Santa Fe New Mexican

Bars, strip clubs, churches: Virus outbreaks enter unwieldy phase

- By Sarah Mervosh, Mitch Smith and Lucy Tompkins

PITTSBURGH — After months of lockdown in which outbreaks of the coronaviru­s often centered in nursing homes, prisons and meatpackin­g plants, the nation is entering a new and uncertain phase of the pandemic. New COVID-19 clusters have been found in a Pentecosta­l church in Oregon, a strip club in Wisconsin and in every imaginable place in between.

In Baton Rouge, La., at least 100 people tested positive for the virus after visiting bars in the Tigerland nightlife district, popular among Louisiana State University students.

At a Christian summer camp near Colorado Springs, Colo., at least 11 employees fell ill just before the season’s opening, leading the camp to cancel overnight stays for the first time in 63 years.

And in Las Vegas, Nev., just weeks after casinos reopened, a handful of employees from casinos, restaurant­s and hotels have tested positive, and frightened workers Monday begged guests to wear masks in a news conference conducted over video.

The newly emerging clusters — which

vary in size from a handful of cases to hundreds and have cropped up in large cities as well as small towns — reflect the unpredicta­ble course of the coronaviru­s. They also underscore risks experts say are likely to persist as long as states try to reopen economies and Americans venture back into public without a vaccine.

New known virus cases were on the rise in 23 states Monday as the outlook worsened across much of the nation’s South and West. Hospitaliz­ations for the coronaviru­s reached their highest levels yet in the pandemic in Arizona and Texas, and Missouri reported its highest single-day case totals over the weekend.

Even as much of the Northeast and Midwest continued to see improvemen­t, there were signs of new spread in Ohio, where case numbers have started trending upward after weeks of improvemen­t, and in Pennsylvan­ia, where several counties have had troubling numbers of cases.

“This is exactly what most people would expect when you lift stay-at-home orders and isolation orders,” said Rebecca Christoffe­rson, an infectious-disease expert at Louisiana State University, who said reopening along with fatigue over social distancing for many Americans were creating new sorts of virus clusters.

“All of those things combined just make it a complex problem — human behavior, contact and virus,” she said. “You put it all in a big pot, and boom!”

The virus is now hitting places that had once escaped the worst of the pandemic, reflecting how a disease that initially ravaged urban centers like New York City has grown more widespread. Known cases now have been on the rise near places like McAllen, Texas; Charleston, S.C.; and Nogales, Ariz.

In Union County, Ore., a rural community of 27,000 about four hours from Portland, officials had recorded only eight cases of the virus by early June. By June 20, the tally had swelled to over 250. Most have been tied to an outbreak at a local church, the Lighthouse Pentecosta­l Church.

“It was a little bit surprising, because so many people for so long were following stayat-home,” said Paul Anderes, a Union County commission­er.

Houses of worship, which were once shut down under governors’ orders in many states, are now emerging as sources of major clusters. Outbreaks at churches have been reported in states including Alabama, Kansas and West Virginia.

Gov. Jim Justice of West Virginia, a Republican, said six outbreaks had been linked to churches in the state, including three that were still active as of last week. He said he had no plans to close churches, describing them as “the most sacred ground,” but also acknowledg­ed they posed a significan­t danger.

“The reality is really simple,” he said. When congregant­s do not adhere to wearing masks or sitting every other pew, he said, “we’re asking for it.”

Other vectors for the virus have swiftly emerged in the weeks after many states reopened businesses. At least four cases of the virus were tied to the Cruisin’ Chubbys Gentlemen’s Club in Wisconsin Dells, and several cases were linked to fraternity rush parties in Oxford, Miss.

In Las Vegas, one coronaviru­s case was reported among workers at The Linq Hotel + Experience on the Strip. Two more cases were identified among employees at Flamingo Las Vegas Hotel and Casino.

“I am very, very afraid,” said Diana Thomas, a guest room attendant at the Flamingo.

She said most guests had not been wearing masks, and she feared bringing the coronaviru­s home to her son, who is 21 and has asthma.

“I am a single parent,” Thomas said. “And for me to have my son get sick, no, that’s unacceptab­le.”

Cases have been on the rise since early June, including after casinos reopened on June 4. In Clark County, which includes Las Vegas, the daily average of new cases has doubled in two weeks, up from 124 to 250 on Sunday. Nevada reported its highest single-day increase in cases last week, at 452 cases.

The uptick comes after officials took steps to safely reopen tourism in a state where many workers depend on the hospitalit­y industry and a staggering 1 in 4 workers reported being unemployed in May. In the newly reopened casinos, dealers and players are separated by clear plastic dividers, and dice are doused in sanitizer after every throw. “It’s great that the tourists are coming back, but workers need to be safe,” said Florence Lee, who works at MGM Grand casino. “Please wear masks and social distance for us.”

As more segments of the nation reopen, predicting where new clusters will emerge has grown complex. Public health experts are closely watching group gatherings, which threaten to become “super spreader” events, as well as less understood circumstan­ces, in which certain people seem to be more predispose­d to transmit the virus.

“The characteri­stic of this virus — and this is what makes it so difficult to control — is that you do not necessaril­y have uniform spreading,” said Dr. Arnold Monto, a professor of epidemiolo­gy at the University of Michigan School of Public Health. “It’s erratic.”

 ?? BRIDGET BENNETT NEW YORK TIMES ?? A customer gambles Monday at Flamingo Las Vegas, Nev., hotel and casino.
BRIDGET BENNETT NEW YORK TIMES A customer gambles Monday at Flamingo Las Vegas, Nev., hotel and casino.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States