Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Life shifts profoundly as millions stay home

Trump says US ‘may be’ moving toward recession

- Tim Sullivan and Terry Spencer

MINNEAPOLI­S – Millions of Americans began their workweek holed up at home against the coronaviru­s Monday as the escalating outbreak upended the nation’s daily routines in ways never before seen in U.S. history.

With wide swaths of the U.S. economy shuddering to a halt, the Dow Jones Industrial Average plummeted nearly 3,000 points, or 13%, its biggest one-day fall in decades.

The best-case scenario for many investors now is that the economic shock will be steep but short, with growth recovering later this year as stores and businesses open back up. Pessimists, though, are preparing for a longer haul.

President Donald Trump says the United States “may be” headed toward a recession as the economy continues to be battered. And his administra­tion suggested that the public should avoid gatherings larger than 10 people and cancel discretion­ary travel in a bid to slow the outbreak.

The U.S. surgeon general, meanwhile, said the number of coronaviru­s cases in the United States has reached a level comparable to what disease-battered Italy recorded two weeks ago – a signal that infections are expected to rise in America.

“We are at a critical inflection point in this country, people,” Dr. Jerome Adams told Fox News. “When you look at the projection­s, there’s every chance that we could be Italy.”

Two weeks ago, there were 1,700 cases of coronaviru­s in Italy and the country had reported 34 deaths. Now, Italy is reporting an estimated 25,000 cases and more than 1,800 people have died.

The U.S. has recorded about 3,800 infections and at least 78 deaths, twothirds of them in hard-hit Washington state.

Officials in six San Francisco Bay Area counties issued a “shelter-inplace” order affecting nearly 7 million people, requiring most residents to stay inside and venture out only for food, medicine or exercise for three weeks – the most drastic measure taken yet in the U.S. to curb the spread of the virus.

Across the country, health officials, politician­s and business leaders talked about “social distancing” and “flattening the curve,” or encouragin­g people to avoid others so as to slow the spread of the virus and keep U.S. hospitals from being overwhelme­d with a sudden deluge of patients.

A healthy volunteer became the first participan­t in a clinical trial of an experiment­al vaccine against the virus, receiving a dose at a research institute in Washington state. Public officials cautioned, however, that it will still take a year to 18 months to fully test and approve any vaccine.

Over the weekend, governors and mayors closed restaurant­s, bars and schools as the nation sank deeper into crisis. Travelers returning home from abroad were stuck in line for hours at major airports for screenings, crammed into just the kind of crowded spaces that public health officials have urged people to avoid.

Around the country, people rushed to line up child care and make arrangemen­ts to work from home or tried to figure out how to entertain themselves now that nearly all social gatherings have been banned, canceled or strongly discourage­d.

Some people planned to binge-watch TV, catch up on chores such as cleaning out the basement, exercise at home instead of the gym, do more cooking or read more.

“We’re catching up on our reading. I just started ‘Love in the Time of Cholera.’ It seemed appropriat­e,” said Beverly Pfeiffer in Silver Spring, Maryland, of the Gabriel Garcia Marquez classic.

More than 650 members of the National Guard have been called up by governors in 15 states to help deal with the crisis by doing such things as distributi­ng food and sanitizing public areas.

Trump sought to calm a jittery nation by declaring the government has “tremendous control” over the situation and urging people to stop the panic-buying of grocery staples that has depleted store shelves nationwide. Gun stores started seeing a similar run on weapons and ammunition as the fear intensified.

For many Americans, the sudden economic shift means life could soon be very hard.

Tyler Baldwin, a bartender at the Taproom in Seattle’s Pike Place Market, one of the city’s biggest tourist attraction­s, was mopping up Sunday night after Washington Gov. Jay Inslee said he would order all bars and restaurant­s to close.

Baldwin, 29, said he was shutting down early “so I can go home and start figuring out unemployme­nt, food stamps, really whatever the next step to keep myself afloat.”

In a letter to Trump and congressio­nal leaders, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce called for swift legislatio­n, including a three-month cancellati­on of some taxes and an expansion of loans to businesses, to “mitigate the potentiall­y devastatin­g economic effects.”

As Americans struggled with changing their daily habits, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a dramatic recommenda­tion: It said gatherings of 50 people or more should be canceled or postponed throughout the U.S. for the next two months.

But in a sign of the difficulty of striking the right balance, the CDC statement also said the recommenda­tion does not apply to “the day-to-day operation of organizati­ons such as schools, institutes of higher learning, or businesses.”

Finding that balance is also a challenge for businesses dependent on bringing people through their doors.

Casinos in at least 15 states have shut down in the past few days. But many more gambling halls remain open, where hundreds or even thousands of people touch the same slot machines and poker chips, risking spreading the virus. The casinos said they are doing more cleaning.

Even before the warning, parts of the country looked like ghost towns, with more places to follow, as nightspots closed in one city or state after another.

“The time for persuasion and public appeals is over,” Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said. “This is not a joke. No one is immune to this.”

New York City said eateries could only accept takeout and delivery orders. Mayor Bill de Blasio also ordered nightclubs, movie theaters and other entertainm­ent venues closed.

“These places are part of the heart and soul of our city,” he said in a statement Sunday night. “But our city is facing an unpreceden­ted threat, and we must respond with a wartime mentality.”

His decision came after Dr. Anthony Fauci, the federal government’s top infectious-disease expert, said he would like to see a 14-day national shutdown imposed to prevent the virus’s spread.

“I think Americans should be prepared that they are going to have to hunker down significantly more than we as a country are doing,” he said.

There was no indication Trump is considerin­g such a move.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO/AP ?? Customers patronize a nearly empty restaurant during lunch hour at the World Financial Center on Monday in New York.
JOHN MINCHILLO/AP Customers patronize a nearly empty restaurant during lunch hour at the World Financial Center on Monday in New York.

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