The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Wolf loosens restrictio­ns in last of counties except Lebanon

- By Mark Scolforo and Michael Rubinkam

HARRISBURG » Heavily populated regions of Pennsylvan­ia that were among the hardest hit by the coronaviru­s pandemic will move next week into the “green” phase of Gov. Tom Wolf’s reopening plan, meaning gyms, salons and theaters can reopen and people can gather in larger groups, his administra­tion announced Friday.

The move leaves a single Pennsylvan­ia county — Lebanon County, where local GOP leaders reopened early in defiance of the Democratic governor and virus cases have been rising since late May — under tighter pandemic restrictio­ns.

The 12 counties going from yellow to green under Wolf’s color-colored reopening system include Philadelph­ia and its collar suburbs of Montgomery, Bucks, Chester and Delaware counties.

Other counties moving to green next week will be Lehigh and Northampto­n in the Lehigh Valley; Erie County, where local officials have pressed for looser restrictio­ns; Lackawanna and Susquehann­a counties in the northeast; and Berks and Lancaster.

The changes will encompass the cities of Allentown, Bethlehem, Erie, Scranton, Lancaster and Reading.

In the green zone, spas, gyms, barbers, theaters, casinos, malls and similar venues can reopen at reduced capacity. Bars and restaurant­s may allow indoor dining, also at reduced capacity. Gatherings of up to 250 people are permitted in green zones.

Wolf, a Democrat, said local officials in Philadelph­ia will maintain some additional restrictio­ns for an additional week, until July 3.

The only county left in the yellow zone is Lebanon County in central Pennsylvan­ia. In a news release, the Wolf administra­tion blamed Republican county officials for voting to open about a month ago.

“Lebanon County’s partisan, politicall­y driven decision to ignore public health experts and reopen prematurel­y is having severe consequenc­es for the health and safety of county residents,”

Wolf’s health secretary, Dr. Rachel Levine, said in the release. “Case counts have escalated and the county is not yet ready to be reopened. Lebanon County has hindered its progress by reopening too early.”

The number of new infections in Lebanon County per 14-day reporting period has more than doubled since late May.

Four Republican state lawmakers from the area released an open letter to Lebanon County residents that said the decision was motivated more by politics than concerns about public health.

“They own the so-called ‘data,’ they disseminat­e the ‘data,’ they use this same ‘data’ to bully those who do not comply or who challenge their authority,” wrote Sen. Dave Arnold and Reps. Sue Helm, Frank Ryan and Russ Diamond.

They said Wolf “deserves only to be ignored.”

Diamond was prime sponsor of a resolution passed by both chambers earlier this month to end Wolf’s shutdown. The state Supreme Court will decide whether the resolution carries any legal weight.

The May 15 decision by the GOP-controlled Lebanon County Board of Commission­ers to lift restrictio­ns on their own — without Wolf’s blessing — sparking a political row as the governor threatened to withhold COVID-19 funding from Lebanon and other rebellious counties. Wolf has not followed through, a spokeswoma­n said Friday.

A message was left seeking comment from the Lebanon County commission­ers.

Democratic Commission­er Jo Ellen Litz, who voted against the majority’s reopening plan, called Friday a “sad day” and, in a message to county residents, urged them to wear masks and stay away from each other “religiousl­y” for the next two weeks to give the county a chance to move to green.

“We need to work together,” she wrote.

In other coronaviru­s-related developmen­ts Friday:

CASES

The state Department of Health reported 38 additional coronaviru­s deaths, raising the statewide total to 6,399.

Health officials also reported 526 new infections, bringing the statewide total to more than 80,750.

The number of infections is thought to be far higher than the state’s confirmed case count because many people have not been tested, and studies suggest people can be infected without feeling sick. There is no data on how many people have fully recovered.

 ?? LINDSEY SHUEY/THE REPUBLICAN-HERALD VIA AP ?? Kelly Lecher, owner of BeeHive Hair Salon, talks about her midnight reopening in her salon in Pottsville on Thursday, June 18. Schuylkill County moved to the green phase Friday, June 19, which means that hair salons can resume operations.
LINDSEY SHUEY/THE REPUBLICAN-HERALD VIA AP Kelly Lecher, owner of BeeHive Hair Salon, talks about her midnight reopening in her salon in Pottsville on Thursday, June 18. Schuylkill County moved to the green phase Friday, June 19, which means that hair salons can resume operations.
 ?? SEAN SIMMERS/THE PATRIOT-NEWS VIA AP ?? Nursing home worker Molly Brechtel of Erie, Pa. stands in front of over 3,400tea lights on the steps of the state Capitol in Harrisburg, Thursday, June 18, to represent the women and men who have died of COVID-19 in Pennsylvan­ia nursing homes. The event was part of a National Nursing Home Day of Action.
SEAN SIMMERS/THE PATRIOT-NEWS VIA AP Nursing home worker Molly Brechtel of Erie, Pa. stands in front of over 3,400tea lights on the steps of the state Capitol in Harrisburg, Thursday, June 18, to represent the women and men who have died of COVID-19 in Pennsylvan­ia nursing homes. The event was part of a National Nursing Home Day of Action.

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