Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Governor resists stay-at-home order
LITTLE ROCK — Gov. Asa Hutchinson on Thursday continued to resist calls for a statewide stay-at-home order as the deaths of two more Arkansans from the coronavirus were reported, including the death of a second resident from the virus at a Little Rock nursing home where dozens of others also have been infected.
The state’s death toll rose to 12 while the number of cases went up 59, to 683.
Hutchinson argued restrictions the state has in place are working to slow the rate of infection. A broader order would accomplish little while creating confusion and putting 100,000 Arkansans out of work, he said.
At a news conference, he displayed two images, one after another, on a large television screen.
The first was a chart showing the number of positive covid-19 tests trending below last week’s projection by state health officials.
The second was a colored map showing Arkansas was one of only a handful of states yet to issue a stay-at-home order.
The map “is not helpful to us, because it gives people an unrealistic expectation as to what this means, first of all and secondly, the impact of it,” Hutchinson said.
“It gives the impression that we’re really not doing as much as we should be in Arkansas, when you can see from the targeted response that we’re doing a great deal, and it has been having some success.”
RESTRICTIONS TOUTED
According to The New York Times, 38 states had stayat-home orders Thursday. Similar orders were in place in parts of seven other states.
Hutchinson also displayed a list of steps he has taken.
Those include closing public schools through at least April 17, limiting restaurants to take-out and delivery only and indefinitely closing movie theaters, bowling alleys, casinos, hair salons and other businesses.
A stay-at-home order, Hutchinson said, would mean closing Little Rock-based Dillard’s stores, sporting good stores, “mall-type clothing” stores and other businesses.
“Right now, their business is probably down 80 percent, [according to] reports I get, but they’re able to use some employees to serve a minimal number of customers and also to do their online shopping,” he said.
He said a stay-at-home order would also create confusion about which businesses can stay open.
California’s order, for instance, directs residents to stay home unless they are needed on the job to support “critical infrastructure.”
A 13-page document by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency lists hundreds of classifications of workers whose jobs are considered essential, including those who work in health care, law enforcement, agriculture, grocery stores, utilities, transportation, plumbing, electricity, media and other fields.
Residents also are allowed to leave for other necessary trips, such as going to the grocery store, pharmacy or doctor’s office.
If he instituted a stay-athome order immediately, “over 700,000 Arkansans would get up and go to work” the next day, he said.
Meanwhile, he estimated 100,000 Arkansans would lose their jobs, adding to the tens of thousands who have already been laid off.
“We’re trying to make good judgments based upon good public health data that is scientifically based and that makes sense in Arkansas,” he said.
GROWTH “FLATTENED”
Department of Health Secretary Nate Smith said coronavirus cases are increasing in every state, including those implementing stay-at-home orders, and the rate of growth in Arkansas “has at least recently flattened out.”
Such orders might make more sense for a more densely populated state, he said. But so far, he said, they haven’t proven to be effective in other states or countries where similar orders have been implemented.
“I think what we’re trying to accomplish here is not to be like every other state or to tick off a box saying that we’re a stay-at-home state,” Smith said. “What we’re trying to do is to flatten that curve.”
Rep. Denise Garner, D-Fayetteville, said Thursday the restrictions in the state haven’t gone far enough.
“We need to act decisively now, so that we can minimize the duration and long-term impact of this virus,” Garner, a retired nurse practitioner, said. “While our efforts so far have made some difference and have been well intentioned, it’s clear that far too many people are disregarding guidance to stay home and avoid crowds.
“Arkansas needs to focus on shutting down all but essential activities, providing food and economic support to people for the duration of the crisis, and then on re-building and re-starting our economy. With each day we delay, we are making our own crisis worse.”
Dillard’s spokesman Julie Johnson Guymon and Hutchinson’s office didn’t
respond to an inquiry about whether Dillard’s has weighed in with Hutchinson on the issue of a stay-at-home order.
The retailer remains among the few department stores that haven’t closed amid the coronavirus pandemic.
It employs about 38,000 people, including 3,000 people at eight stores in Arkansas and its corporate headquarters, Guymon said.
“We believe we can safely serve the customers who choose to visit us by strictly following [U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] guidelines,” Guymon said in an email. She noted that all customers also can order from the company’s website.
“We implemented ship from store in August of 2019 and this enhancement is serving us well in the current situation,” she said.
STATES RANKED
Health officials in Arkansas and elsewhere have focused on limiting the spread of the virus so hospitals aren’t overwhelmed when infections peak.
