Las Vegas Review-Journal

Happy hour arrives

State’s task force lets Clark County bars reopen

- By Bill Dentzer

CARSON CITY — Nevada’s bars and taverns will be open again statewide Monday for the first time in more than two months following the state’s signoff on reopening plans for Clark and Elko counties Thursday.

The state COVID-19 Task Force approved the two counties’ proposals unanimousl­y based on continuing improved metrics on COVID-19 case numbers, testing and positivity rates, locally and throughout the state. Officially, bars, taverns, distilleri­es and other alcohol-serving establishm­ents can reopen at 11:59 p.m.

Sunday under social distancing requiremen­ts that apply to restaurant­s.

Clark, the state’s most populous county, and Elko, its second largest and the fourth-largest county in the contiguous United States, were the last two counties subject to bar closures due to high risk for coronaviru­s spread based on testing numbers, reported cases and positive test rate. Numbers continue to decline in all three categories in nearly all of Nevada’s counties. As of Thursday, only three counties remain at high risk — Clark, Elko and Mineral — with a fourth, Lyon, considered borderline.

“It’s just really great news that we just have three counties that are being flagged now,” said Kyra Morgan, the state’s chief biostatist­ician.

Morgan and others on Thursday cautioned that numbers could rise again as data comes in from the Labor Day period, which has already shown elevated case numbers due to holiday weekend gatherings. Officials also referenced, without naming the events, the possibilit­y of increased spread from two campaign rallies for President Donald Trump attended by thousands in Minden, located in Douglas County, and in Henderson.

In the right direction

In a statement, Gov. Steve Sisolak said he was “beyond thrilled that the hard work of Nevada’s residents and businesses has resulted in our COVID-19 data trending in a positive direction,” giving the task force the green light to lift restrictio­ns.

Bars in select counties were closed by order of the governor on July 10 as infection rates began to peak following a steady climb through June. Under the state model, counties that exceeded metrics in two of the three criteria were flagged at high risk and required to submit mitigation plans to the task force, which meets weekly to review the plans.

The state topped 1,500 deaths from COVID-19 Thursday and nearly 75,000 cases. But the positivity rate has declined steadily since July 9, the case and death rate has slowed, and hospitaliz­ations have declined since early August.

In Clark alone, the test-positive rate has gone from a peak of 17.1 percent at the end of July to 8.6 percent as of Monday. Morgan said that number had declined even further, to 7.8 percent as of Thursday.

County officials for both Clark and Elko came prepared to make the case for reopening but met less resistance from the task force based on the improving trends. Clark had also requested the relaxing of restrictio­ns on church gatherings and convention and business meetings. Action on those items is outside the purview of the task force and subject to the governor’s directives.

Gold standard

Representi­ng Clark County at Thursday’s meeting, commission Chairwoman Marilyn Kirkpatric­k and other county officials reviewed for the task force how the county had worked with bar and tavern owners for weeks to facilitate reopening. The county’s mitigation and management plan for reopening requires owners to agree to follow public health protocols, with penalties for lapses.

Nevada as a whole also recently moved from a red to yellow zone ranking in the White House coronaviru­s task force status, indicating lower outbreak risk, Kirkpatric­k

noted.

“Knowing what other states are doing, I promise you that we are the gold standard, and we will continue to be the gold standard,” she told the task force.

Interviewe­d after the task force vote, Kirkpatric­k said there was no considerat­ion to reopen bars ahead of Monday night’s first-ever Las Vegas Raiders game at Allegiant Stadium.

“I’m more worried about the economy and where people are headed” than sports, she said.

The task force officially removed Churchill, Eureka and Washoe counties from the high-risk list Thursday, leaving Clark, Elko, Lyon and Mineral. Washoe on Wednesday reported the highest daily case increase since mid-august, attributed to Labor Day socializin­g.

Interviewe­d after the task force vote, Clark County Commission Chairwoman Kirkpatric­k said there was no considerat­ion to reopen bars ahead of Monday night’s first-ever Las Vegas Raiders game at Allegiant Stadium. “I’m more worried about the economy and where people are headed” than sports, she said.

 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto ?? Bartender Erik Kluever makes an Apple Pie Harvest cocktail at Oak & Ivy in downtown Las Vegas on July 10.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto Bartender Erik Kluever makes an Apple Pie Harvest cocktail at Oak & Ivy in downtown Las Vegas on July 10.

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