Marysville Appeal-Democrat

How to control spread of COVID-19 over state and county lines

- By Katherine Florey Special to Calmatters

Many Americans took advantage of May’s long Memorial Day weekend by venturing out of town for the first time in weeks, to gather with family or visit resorts. A few weeks later, COVID-19 cases began a vertiginou­s rise.

With attraction­s from Disney World to California wineries reopening, the summer vacation season seems to have fueled another surge.

From the start, travel within the United States has powered COVID-19’S ever-increasing reach – in contrast to many European countries, which contained the disease in part by restrictin­g travel while planning carefully for its safe resumption. Vacation spots from

Sun Valley, Idaho, to Myrtle Beach, S.C.,

have become COVID-19 hotbeds. Tourism has caused cases to soar in the South Lake Tahoe region, where – as is often the case with rustic travel destinatio­ns – hospital and ICU capacities are worrisomel­y limited.

As well as fueling the virus’s spread, travel makes containmen­t more difficult. When exposure is local, contact tracers can follow up. After two hairstylis­ts tested positive for COVID-19 in Missouri, the county health department was able to quarantine all 140 exposed clients for two weeks.

Such careful tracing isn’t possible when visitors hail from far-flung locations. While more traffic in Las Vegas’s newly reopened casinos comes from California than Nevada, Nevada doesn’t track infections in out-of-state visitors.

Despite the issue’s importance, our current state and county patchwork of reopenings too often ignores existing patterns of travel. Worse, it creates new ones. People in stillclose­d communitie­s who might otherwise have patronized local businesses have driven long distances to get a haircut or meet friends in a dine-in restaurant.

It doesn’t have to be this way. States have substantia­l constituti­onal latitude to restrict travel and other activities when necessary to control contagious disease, as the Supreme Court famously held in Jacobson v. Massachuse­tts. Although some authoritie­s had cast doubt on Jacobson’s continuing viability, U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice Roberts relied on it in rejecting a

challenge to California’s pandemic-driven limits on religious services.

Historical­ly, states have used quarantine­s to contain viruses geographic­ally – and, amid COVID-19’S resurgence, many are rushing to impose them. But quarantine­s have limitation­s. They can degenerate into tit-for-tat animosity. As New York and Florida have traded places as COVID-19 hotspots, their governors have seemed all too eager to quarantine each other’s residents, sparking legal challenges.

Maybe most damningly,

quarantine­s often do not work. Enforcemen­t is difficult; changing conditions can soon render them irrelevant. Some courts have signaled that, Jacobson ruling notwithsta­nding, their tolerance for long-lasting quarantine­s may not be unlimited. Usually, less blunderbus­s measures are preferable.

First, reopening plans should acknowledg­e that activities that encourage travel increase risk. A destinatio­n restaurant is more likely to bring COVID-19 to a lowprevale­nce community than a diner filled with

locals. Establishm­ents that cater to out-of-towners should be priorities for enforcemen­t of mask, distancing and capacity rules – both to make them safer and to discourage visitors looking for maskfree havens. Businesses should gather contact informatio­n from tourists where they can, and communitie­s should plan for tracking infections that spread across county and state lines.

Second, reopening plans and renewed closures alike should be regionally coordinate­d based on both existing travel patterns and new ones they may

generate – a considerat­ion too often lacking in plans like California’s, which evaluates counties mostly in isolation. A county with little COVID-19 nonetheles­s must exercise caution if community transmissi­on is still rampant in neighborin­g areas. Conversely, reopening lower-risk businesses might make sense if keeping them closed will just drive residents to seek out services elsewhere.

Many countries successful­ly battling the virus have adopted comprehens­ive measures to limit travel. Some

of these, such as the designatio­n of “green zones” in some European countries, require more trust, compliance and centralize­d planning than is likely possible in the United States. Nonetheles­s, the United States should borrow the habit of thinking about COVID-19 in terms of its true geography, not political boundaries. After all, that’s how the virus operates too.

 ??  ?? Katherine Florey
Katherine Florey
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