The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

‘Truly alarming’: Officials order shutdown over virus spike

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » With a spike in coronaviru­s cases expected to continue growing, Allegheny County, home to Pittsburgh and 1.2 million residents, imposed a one-week shutdown of bars and restaurant­s and all gatherings of more than 25 people starting Friday.

The order is to take effect after midnight Thursday, the county’s health director, Dr. Debra Bogen, said, ahead of the July Fourth holiday when health officials fear that the virus will spread through packed holiday celebratio­ns.

Bogen also asked Allegheny County residents to follow a voluntary stayat-home protocol, limiting travel outside the home to necessitie­s.

The order came as Pennsylvan­ia reported its highest one-day total of confirmed coronaviru­s cases since May, and Allegheny County reported its highest one-day total of positive tests that more than doubled the previous high.

On Twitter, Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, who lives in Allegheny County, called Thursday’s figure “truly alarming.” Allegheny County officials said the increase was larger than expected and that they expected another significan­t increase in Friday’s report.

Health officials in Philadelph­ia and Allegheny County say they are finding that many of the people testing positive are describing socializin­g in bars and returning from beach vacations and travel to coronaviru­s hot spots in other parts of the U.S.

“The trend among new cases remains consistent,” Allegheny County said of the hundreds of cases that health personnel have investigat­ed in recent days. “They are younger people who traveled out of state or who visited bars and restaurant­s in and around the county.”

In addition to bars and restaurant­s, the order also shuts down the county’s only casino. However, it allows take-out and delivery service.

The ban on gatherings applies to meetings, concerts, festivals, sporting events, movies and theater performanc­es, but exempts religious gatherings.

The move is perhaps the most severe measure taken since Gov. Tom Wolf, a Democrat, began relaxing his pandemic restrictio­ns in stages across Pennsylvan­ia, including a stay-athome order, two months ago.

Wolf’s administra­tion on Wednesday expanded his mask-wearing order to help suppress outbreaks, drawing harsh criticism from Republican lawmakers that he is acting like a dictator and complaints that it is exposing business owners to lawsuits.

Allegheny County reported more than 230 new coronaviru­s cases Thursday. Statewide, Wolf’s administra­tion reported more than 830 people newly testing positive for COVID-19, bringing the statewide total to above 88,000.

It also reported another 25 coronaviru­s-related deaths for a statewide total of 6,712 since early March.

While Pennsylvan­ia’s hospitaliz­ations for the virus are below where they were a week ago, according to state statistics, an Associated Press analysis of state data shows the percentage of people testing positive has risen in the past week.

Allegheny County’s percentage of positive tests and hospitaliz­ations are on the rise.

The county, Pennsylvan­ia’s second-most populous after Philadelph­ia, had avoided the higher case counts that hit Philadelph­ia and much of eastern Pennsylvan­ia in the spring. But over the weekend, Allegheny County officials ordered a halt to drinking alcohol in bars and restaurant­s in response to a spike in positive tests.

In an interview on KDKA-AM radio in Pittsburgh on Thursday, Gov. Tom Wolf’s top health adviser, Health Secretary Rachel Levine, was asked if now is the time is try herd immunity.

She said no, warning that the disease can make even younger adults very sick.

“We know that significan­t numbers of people get very sick from the virus, not just seniors, but younger adults as well, in their 20s, 30s and 40s, and that would overwhelm the hospitals,” Levine said.

It also would lead to more cases in nursing homes, Levine said, citing academic researcher­s who found that outbreaks in nursing homes are driven most by how widespread the virus is in the community around it.

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People gather at the Porch in the Oakland neighborho­od of Pittsburgh on Sunday, June 28. In response to the recent spike in COVID-19cases in Allegheny County, health officials are ordering all bars and restaurant­s in the county to stop the sale of alcohol for on-site consumptio­n.
GENE J. PUSKAR - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People gather at the Porch in the Oakland neighborho­od of Pittsburgh on Sunday, June 28. In response to the recent spike in COVID-19cases in Allegheny County, health officials are ordering all bars and restaurant­s in the county to stop the sale of alcohol for on-site consumptio­n.

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