Houston Chronicle

Hundreds broke rules to attend a wedding; 17 now ill

- By Tim Elfrink

In September, when coronaviru­s cases were on the wane in Washington state, Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee lifted a full ban on wedding receptions, but capped guest lists at 30 people.

More than a month later, just as the virus began to surge again throughout the West, a couple in rural Ritzville, Wash., held their own ceremony — and brought 10 times that number of revelers to their party.

Health officials in Washington said this week that more than 300 people attended the wedding, providing a case lesson in why the restrictio­ns were put in place.

Two separate outbreaks have now been fueled by at least 17 guests who since have tested positive for the virus, officials said, with more new cases from the event “being added daily.”

“Our personal decisions affect the health of our family, friends, and communitie­s,” the Grant County Health District said in a statement that urged everyone who attended the wedding to get tested for the virus.

While small get-togethers have helped spark the dramatic spike in corona virus cases nationally, authoritie­s also have highlighte­d several large weddings as supersprea­der events, including a ceremony in Maine in early August that has led to nearly 200 infections and at least seven deaths.

More recently, an October wedding in Long Island that flouted New York’s pandemic orders has led to dozens of cases.

Cases have risen so dramatical­ly in Washington that Inslee on Sunday announced a new round of shutdowns, banning indoor dining and closing bars and gyms, forbidding most indoor social gatherings and limiting outdoor get-togethers to five people or less.

The orders come as the state sets records daily, with a 38 percent increase in its weekly average of new cases.

“Today . . . is the most dangerous public health day in the last 100 years of our state’s history,” Inslee said at a news conference. “A pandemic is raging in our state. Left unchecked, it will assuredly result in grossly overburden­ed hospitals and morgues.”

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