The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Lockdowns closed 30% of Pa. businesses

- By Christen Smith

Federal data shows pandemic restrictio­ns forced three in 10 businesses statewide to close, at least temporaril­y.

(THE CENTER SQUARE) » Federal data shows pandemic restrictio­ns forced three in 10 businesses statewide to close, at least temporaril­y, ranking Pennsylvan­ia second only to Michigan in terms of economic lockdown impacts.

Still, the number of businesses that received federal aid in Pennsylvan­ia for complying with these closures didn’t even crack the top 20, leaving many employees seeking jobless benefits in a system too crowded to handle the influx of workers — more than 1.2 million in March and April alone — witnessed at the onset of the pandemic.

Sen. Camera Bartolotta, R-Monongahel­a, blamed one person alone for the state’s lagging economy — Gov. Tom Wolf.

“The statistics clearly show the Wolf Administra­tion forced too many businesses to close, kept those businesses closed for far too long, and did not do enough to help the business owners and employees who were deeply affected by the Administra­tion’s unilateral orders,” she said. “We all recognize that certain precaution­s must be taken during a pandemic, but Gov. Wolf’s mismanagem­ent of the response to this crisis over the past several months is a big reason why many Pennsylvan­ians have zero faith in the decisions he is making now.”

Those decisions — including a three-week ban on indoor dining and drinking, youth sports and extracurri­cular activities and gatherings of more than 10 people — came last week as COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations eclipsed 5,500. That number exceeded 6,000 as of Tuesday as Secretary of Health Dr. Rachel Levine said more than half of the state’s 509,000 cases have only been diagnosed within the last six weeks.

“The situation is dire,” Wolf said Thursday. “It’s worse than it was in the spring [when] we had to flatten the curve.”

He said the latest measures, set to expire Jan. 4, 2021, will help accomplish three goals: slowing the virus’s spread, prevent caseloads from overwhelmi­ng hospitals and ensure residents survive the holiday season as “we move closer to a widely available vaccine — as safely as possible.”

“It’s not the government that’s doing this,” he said last week. “It’s not me. It’s dictated by the virus.”

Levine said Monday the continued restrictio­ns on restaurant­s and bars — decimated by nine months of pandemic regulation­s — are based on science, a notion that many Republican legislator­s and industry representa­tives refute.

“It’s been very clearly shown for months and months how restaurant­s and bars can share in significan­t spread of COVID-19,” she said. “You cannot eat or drink with a mask on. Depending on the ventilatio­n system, it’s very easy to spread.”

“We are not trying to target that industry,” she added.

Bartolotta said the administra­tion’s unwillingn­ess to collaborat­e with lawmakers about economic restrictio­ns means many businesses stayed closed “much longer than necessary.”

Even now, as the unemployme­nt rate lags the national average, businesses still can’t recover from the unilateral shutdowns of last spring.

“And the businesses that were strong enough to survive the early months of the pandemic now face even greater threats of bankruptcy and financial ruin because of his new shutdowns,” she said. “We have long said that we can protect lives and livelihood­s, and these goals do not need to be mutually exclusive. Unfortunat­ely, the governor’s go-it-alone, onesize-fits-all approach has protected neither lives nor livelihood­s.”

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 ?? COURTESY OF COMMONWEAL­TH MEDIA SERVICES ?? Lockdowns ordered by Gov. Tom Wolf have failed to curb the spread of COVID-19 but have decimated small businesses across Pennsylvan­ia.
COURTESY OF COMMONWEAL­TH MEDIA SERVICES Lockdowns ordered by Gov. Tom Wolf have failed to curb the spread of COVID-19 but have decimated small businesses across Pennsylvan­ia.

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