The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

With announceme­nt, county, cities have consistent coronaviru­s response

- By Arielle Kass akass@ajc.com

Late last week, Suwanee decided to close restaurant­s to sit-down dining. But elsewhere in Gwinnett County, eateries remained open.

That discrepanc­y was fixed Wednesday, with an announceme­nt from Gwinnett County leaders that finally ensures all county residents are subject to the same rules.

Until April 6, the county and its 16 cities ordered all restaurant­s, breweries and other dining facilities to stop letting people stay. They can remain open for takeout and delivery service, but not for dining. Additional­ly, gath- ering places like gyms, the- aters and bowling alleys were instructed to close.

The county and cities authorized officers to enforce the order, which goes further than Gov. Brian Kemp’s actions in response to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Charlotte Nash, the Gwinnett County Commission chair- man, said because the county provides police services in seven cities, it was important that there be consistenc­y for enforcemen­t. Additional­ly, about three-quarters of Gwin- nett County residents live in unincorpor­ated parts of the county — though they often identify with the closest city to them, causing more confusion about what rules stand.

Nash said once the cities all got on the phone together with county leaders, it wasn’t too difficult to come to an agree- ment. While she said some details may be different in the announceme­nts — Lawrencevi­lle, for example, made sure to mention ice cream shops in its announceme­nt — she said the “spirit and intent” of the rules will stay “as consistent as possible.”

“Folks don’t have to grapple with which set of rules actually applies,” she said. “It’s not just changing day to day, it’s changing hour by hour.”

Chuck Warbington, the Lawrencevi­lle city manager, said any further announceme­nts will also be consistent. He and Nash both said the group had discussed a stay-at-home order but had no plans yet to require residents to do so. Nash said there were additional steps the county was still able to take to contain the spread of COVID-19 before requiring that people stay in their houses.

Warbington said it was “surprising­ly easy” to get everyone to agree after conversati­ons started Monday. The decision to close restau- rants countywide came after requests to keep patrons at least 6 feet apart weren’t necessaril­y followed. Warbington said after Suwanee ordered its restaurant­s to close, many diners simply moved to a neighborin­g city that hadn’t yet establishe­d rules for eating out.

“It caused a problem,” he said.

Gwinnett has already said it will extend the deadline to renew business licenses until July 1 and would not collect excise taxes on alcohol sales through May until September.

Gwinnett County also calls for some changes to trash pickup. Bulky waste and yard waste collection­s will be stopped through April 7, and haulers will only collect bagged trash and recycling that is placed in bins through that day.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? An announceme­nt Wednesday from Gwinnett leaders ensures all county residents face the same rules. Until April 6, all restaurant­s, breweries and other dining facilities must stop letting people stay.
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM An announceme­nt Wednesday from Gwinnett leaders ensures all county residents face the same rules. Until April 6, all restaurant­s, breweries and other dining facilities must stop letting people stay.

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