Los Angeles Times

Texas and Florida are taking it slow

The two states preach limited government and resist issuing orders to stay home.

- By Molly Hennessy-Fiske and Jaweed Kaleem Hennessy-Fiske reported from Houston and Kaleem from Miami. Times staff writers John Myers in Sacramento and Meredith Blake in New York contribute­d to this report.

The states preach limited government and resist stay-at-home orders. Will they be the “next Italy”?

HOUSTON — Gavin Newsom was the first governor to order his citizens to stay at home, shutting down California’s economy, the world’s eighth-largest, in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic. The next day, Friday, Andrew Cuomo, the governor of New York, followed suit.

But not so in Texas and Florida, the nation’s second and third most populous states, where a small-government philosophy — less taxes, fewer regulation­s and a weaker safety net — has long held sway.

About one-fifth of Texas’ 29 million people lacks health insurance, and nearly one-quarter of Florida’s 21 million residents are elderly. But the governors of those states have resisted stayat-home orders, despite mounting criticism.

Democratic mayors in both states have canceled events like Miami’s Ultra electronic music festival and Austin’s South by Southwest and have opened a handful of testing sites. They complain the patchwork of policies has made it nearly impossible to limit the disease’s spread.

But the governors, who are Republican, fear overreacti­ng.

“The vast, vast majority of people are testing negative for this,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said at a Sunday briefing at one of the state’s three coronaviru­s test sites.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has pointed to the state’s vast rural stretches in arguing against ordering residents to stay home.

“What may be right for places like the larger urban areas may not be right for the more than 200 counties that still have zero cases of COVID-19,” Abbott said.

Officials in Houston, San Antonio and Dallas, the state’s largest cities, disagree. On Monday, San Antonio issued a stay-at-home order and Austin was expected to follow suit on Tuesday.

“I’m hopeful the governor will reconsider,” Clay Jenkins, the Dallas County judge, or chief executive, said at a Sunday briefing.

There, Jenkins displayed a chart showing the projected spread of the coronaviru­s far exceeded Texas’ available hospital beds. According to the projection, a statewide stay-athome order could decrease coronaviru­s deaths from 430,000 to 5,000.

He noted that Dallas has 250,000 uninsured residents, the most of any U.S. city.

“Those folks aren’t going to the doctor. If we don’t do something it’s going to be very, very bad here,” he said.

On Sunday, Abbott created a “strike force” of public and private sector officials to get Texas more medical supplies and deployed National Guard troops to assist local test sites.

He promised that Texas would soon perform up to 20,000 coronaviru­s tests a week — but in Dallas County, just a couple of hundred of people had been tested, said Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson.

“The availabili­ty of testing isn’t there,” he said.

Johnson, a former state legislator elected mayor last year, has faced tough decisions since the start of the crisis, when he canceled the city’s St. Patrick’s Day parade.

He and Houston’s mayor, Sylvester Turner, declared emergencie­s before the governor did, but he said the orders have been difficult to enforce without statewide support.

“It makes all the economic pain you’re inflicting on one city a wasted effort if a neighborin­g city is doing something different — if people are continuing to congregate on the other side of an imaginary line,” he said. “The approach probably should have been statewide from the outset. I think the governor is there now.”

Turner declined to issue a stay-at-home order Monday, citing the need for “economic balance.”

“In some cases, for many people, that can be worse than the virus itself,” he said.

Lina Hidalgo, the county judge for Harris County, which includes Houston, said local officials had planned to create 10 testing sites, but the federal government sent only enough supplies for four, and they were delayed.

As of Monday, three test sites had opened capable of testing up to 250 people a day with results taking several days.

“We do expect there to be a waiting list,” Hidalgo said. “There is a triage process going on behind the scenes.”

Hidalgo has been conferring with officials in California and Washington as she tries to increase testing capacity. With testing so limited, she said, “All we have left is the blunt tool of social distancing.”

Hidalgo worries Texas will soon look like Italy, with rampant coronaviru­s infections and deaths, especially in places like the county jail.

“Italy has an award-winning healthcare system. We have 20% uninsured,” she said. “They’re overwhelme­d. You can bet we’d be overwhelme­d if we saw the kind of spike they’ve seen.”

In Texas, drive-through coronaviru­s testing just started Thursday and has been slow to expand, even in Dallas and Houston, where police and firefighte­rs have tested positive for the virus.

So far, 10,000 Texans have been tested, less than half of California’s number. New York is now testing 16,000 daily and has tested 75,000 total.

Even Florida, a smallgover­nment state led by Republican­s with a smaller population of about 20 million, had tested more people than Texas as of Sunday.

