Rome News-Tribune

Gov. Brian Kemp lifts more COVID-19 restrictio­ns for Ga.

♦ Sports leagues and convention­s are among the activities restarting.

- By Beau Evans Capitol Beat News Service

Vice President Mike Pence eats lunch with Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp and his wife Marty Kemp at the Star Cafe, on May 22 in Atlanta. Pence said Georgia was “leading the way” and the country was making progress against the coronaviru­s.

Gov. Brian Kemp moved late Thursday to ease more social distancing restrictio­ns for businesses amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, including ending capacity limits for restaurant­s and lifting the shelter-in-place order for many people 65-years and older.

The governor is also allowing live performanc­e venues and large convention spaces to reopen on July 1 so long as they meet some distancing and sanitizing requiremen­ts. Bars will also be allowed to have the greater of up to 50 patrons or 35% of their full capacity, starting June 16.

Profession­al, youth and amateur sports teams will also be allowed to resume games and practices starting June 16 so long as their respective leagues allow it, according to the governor’s office. Sports leagues have previously been advised that they may draft their own distancing and cleanlines­s rules.

Seniors in long-term care facilities and those with chronic health conditions including lung disease, moderate to severe asthma, severe heart diseases, compromise­d immune systems and diabetes are still under a shelter-inplace order through June 30.

Overnight summer camps will be allowed starting June 16 so long as campers and staff can show proof that they tested negative for coronaviru­s before arriving at camp. Day camps and summer school classes have already been allowed to resume.

The limit on restaurant gatherings, previously set at a maximum of 25 people, will be eliminated entirely starting June 16. Seating arrangemen­ts need to allow for 6 feet of space between groups, according to Kemp’s order.

“For salad bars and buffets, a worker can use cafeterias­tyle service to serve patrons or the establishm­ent can provide hand sanitizer, install a sneeze guard, enforce social distancing and regularly replace shared utensils to allow patron self-service,” said a news release from Kemp’s office.

Bars, bowling alleys, barbers, salons, gyms, movie theaters and amusement parks will be allowed to reopen as of Friday if they have not done so yet, pending certain safety requiremen­ts.

The latest round of restrictio­n easing comes as Kemp continues pulling back on drastic measures put in place in April to curb the spread of coronaviru­s. He has cited the need to jump-start the state’s flagging economy, touting a decrease in hospitaliz­ations and infection rates to back his decisions.

As of Thursday afternoon, nearly 55,000 people in Georgia had tested positive for COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel strain of coronaviru­s that sparked a global pandemic. It had killed 2,375 Georgians.

Health experts across the country have warned local communitie­s could see an uptick in infections following Memorial Day festivitie­s late last month and as state officials peel back business and distancing requiremen­ts.

Those experts, including Georgia’s top public health official, Dr. Kathleen Toomey, have urged people to continue wearing face masks and keep their distance from each other when in public areas.

“We are still battling a pandemic and we need to stay vigilant,” Kemp said at a news conference last week. “Continue to keep your distance, wash your hands and do all the other things we have been saying for weeks and weeks now.”

 ?? Rob Crilly/the Washington Examiner via AP, Pool, File ??
Rob Crilly/the Washington Examiner via AP, Pool, File

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