Their knowledge about the spread of the virus has been limited a scarcity of supplies to do tests.
According to data from the Covid Tracking Project, which collects information from state health departments, Arkansas, as of Wednesday afternoon, ranked 34th in the number of coronavirus tests completed in proportion to its population.
The 584 Arkansans who tested positive translated into a rate of 1.9 identified cases per 10,000 residents, the 35th-highest rate among the states and Washington, D.C.
With 10 deaths at that time, the state’s number of deaths per 10,000 residents was the 38th-highest.
NURSING HOME DEATH
Smith said of the Arkansans who died most recently from the coronavirus, one was a resident of Briarwood Nursing and Rehabilitation in Little Rock and the other was a central Arkansas resident under age 65.
Pulaski County Coroner Gerone Hobbs said a 94-yearold woman had died at the home shortly after 9 p.m. Wednesday.
A precise cause of death wasn’t immediately provided, Hobbs said. He said his records, provided by the nursing home, only showed the woman had been screened as positive for “exposure” to covid-19, rather definitively showing she contracted the virus.
He said the woman’s death was the only one of a resident at the home since 83-year-old Alice Jett died of the coronavirus on Monday morning at CHI St. Vincent Infirmary in Little Rock.
A total of 37 residents have tested positive for covid-19, Smith said.
He said the number of nursing home staff members there and elsewhere who have tested positive has risen to 24.
Those include 15 staff members at Briarwood; four at The Waters of White Hall, where eight residents have also tested positive; three staff at The Villages of General Baptist West in Pine Bluff, where two residents have tested positive; one at Newton County Nursing Home in Jasper; and one at The Lakes of Maumelle Health and Rehabilitation.
Meanwhile, the Van Buren County coroner confirmed Thursday the sixth person in the state who died of the coronavirus was Samuel Stone, a 75-year-old member of Greers Ferry First Assembly of God Church, where more than three dozen members have tested positive for the virus.
According to his obituary, Stone died Sunday in his Fairfield Bay home.
Two other members of the church have also died from the virus: Bill Barton, 90, of Greers Ferry, who was a door greeter at the church, on March 24, and Terry Henderson, 73, of Edgemont the next day.
The infections of church members were discovered in the weeks after two out-ofstate visitors led a children’s event there March 6-8.
Out of the 12 people in the state who have died from the coronavirus, four were adults under age 65, and the others were older, Smith said.
FOUR NEW COUNTIES
As of Thursday evening, cases had been reported in 59 of Arkansas’ 75 counties, including the first reported in Mississippi, Monroe, Ouachita and Sharp counties.
The number rose by 13, to 126, in Pulaski County, which had the highest total and largest increase.
The cases rose by seven each in Lonoke and White counties, bringing the total to 13 in Lonoke County and 22 in White county.
Saline County and Garland counties each had increase of four, bringing the total to 18 in Saline County and 37 in Garland County
In Cleburne County, where Greers Ferry First Assembly of God Church is located, one additional case was reported, bringing the county’s total to
64.
The cases increased by two, to 42, in Benton County; by the same number, to 38 in Faulkner County; and by one, to 32, in Crittenden County.
Jefferson County had 49 cases, the same total as the previous evening.
The number of coronavirus patients who were hospitalized in Arkansas as of Thursday afternoon rose by 10, to 66, from a day earlier, while the number who were on ventilators fell by two, to
23.
The number of health care workers who had tested positive rose by seven, to 91. That total includes 10 physicians, 26 nurses and four nurse assistants, Smith said.
The others are a combination of licensed and unlicensed workers, and the Health Department is still gathering information on some of their job duties, Smith said.
Those who had tested positive as of Thursday afternoon included 20 children, 183 people age 65 or older and 440 people age 18-64.
By the evening, 50 people were listed as having recovered, meaning they meaning that at least a week had passed since they fell ill and that they hadn’t had symptoms for at least three days.
NO RENTAL ACTION
Despite the number of people who have lost their jobs, Hutchinson said he didn’t see a need yet take action to prevent evictions.
“There is a practical moratorium already on evictions,” he said. “The courts aren’t open. The process servers are not going out doing that kind of contact.”
He said he had also spoken to landlords and tenants who told him landlords are being “more than accommodating” to renters who can’t make a rent payment for reasons related to the pandemic.
Once out-of-work renters get their unemployment check or disaster relief from the federal government, however, he said, they should pay their rent so that properties don’t end up in foreclosure. Information for this story was contributed by Francisca Jones, Bill Bowden and Eric Besson of the