Los Angeles Times

Daily virus cases hit new nationwide high

38,459 new infections are reported as CDC warns numbers may be 10 times higher.

- By Jaweed Kaleem Kaleem reported from Los Angeles. Staff writers Jenny Jarvie in Atlanta, Molly Hennessy-Fiske in Houston and Richard Read in Seattle contribute­d to this report.

The nation may be opening up, but the coronaviru­s is far from slowing down. In fact, COVID-19 is on the rise.

There were 38,459 new cases of the virus reported nationwide on Thursday, a number that surpassed a record set the prior day of 38,115.

The upticks are the largest in two months, when 36,739 cases were reported April 24.

The records come as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned Thursday that infections could be 10 times the 2.4 million that have been been logged as states in the South and West, including California, see surges and either hit pause on reopening plans or implement new restrictio­ns to slow the disease’s spread.

“We probably recognized about 10% of the outbreak,” CDC Director Dr. Robert Redfield said Thursday, adding that up to 8% of Americans may have been infected.

There were 5,996 new cases that day in Texas, a record since the onset of the pandemic. There was a record in deaths, too. Fortyseven people were reported to have died from the virus in the state, the most in more than a month.

A broad swath of Southern states, including Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Louisiana, Tennessee and South Carolina, have also seen a surge in cases and hospitaliz­ations.

This week, Democratic members of the state’s congressio­nal delegation urged Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, to require Floridians wear protective masks in public.

Similar moves have been announced in California, Nevada and Washington state.

“As positive cases surge and hospitaliz­ations increase, it is imperative that you take data-driven action to help protect Floridians, our families, and our communitie­s from the dangers of COVID-19,” members of the Florida delegation wrote in their letter.

DeSantis has so far resisted scaling back the reopening or issuing new mandates amid one of the most dramatic spikes in the nation.

On Thursday, the Florida Department of Health reported an additional 5,004 new cases after 5,508 additional cases Wednesday — the highest number since the pandemic hit.

Like elsewhere, part of the increase can be attributed to more testing, but the rate of positive tests has also reached a record high

Experts say that indicates the virus is spreading as more businesses reopen and more people resume social contact.

The virus is growing particular­ly fast in Miami-Dade, the state’s most populated county with 2.7 million residents.

After seeing a decline in the numbers of cases and the rate of positive tests in late May, the area — which includes the city of Miami and tourism magnet Miami Beach — has seen a dramatic increase in infections among young people.

According to Mary Jo Trepka, professor and chair of the department of epidemiolo­gy at Florida Internatio­nal University, the median age of people in Miami-Dade with COVID-19 is now 33, down from 37 a couple of weeks ago.

“What’s most troubling over this last week is how steep the increase has been,” Trepka said. “It was so hard on the community to close down, but it was effective and the rates went down. The problem right now is rates are going up faster than they declined when we shut down.”

The number of people in hospitals in Miami-Dade has also surged from around 700 to 900, Trepka said, with the number of patients in intensive care units almost doubling from 100 to 200.

Local officials have scrambled to introduce measures to mitigate the spread. Miami commission­ers on Thursday passed a measure that would fine people $250 for not wearing a mask in public.

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, who this week announced a similar statewide requiremen­t for masks, has faced a backlash in parts of the state.

In Lewis County — a conservati­ve region between Seattle and Portland, Ore. — the sheriff warned a group of residents against being “sheep” in reference to the directive that takes effect Friday.

“In case you guys didn’t hear, Gov. Inslee, in his infinite wisdom, has decided after over 100-some-odd days, that we should all wear face masks, inside and out,” Sheriff Rob Snaza, a Republican, said through a bullhorn this week in Chehalis, Wash., near a billboard famed for displaying rightwing statements.

Inslee, a Democrat, has equated masks to seat belts.

“I just don’t agree with calling those folks somehow barnyard animals,” Inslee said this week. “They’re protecting other people.”

Elsewhere in the state, which in March saw the first major U.S. outbreak of the virus around Seattle, cases have grown in agricultur­al regions. Those among Yakima County food processing and agricultur­al workers have more than doubled in a month to surpass 1,000.

In Texas, the surge is especially bad in the largest cities.

South Texas officials expressed concern this week that crowds would descend on Gulf Coast beaches and Hill Country riverfront­s to celebrate July 4, as they did on Memorial Day.

At Houston’s Galleria Mall, the state’s largest, people flocked to the food court this week. Nearby, parents skated with children on an indoor ice rink, and stylists and barbers cut hair — many without masks. The city and county have required coverings at local businesses, but the state hasn’t.

Inside Kuttin’ Edge, barber Ricky Watson wore a mask and said he has been social distancing, removing chairs from the waiting area and spraying down seats with sanitizer. He checks the temperatur­es of staff and customers.

“I believe you take as many precaution­s as you can,” Watson, 34, said as two barbers gave trims.

His shop was closed 45 days before reopening. If officials think the latest outbreak is too dangerous, he said, he would understand the need to close again.

“If it’s a spike, health and safety first,” Watson said.

Barber Sean Bowie, 38, said he’s met his share of “nonbelieve­rs” who still refuse to wear masks. He tells them they have to while in the shop.

“We don’t want to be the cause of somebody getting it,” he said.

Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, who earlier in the pandemic imposed twoweek quarantine­s on travelers arriving from New York, has now seen that state’s governor slap the same restrictio­n on Texans due to growing infections.

The rule also applies in Connecticu­t and New Jersey to travelers from other states that have a positive rate higher than 10 for every 100,000 residents.

Meanwhile, Hawaii, which had famously fined and arrested travelers who broke a mandatory twoweek quarantine after traveling to the state, announced an easing of its rules this week.

Beginning Aug. 1, anyone who travels to the state and has a negative coronaviru­s test no longer needs to selfquaran­tine.

Instead, they can roam free.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? PEOPLE WEAR masks in downtown Los Angeles. In states that are seeing an uptick in cases, including Florida and Texas, governors have declined to require masks even as major cities mandate them. Georgia, Louisiana and the Carolinas have also seen a surge in cases.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times PEOPLE WEAR masks in downtown Los Angeles. In states that are seeing an uptick in cases, including Florida and Texas, governors have declined to require masks even as major cities mandate them. Georgia, Louisiana and the Carolinas have also seen a surge in cases.

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