Hartford Courant

Leaders point to social gatherings for sudden uptick in New London

State, city officials say businesses, schools not to blame

- By Emily Brindley

NEW LONDON — Connecticu­t and local officials said Monday that the recent uptick in coronaviru­s cases in New London can be traced back to a series of social gatherings and other small social interactio­ns — not to local school or business reopenings, or to the nearby casinos.

“We’re being told by the contact tracers that it’s not coming from any institutio­nal or business setting, it’s coming predominan­tly from social spread ... where people are letting their guard down,” said New London Mayor Michael Passero.

He pointed to situations — such as small family gatherings that are well within the state limits on gathering

size — where people may feel relaxed enough that they remove their masks or sit nearby one another. But COVID-19 can still spread, even among a small group of people and even from people who aren’t displaying any symptoms.

“The institutio­nal environmen­ts — nursing homes, schools, even the casino — they have these strict protocols in place, people are less likely to let their guard down,” Passero said. “So where it’s spreading now is where people are more likely to be relaxed and let their guard down.”

Thestate issued a COVID-19 alert for New London on Thursday, after a steep increase in cases in the city. New London and the surroundin­g areas saw relatively few cases in the spring, and by Sept. 25 New London had recorded a total of 229 confirmed or probable COVID-19 cases since the pandemic began. But from Sept. 25 to Oct. 9, New London’s cases jumped up to 368 — an increase of 139 in just two weeks.

So far, according to local health director Stephen Mansfield, the city has increased testing to help identify positive patients and contain the virus before it spreads further. Those efforts haven’t actually turned around the trend in New London yet, but Mansfield said he believes the efforts will pay off soon.

“We’re confident we have a good handle on this ,” Mansfield said .“The numbers aren’t going down yet. We expect they will.”

At the Monday press briefing, Gov. Ned Lamont pointed to the issue of social gatherings and referenced similar comments made last week by White House coronaviru­s response coordinate Dr. Deborah Birx. During a stop in Hartford, Birx had said she’s seeing social gatherings become spreading events across much of the Northeast.

It’s “informal social events, that’s where we’ve got to the track and trace, that’s where we need families to be particular­ly careful,” Lamont said Monday.

Dr. Deidre Gifford, the interim commission­er of the state Department of Public Health, listed off a couple specific spreading events that have been identified by contact tracers — including carpooling, lunch breaks and family gatherings that brought together multiple households. (It’s unclear if she was referencin­g spreading events across the entire state or specifical­ly in New London.)

The necessary response to the spread is “nothing new,” Gifford said. “But it’s just ... the vigilance. We keep reminding ourselves: mask on, over the nose and mouth, if you’re with anybody that’s not part of your household.”

Also at Monday’s briefing, Lamont said that he expects to release an executive order “within the next couple of days” that will allow municipali­ties with rising cases of COVID-19, including New London, to remain in the second phase of reopening if they choose. The state moved to the third phase of reopening on Thursday, which has meant an increase in the number of people allowed inside restaurant­s and at private gatherings, among other loosened restrictio­ns.

Under current state law, all municipali­ties are required to abide by the state’s reopening guidance — which means that municipali­ties such as New London have been required to move to phase three until the governor releases an executive order allowing them to move back to phase two.

But although the state has left a handful of at-risk municipali­ties in limbo, the timing lag may not make a difference in New London.

Passero, the New London mayor, said he isn’t planning to move the city back to phase two, even once the state allows it.

“The problem with New London is, it’s so small. For met o do something independen­t in New London, I’m not getting the feedback from my health department that it would have any real relevance,” Passero said. “It’s too small a geographic­al area for me to really be able to effectivel­y exercise any discretion .”

Passero said he and the local health department are still looking into the possibilit­y of reinstatin­g some restrictio­ns. But as of Monday, Passero said he felt it would be a pointless penalty on New London businesses — without any real public health benefits — unless it was done in coordinati­on with a number of neighborin­g towns.

 ?? KASSIJACKS­ON/HARTFORD COURANT ?? Dr. Deborah Birx speaks after meeting with state and local leaders last week at the UConn campus in Hartford.
KASSIJACKS­ON/HARTFORD COURANT Dr. Deborah Birx speaks after meeting with state and local leaders last week at the UConn campus in Hartford.

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