“The unknown is whether every city is going to look like New York in a couple weeks, or whether we’ve interrupte­d community spread,” said Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. “Without the testing, it’s hard to know.”

The first coronaviru­s case was reported in Houston on March 4, about a month after California.

Two days after California’s first confirmed COVID-19 fatality, Newsom convened top officials and ran a series of “scenarios for worst-case spread” and created pandemic response plans, he later said.

Newsom declared a statewide emergency and sought both early federal assistance and community compliance through new rules for elder care and caution in attending large events. He ordered more help for seniors, renters and the homeless; delayed income tax filings; and loosened rules on commercial trucking and election procedures.

But in Texas, Abbott waited until Thursday to issue an order closing schools and dine-in restaurant­s and limiting gatherings to 10 people, as of Saturday.

“The traditiona­l disaster model we have applied for so long does not apply,” Abbott conceded in announcing the measures. “What we’re dealing with now is not a local disaster: It’s an internatio­nal pandemic.”

The same day, Newsom ordered all of California’s 40 million residents to stay home for two weeks. The next day, Cuomo issued a similar order covering 19 million residents of New York. In the last three days, other states have followed suit with stay-at-home orders: Hawaii, Illinois, New Jersey, Louisiana, Ohio, Delaware, Indiana, Michigan, Oregon and West Virginia.

Louisiana’s governor, John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, warned coronaviru­s is spreading faster there than anywhere else in the world, with more cases per capita than any state other than Washington and New York. He said they were on pace to run out of hospital beds in as soon as a week.

“There’s no reason to believe we won’t be the next Italy,” he said Sunday.

Newsom has said California needs 30,000 additional hospital beds; Cuomo said New York needs an additional 50,000. Both said they don’t have enough ventilator­s needed to treat critical coronaviru­s patients.

“Ventilator­s are to this war what missiles were to World War II,” Cuomo said Friday.

Abbott has yet to address Texas’ ventilator supply. He has praised the president’s handling of the outbreak, waited to issue a disaster declaratio­n and was still investigat­ing Sunday how to add hospital beds.

On Sunday, he ordered elective hospital procedures postponed and suspended regulation­s limiting hospital room capacity.

“These orders will free up countless hospital beds across the state of Texas to treat COVID-19 patients,” he said, although it wasn’t clear how many added beds would be provided.

Texas has 2.9 hospital beds per 1,000 people, about the national average, according to regulators. That’s less capacity than Italy (3.2 beds per 1,000 people), where hospitals have been overwhelme­d by coronaviru­s, and far less than South Korea (12 beds per 1,000 people).

The looming shortage has alarmed local Texas officials.

While the California Legislatur­e

approved up to $1 billion in emergency spending on coronaviru­s efforts — a plan that was written and enacted in a matter of hours with broad bipartisan support — Abbott has yet to commit to tapping the state’s rainy-day fund of more than $11 billion to help the unemployed or issue a special open enrollment for health insurance, as California and New York have.

Texas’ Legislatur­e meets every other year — in the interest of small government — and isn’t due to reconvene until January unless Abbott calls a special session.

“You’ve had a state government that for weeks has been hands off and trailing behind the crisis,” said Manny Garcia, executive director of the Texas Democratic Party.

In Florida, DeSantis refused to issue a stay-athome order, despite pleas from local leaders and Nikki Fried, the state agricultur­e commission­er, who warned in a letter last week that, “We cannot afford to lose another week.”

Miami Mayor Francis Suarez closed dine-in restaurant­s and bars March 16, only to see people continue to party to the north on Fort Lauderdale beaches.

“It’s frustratin­g because you get blamed for things that you have no say over,” said Suarez, a Republican who is self-quarantine­d at home after testing positive for the virus.

Suarez has posted videos online encouragin­g Floridians to stay at home, but said he’s not he can legally order them to do so the way the governor can.

 ?? Delcia Lopez Monitor ?? THE REV. ROD CLARK holds a service in the parking lot of his Episcopal church in McAllen, Texas.
Delcia Lopez Monitor THE REV. ROD CLARK holds a service in the parking lot of his Episcopal church in McAllen, Texas.
 ?? Eric Gay Associated Press ?? TEXAS Gov. Greg Abbott, center, says the state’s vast rural stretches argue against ordering people to stay home. Leaders in the state’s largest cities disagree.
Eric Gay Associated Press TEXAS Gov. Greg Abbott, center, says the state’s vast rural stretches argue against ordering people to stay home. Leaders in the state’s largest cities disagree.

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