The Denver Post

Memorial Day weekend draws crowds and triggers warnings

- By Curt Anderson and Brian Mahoney

The Memorial Day weekend marking the unofficial start of summer in the U.S. meant big crowds at beaches and warnings from authoritie­s Sunday about people disregardi­ng the coronaviru­s social-distancing rules and risking a resurgence of the scourge that has killed nearly 100,000 Americans.

Meanwhile, the White House broadened its travel ban against countries hardhit by the virus by saying it would deny admission to foreigners who have recently been in Brazil.

Sheriff’s deputies and beach patrols tried to make sure people kept their distance from others as they soaked up the rays on the sand and at parks and other recreation sites around the country.

In the Tampa area along Florida’s Gulf Coast, the crowds were so big that authoritie­s took the extraordin­ary step of closing parking lots because they were full.

On the Sunday talk shows, Dr. Deborah Birx, coordinato­r of the White House coronaviru­s task force, said she was “very concerned” about scenes of people crowding together during the weekend.

“We really want to be clear all the time that social distancing is absolutely critical. And if you can’t social-distance and you’re outside, you must wear a mask,” she said on ABC’s “This Week.”

In Missouri, people packed bars and restaurant­s at the Lake of the Ozarks, a vacation spot popular with Chicagoans.

In Daytona Beach, Fla., gunfire erupted Saturday night along a beachside road where more than 200 people had gathered and were seen partying and dancing despite the restrictio­ns. Several people were wounded and taken to a hospital, authoritie­s said.

“We got slammed. Disney is closed. Universal is closed. Everything is closed. So where did everybody come with the first warm day with 50% opening? Everybody came to the beach,” Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood said at a Sunday news conference, referring to crowds in the Daytona Beach area.

But officials in California said most people were covering their faces and keeping their distance even as they ventured to beaches and parks. Many Southern California beaches were open only for swimming, running and other activities.

Sunbathing and group activities such as volleyball were prohibited.

At New York’s Orchard Beach in the Bronx, kids played with toys, and people sat in folding chairs. Some wore winter coats on a cool and breezy day, and many wore masks and sat apart from others.

“Good to be outside. Fresh air. Just good to enjoy the outdoors,” said Danovan Clacken, whose face was covered.

The U.S. is on track to surpass 100,000 coronaviru­s deaths in the next few days, while Europe has seen more than 169,000 dead, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University that almost certainly understate­s the toll. Worldwide, more than 5.3 million people have been infected and 342,000 have died.

The New York Times marked the horror by devoting Sunday’s entire front page to a long list of names of those who have died in the United States. The headline: “An Incalculab­le Loss.”

Meanwhile, President Donald Trump, who went golfing for the second day in a row after not playing for weeks, said on the syndicated Sunday program “Full Measure With Sharyl Attkisson” that he is feeling fine after a two-week course of the unproven drug hydroxychl­oroquine and a zinc supplement.

The president has spent weeks pushing the drug against the advice of many of his administra­tion’s top medical profession­als.

Hydroxychl­oroquine can have deadly side effects.

The issue of wearing masks in public and staying several feet apart has become fraught politicall­y, with some Americans protesting such rules as a violation of their rights.

Repubican Gov. Mike DeWine of Ohio, who has been targeted by such demonstrat­ions, insisted the precaution­s should not be a partisan issue.

“This is not about whether you are liberal or conservati­ve, left or right, Republican or Democrat,” DeWine said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “Its been very clear what the studies have shown, you wear the mask not to protect yourself so much as to protect others.”

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