Orlando Sentinel

DeSantis’ order: Stay home

Directive for all Florida residents begins at 12:01 a.m. Friday Edict comes as state’s COVID-19 cases climb to nearly 7,800 ‘It makes sense to make this move now,’ governor says

- By Gray Rohrer and Steven Lemongello

TALLAHASSE­E — Gov. Ron DeSantis is ordering all Floridians to stay at home beginning at 12:01 a.m. Friday, a decision that came after mounting pressure from health officials and other critics to lock down the state in the fight against the coronaviru­s.

Florida had been the only state with more than 5,000 cases without such an order, with DeSantis insisting that localized orders for South Florida and by individual cities and counties were sufficient.

But by Wednesday, the state had nearly 7,800 cases and was seeing one of the biggest day-overday increases in the country.

DeSantis said at a Tallahasse­e news conference that he would order for Floridians to “limit movements and personal interactio­n outside the home” to just essential services and activities.

“It makes sense to make this move now,” DeSantis said.

The order includes exceptions for “essential services” – getting food, medical supplies, hospital visits and working for crucial industries like grocery stores and pharmacies, for example. Religious services in houses of worship are also permitted, as are recreation­al activities such as fishing, hunting, walking, running, biking and swimming.

Caring for pets also is specifical­ly permitted, the order says.

“A social gathering in a public place is not an essential activity,” the order states. “Local jurisdicti­ons shall ensure that groups of people greater than 10 are not permitted to congregate in any public place.”

Less than 24 hours earlier, DeSantis was defending his decision not to issue a statewide order. He argued he didn’t have any power

to enforce it and that local government “buy-in” would be critical for enforcemen­t. DeSantis’ order supersedes all local stay-athome mandates already in place, but city and county government­s can impose stricter rules if they want.

The state order expires on April 30, though at least one major study out of the University of Washinton predicted Florida’s peak for coronaviru­s cases would be May 3.

The governor said President Trump had agreed with him on his previous focus on the state’s “hotspots,” but added, “it seems like he understood” the new order.

DeSantis cited Trump’s announceme­nt Tuesday that social distancing should last until May as one reason for moving forward with the statewide order.

“It’s another 30-day situation,” DeSantis said. “And we’ve got to do what makes sense.”

The move comes as DeSantis was taking increasing criticism from not only Florida Democrats but also health experts and some Republican­s for being one of the last governors of a large state to issue a shutdown order.

“It is distressin­g that Governor Ron DeSantis waited until the coronaviru­s had spread to so many Floridians before finally issuing a statewide stay-at-home order,” Florida Democratic Party Chair Terrie Rizzo said in a statement. “I hope this will finally slow the rise in infections and that his actions are not too late.”

On Wednesday, U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams

told NBC that Trump’s guidelines, which predicted estimates of between 100,000 to 240,000 deaths nationally if all states took strict measures, were a de facto order to stay home.

“My advice to America would be that these guidelines are a national stay-athome order,” Adams said.

DeSantis has ordered bars and nightclubs to close, issued stay home orders for South Florida, limited restaurant­s to take out and delivery only and banned non-emergency medical procedures. But he said Tuesday that he hadn’t received an explicit recommenda­tion from the White House’ coronaviru­s task force to issue a statewide order.

“The task force has not recommende­d that to me, if they do obviously that would be something that would carry a lot of weight with me,” DeSantis said Tuesday.

Nikki Fried, the state agricultur­e commission­er and lone Democrat in the Florida Cabinet, who said the order was weeks in the making, was conciliato­ry towards DeSantis.

“When I called for this stay-at-home order nearly two weeks ago, there was a reason,” Fried said in a statement. “It was necessary to flatten the curve and save lives. I said then I would stand with the governor when he issued the order, and I do so now. Thank you, Governor, for making the right call.”

Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings said DeSantis should have acted sooner and that he will continue to act in any way possible to save lives in Orange County.

Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer agreed.

“I think the governor

came under a lot of pressure to act in the manner that we did 10 days ago,” Dyer said. “The governor did the right thing today.”

Seminole Commission Chairman Jay Zembower said the county is still in the process of receiving the governor’s order “and how it relates to what we’ve put in place.”

“I think a lot of us will be grateful across the entire state [about the governor’s order] and so we don’t have a puzzle of orders across the state,” Zembower added.

Alan Harris, Seminole’s emergency director, said that Seminole’s executive order limits businesses capacity and required people to stand 6 feet apart.

“Seminole County’s is going to be a little more strict,” Harris said. “In our county, you must have the markings on ground.”

In Volusia County, which had no county shutdown order and where beaches remain open, there was mixed reaction from county commission­ers.

Volusia Commission­er Billie Wheeler said in an email that DeSantis “has had Florida’s well-being always first on his list. I am sure this decision did not come easily, nor without much consultati­on throughout.”

But Volusia Commission­er Heather Post said the order came much too late.

“I’ve had deep concerns over the mixed messages about COVID-19 being provided on many fronts and adversely, the mixed reactions/actions from citizens,” Post said in an email. “I have been calling on residents to STAY HOME unless ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY.”

DeSantis also announced he would accelerate several road projects across the state to take advantage of the lighter traffic amid the stay-at-home order, including one in Orlando on Sand Lake Road.

The state transporta­tion department has several widening and improvemen­t projects underway along the normally busy tourist corridor of Sand Lake Road in south Orange County, spanning from west of Internatio­nal Drive to east of Florida’s Turnpike.

A section starting at Internatio­nal Drive was chosen for an accelerate­d schedule, according to the governor’s initiative. The cost of that work was not immediatel­y available.

But DeSantis’ order did not include the overhaul of Interstate 4. It started in 2015 with a budget of $2.3 billion and a scheduled finish in spring 2021. But work on Central Florida’s busiest road has fallen behind and over budget and has been disrupted by the deaths of five workers on the job.

The state recently confirmed that convention­al lanes without tolls will open next year and that newly added toll lanes will be ready for use in 2022.

“It’s another 30day situation. And we’ve got to do what makes sense.”

Gov. Ron DeSantis

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