The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

City weighs more action to keep people home

- By Stephen Deere sdeere@ajc.com

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and several Atlanta City Council members expressed concern Tuesday that many city residents aren’t following the mayor’s stay-at-home order, and are impairing the city’s ability to contain the coronaviru­s.

During a conference call in which Bottoms updated council members of the city’s coronaviru­s response, they discussed people congregati­ng in parks to play football, in churches to worship and at a birthday party for a 95-year-old grandfathe­r.

Bottoms said she drove the entire length of Martin Luther King Jr. Drive on Monday, and was disturbed by the interactio­ns she witnessed.

“It’s very clear that the messaging is still not reso- nating with many people,” Bottoms said.

Bottoms also told the coun- cil that more than a dozen city employees have tested positive for the virus, including seven police officers.

Councilman Michael Julian Bond reported that his aunt died on Monday from the virus an hour after he spoke with her. He implored Bottoms to shut down parks, the Beltline and other city trails where people come in close proximity to each another.

“It’s like business as usual, people being out,” Bond said. “This is a very serious circumstan­ce. It can take anybody’s life.”

Bottoms said she hasn’t closed city parks or trails based on the advice of Dr. Carlos Del Rio, a professor in Emory University’s Division of Infectious Diseases. The mayor said she wouldn’t hesitate to do so if Del Rio instructs her.

“I’m a lawyer,” Bottoms said. “I’m not an infectious disease expert.”

In an email to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on on Tuesday, Del Rio said parks and the Beltline present a com- plicated problem.

“I am trying to avoid having to lose them as I believe it is important for people to be able to go outside and exercise,” Del Rio said, adding that team sports should clearly be avoided.

“I suggested to the Mayor that she ‘strongly encourage’ practicing social distancing in parks and the Beltline and that she considers a schedule in which maybe ‘vulnerable population­s’ may walk at certain times and families and runners at other times, much like grocery stores are doing,” Del Rio said. “The concern is obviously how to enforce this. I am looking at other cities and talking to others and, it may well be that we end up soon recommendi­ng that they are closed down.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? People venture onto the Beltline on Sunday despite a stayat-home order in Atlanta. “It’s very clear that the messaging is still not resonating with many people,” Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM People venture onto the Beltline on Sunday despite a stayat-home order in Atlanta. “It’s very clear that the messaging is still not resonating with many people,” Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said.

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