New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Halloween during COVID?

Lamont and local leaders say yes, but health experts are concerned

- By Amanda Cuda

A pandemic won’t stop the Ganino family from handing out candy on Halloween.

Mike Ganino said he and his family plan to take precaution­s, but want the holiday to move forward, despite continuing concerns about COVID-19.

“My family looks forward to lighting up our front porch and handing out candy on Oct. 31,” the Monroe resident said. “We’ll wear a mask at the front door and will consider filling up Ziploc bags to limit little hands in bowls. Our children won’t be young forever and we owe it to them to make this happen in a safe way.”

Trick-or-treating is an annual Halloween tradition, a time when children run through the streets in costumes collecting candy from friends and neighbors. It’s also a potential public health nightmare during a pandemic, some health experts said.

“My thought on trick-or-treating this year is that there are certainly risks,” said Dr. Jeannie Kenkare, chief medical officer of PhysicianO­ne Urgent Care, which has 16 Connecticu­t locations, including Brookfield, Stratford, Norwalk and Derby. “There is the risk of the person giving out candy having COVID and it’s getting on

the candy.”

The traditiona­l method of trick-or-treating also doesn’t allow for social distancing, said Dr. Magna Dias, chairwoman of pediatrics at Bridgeport Hospital.

“Traditiona­lly, people come to the home and you hand them the bowl of candy and that’s less than 6 feet (of distance between you),” she said. “So I just don’t think the traditiona­l way is going to work this year.”

The fate of trick-or-treating in 2020 remains uncertain, but Gov. Ned Lamont is optimistic about allowing Halloween to happen this year.

“I was talking to (state Department of Social Services Commission­er) Deidre Gifford and I told her, ‘Halloween is outside and people are wearing masks, so it sounds like it ought to be doable,’” Lamont said Wednesday. “And I think we’ll get some guidance soon.”

On Thursday, Lamont reiterated he was optimistic about the holiday because trick-or-treaters often wear masks and gloves as part of a costume. The governor did not elaborate on what restrictio­ns might apply for people

handing out candy, or how the rules would be enforced.

But Kenkare said trick-ortreating isn’t a personal risk she’d be willing to take this year.

“I would not have my children go door-to-door this season,” she said. “There are a few things that can be done to do it safely, but it’s still a risky propositio­n.”

So far, Connecticu­t’s municipali­ties are somewhat mixed on the Halloween question and many leaders are not yet ready to commit to a decision.

That includes Ansonia Mayor David Cassetti, who said he plans to wait until October to see where the COVID-19 infection rates stand.

Darien First Selectman Jayme Stevenson said she is waiting for guidance from the governor before making a decision. And in New Canaan, First Selectman Kevin Moynihan said no decision has been made, but Halloween was on the “front burner.”

Some officials are in favor of moving forward with trick-ortreating, including Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton. The city has not proposed an ordinance to limit or ban trick-or-treating.

“I learned a long time ago in my job never, ever mess with Halloween,” Boughton said.

Boughton said he plans to meet with the city’s police chief and acting health director to discuss how to handle Halloween. Boughton expects the city will discourage indoor parties.

“I don’t think we are going to be able to stop people from trickor-treating,” he said. “If you don’t let people get outside and do trick-or-treating, you’re going to drive them indoors and (they) will get infections.”

New Milford Mayor Pete Bass said his town is “looking at opportunit­ies for Halloween” and hopes to have a decision in the coming weeks.

Greenwich First Selectman Fred Camillo is also optimistic that the holiday tradition can happen this year.

“If the kids are with their parents, the parents are going to be very protective and cautious and the kids are going to have masks on anyway,” Camillo said. “If people are answering the door with a mask on and the kids are outside, I don’t see what the harm is.”

Mask-wearing is one way to make trick-or-treating safer, Kenkare said — just make sure it’s the kind that cover the nose and mouth and not a traditiona­l Halloween mask.

“You can make it fun,” she said. “Get a fun mask to go with the costume or match with the costume.”

Other tips for making Halloween safer include quarantini­ng collected candy for at least three days, Kenkare said.

“No one touches the candy,” she said. “After three days, inspect it like you normally would, and then it can be eaten.”

But, she said, maybe the safest thing is to find a way to celebrate Halloween without trick-ortreating.

Dias agreed. She said, even if traditiona­l trick-or-treating isn’t possible, there are still ways to enjoy Halloween, such as organizing a backyard scavenger hunt for candy, or setting up a neighborho­od pumpkin-carving contest, where neighbors could vote virtually on who has the spookiest gourd.

“You can have fun and still be safe,” she said. “It just takes a little more creativity than it did before.”

At least one town has started scaling back some Halloween plans, while keeping others.

While Wilton hasn’t yet broached prohibitin­g door-todoor trick-or-treating, First Selectwoma­n Lynne Vanderslic­e said the downtown Halloween Walk, which is one of the more popular ways of trick-or-treating in town, will not happen this year because of the sizable crowd it draws.

She also called the number of trunk-or-treat events that usually occur in Wilton “problemati­c” during the pandemic.

But another Halloween event — the Scarecrow Festival, in which decorated scarecrows are hung on lampposts in town — is moving forward.

“Some aspects of Halloween will be different, but with thought and creativity, it can still be fun,” Vanderslic­e said.

Meanwhile, some families are still planning to go the traditiona­l route, including Fairfield resident Ashley Popoli.

“My daughter is 19 months and I think that Halloween is such a fun time for children,” Popoli said. “With everything going on, and keeping in mind that this is an outdoor activity where it’s easy to social distance, I am definitely still planning to take my daughter out whether or not people hand out candy. We will walk the neighborho­od, dress up and at least say, ‘Hi’ to people. To be honest, my neighborho­od is so family friendly, I bet people will still be handing out candy, as will I.”

Staff writers Peter Yankowski, Cassandra Day, Julia Perkins, Ken Borsuk, Donald Eng, Joshua LaBella, Jeannette Ross, Deborah Rose, Michael P. Mayko, John Kovach, and Susan Schultz contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Erik Trautmann / Hearst CT Media file photo ?? Preschoole­rs march during the Brookside Elementary School annual Halloween Parade last year in Norwalk.
Erik Trautmann / Hearst CT Media file photo Preschoole­rs march during the Brookside Elementary School annual Halloween Parade last year in Norwalk.

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