The Maui News

Honolulu mayor wants eased coronaviru­s restrictio­ns despite cases uptick

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HONOLULU (AP) — Honolulu’s mayor wants to change Oahu’s coronaviru­s guidelines to allow for less restrictio­ns despite a growing number of COVID-19 cases on the island.

Each county in Hawaii sets forth guidelines for when to impose certain restrictio­ns based on positive case counts. Under the current scheme on Oahu, Hawaii’s most populated island, tighter restrictio­ns should be triggered by a seven-day average of 50 to 100 cases.

The island has had an average of more than 50 cases per day for the past week, The Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported Wednesday.

That should trigger a return to tighter restrictio­ns, but Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi said Monday he was “dead set” against rolling back.

“We feel very confident on where we are in regards to vaccinatio­ns, our hospitaliz­ations,” said Blangiardi.

Oahu moved into tier three of the county’s four-tier system in late February after being in the more restrictiv­e tier two since October.

Blangiardi sent a request to Gov. David Ige asking that criteria for tier three be increased to a seven-day average case count of 50 to 100, the current guideline for tighter restrictio­ns under tier two.

“If we can just stay in the range that we’re at, if we continue to vaccinate like this, we’re going to pull through,” Blangiardi said. “We’re in a very different set of circumstan­ces at this time now than we were just 90 days ago.”

Tier three allows for social gatherings of up to 10 people, restaurant­s to seat up to 10 per table — an increase from five in tier two — and for gyms to operate at 50 percent capacity instead of 25 percent.

Blangiardi also made changes to tier three in March to allow bars to reopen and operate until midnight and to allow outdoor youth sports to resume.

He also made changes to allow outdoor weddings with up to 100 people as long as face masks are worn, temperatur­es checked and dancers stay socially distanced.

The decision about whether or not to allow the change is up to the governor.

Average daily cases for Oahu have increased by 42 percent over two weeks.

It is the wrong time to ease restrictio­ns, said Tim Brown, an infectious-disease modeler and senior fellow at the EastWest Center.

“I’m concerned because we are continuing to see this community spread,” Brown said. “Vaccine-wise, we’re still far from where I’d like to be.”

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