Imperial Valley Press

Governors ratchet up restrictio­ns ahead of Thanksgivi­ng

- AP PHOTO/JAE C. HONG BY DAVID EGGERT AND RACHEL LA CORTE

From California to Pennsylvan­ia, governors and mayors across the U. S. are ratcheting up COVID- 19 restrictio­ns amid the record-shattering resurgence of the virus that is all but certain to get worse because of holiday travel and family gatherings over Thanksgivi­ng.

Leaders are closing businesses or curtailing hours and other operations, and they are ordering or imploring people to stay home and keep their distance from others to help stem a rising tide of infections that threatens to overwhelm the health care system.

“I must again pull back the reins,” New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy said Monday as he restricted indoor gatherings to 10 people, down from 25. “It gives me no joy.”

California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced he is pulling the “emergency brake” on efforts to reopen the economy, saying the state is experienci­ng the fastest growth in cases yet, and if left unchecked, it will lead to “catastroph­ic outcomes.” The move closes many nonessenti­al indoor businesses and requires the wearing of masks outside homes, with limited exceptions.

The tightening came as Moderna Inc. announced that its experiment­al coronaviru­s vaccine appears to be over 94% effective, based on early results. A week ago Pfizer disclosed similar findings with its own formula.

The news raised hopes that at least two vaccines against the scourge could win emergency authorizat­ion and become available in the U.S. before the end of 2020.

A record- breaking nearly 70,000 people were hospitaliz­ed with the coronaviru­s in the U.S. as of Sunday, 13,000 more than a week earlier, according to the COVID Tracking Project. Deaths in the U.S. are running at more than 1,100 per day on average, an increase of over 50% from early October.

The virus is blamed for more than 246,000 deaths and over 11 million confirmed infections in the the U.S.

Thanksgivi­ng was on the minds of leaders nationwide as they enacted tougher restrictio­ns amid fears that the holiday will lead to more infections.

“We don’t really want to see mamaw at Thanksgivi­ng and bury her by Christmas,” Dr. Mark Horne, president of the Mississipp­i State Medical Associatio­n, said as the governor expanded a mask mandate to more counties Monday. “It’s going to happen. You’re going to say ‘ Hi’ at Thanksgivi­ng, ‘It was so great to see you,’ and you’re going to either be visiting by FaceTime in the ICU or planning a small funeral before Christmas.”

New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham’s stay-at-home order went into effect Monday. Only essential businesses, including grocery stores and pharmacies, will be open.

Vice President Mike Pence sounded an upbeat tone Monday on a call with governors, saying that the government is ready to help states where hospitals are nearing capacity and emphasizin­g that vaccines are coming.

“America has never been more prepared to combat this virus,” he said.

 ??  ?? Medical assistant Linh Nguyen assists two women with COVID-19 testing at a testing site set up at the OC Fairground­s in Costa Mesa, Calif., Monday.
Medical assistant Linh Nguyen assists two women with COVID-19 testing at a testing site set up at the OC Fairground­s in Costa Mesa, Calif., Monday.

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