Las Vegas Review-Journal

As pandemic deepens, states resist new rules

Some afraid of adding to economic struggles

- By Julie Watson and Terry Tang

PHOENIX — As the U.S. goes through the most lethal phase of the coronaviru­s outbreak yet, governors and local officials in hard-hit parts of the country are showing little willingnes­s to impose any new restrictio­ns on businesses to stop the spread.

And unlike in 2020, when the debate over lockdowns often split along party lines, both Democratic and Republican leaders are signaling their opposition to forced closures and other measures.

Some have expressed fear of compoundin­g the heavy economic damage inflicted by the outbreak. Some see little patience among their constituen­ts for more restrictio­ns 10 months into the crisis. And some seem to be focused more on the rollout of the vaccines that could eventually vanquish the threat.

The most notable change of tune came from New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, who imposed a tough shutdown last spring as the state became the epicenter of the U.S. outbreak.

“We simply cannot stay closed until the vaccine hits critical mass. The cost is too high. We will have nothing left to open,” Cuomo said this week as confirmed infections in the state climbed to an average of 16,000 a day and deaths reached about 170 per day.

Theaters remain closed and there is no indoor dining in New York

City, but Cuomo said Tuesday that if a system of rapid virus tests could be developed, it could allow those things to return safely.

In Arizona, where the pandemic is raging, Republican Gov. Doug Ducey has been steadfast in his opposition to a statewide mask mandate or the closing of bars, gyms and restaurant dining despite repeated calls from hospital leaders to take such steps. And high school officials voted Tuesday to allow winter sports, reversing a decision made four days earlier to cancel the season.

“If we’re really all in this together, then we have to appreciate that for many families ‘lockdown’ doesn’t spell inconvenie­nce; it spells catastroph­e,” Ducey said.

Governors in other hot spots, including Texas, have expressed similar sentiments, while other states are loosening restrictio­ns even as the U.S. death toll closes in on 380,000 and cases top 22.7 million. Deaths nationwide are running at more than 3,200 a day on average.

Minnesota allowed in-person dining to resume this week, Michigan is set to do the same, and some bars and restaurant­s in the Kansas City, Missouri, area are extending their hours. Nevada, meanwhile, is extending restrictio­ns on restaurant­s that were set to expire Friday.

In Kansas, the state’s largest school district with 47,000 students plans to resume in-person learning.

In Idaho, where many lawmakers refuse to wear masks in the statehouse, a federal judge on Tuesday said he won’t order stricter coronaviru­s precaution­s while a lawsuit moves forward from two legislator­s concerned about being exposed.

Even in states with strict measures in place, such as California, people are flouting the rules. On Monday, as intensive care units in Southern California found themselves jammed with patients, people packed beaches in San Diego to see this week’s high surf, many standing less than 6 feet apart with no masks.

More than 9.3 million Americans have received their first shot of the vaccine, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a slow rollout for a campaign that will have to inoculate perhaps 85 percent of the population, or close to 300 million people, to conquer the outbreak.

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 ?? Smiley N. Pool The Associated Press ?? Florence Mullins, 89, waits in a chair as a family member holds her place in a long line to receive the COVID-19 shot Monday at a mass vaccinatio­n site at Fair Park in Dallas.
Smiley N. Pool The Associated Press Florence Mullins, 89, waits in a chair as a family member holds her place in a long line to receive the COVID-19 shot Monday at a mass vaccinatio­n site at Fair Park in Dallas.

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