The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Governors disregardi­ng White House guidelines on reopening

- By Michelle R. Smith, Nicky Forster and Christina A. Cassidy

Many governors across the U.S. are disregardi­ng or creatively interpreti­ng White House guidelines in easing their states’ lockdowns and letting businesses reopen, an Associated Press analysis found.

The AP determined that 17 states do not appear to meet one of the key benchmarks set by the White House for loosening up — a 14-day downward trajectory in new cases or infection rates. And yet many of those have begun to reopen or are about to do so, including Alabama, Kentucky, Maine, Mississipp­i, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Utah.

Because of the broad way in which the nonbinding guidelines are written, other states, including Georgia, have technicall­y managed to meet the criteria and reopen despite not seeing a steady decline in cases and deaths.

Asked at the White House on Thursday about states that are reopening without meeting some of the federal government’s benchmarks, President Donald Trump said: “The governors have great power as to that, given by us. We want them to do that. We rely on them. We trust them. And hopefully they are making the right decisions.”

The push to reopen across the country comes amid pressure from businesses that are collapsing by the day and workers who have been thrown out of a job. Over 33 million Americans have applied for unemployme­nt benefits over the past seven weeks, and a highly anticipate­d report on Friday is expected to show U.S. unemployme­nt as high as 16%, a level not seen since the Depression.

Elsewhere around the world, the Bank of England projected that Britain’s economy will shrink by 14 percent this year, its biggest decline since 1706, when Europe was embroiled in the War of the Spanish Succession.

The economic woes have affected even brand-name businesses, with Neiman Marcus filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, the first U.S. department store chain to be toppled by the outbreak.

The reopening debate in the U.S. echoes that underway in Europe, where regional and political rifts are emerging over how fast to lift the lid on the lockdowns.

French mayors are resisting the government’s call to reopen schools, while Italian governors want Rome to ease lockdown measures faster. As the British government looks to reopen the economy, Scottish leader Nicola Sturgeon has warned that acting too fast could let the virus wreak havoc again.

Public health experts around the world have cautioned that reopening too soon, without widespread testing and tracing, could enable the virus to come surging back with tragic consequenc­es.

The U.S. has recorded over 74,000 deaths and 1.2 million confirmed infections. But this week, University of Washington researcher­s nearly doubled their projection of deaths in the U.S. to about 134,000 through early August, largely to reflect the loosenings of stay-at-home restrictio­ns.

When Trump announced the guidelines April 16, he declared a “new front in our war” and said he was “establishi­ng clear scientific metrics and benchmarks on testing, new case growth and hospital capacity that must be met before advancing each phase.”

Since then, many states have reopened while daily cases and infection rates have either plateaued or continued to climb, the AP analysis found. Some states are going it alone, using their own criteria, not the White House’s.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man wearing a face mask to protect against the coronaviru­s walks past a closed Dolce & Gabbana store, May 7, in the Soho neighborho­od of Manhattan in New York. Nearly 3.2 million laid-off workers applied for unemployme­nt benefits last week as the business shutdowns caused by the coronaviru­s outbreak deepened the worst U.S. economic catastroph­e in decades.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A man wearing a face mask to protect against the coronaviru­s walks past a closed Dolce & Gabbana store, May 7, in the Soho neighborho­od of Manhattan in New York. Nearly 3.2 million laid-off workers applied for unemployme­nt benefits last week as the business shutdowns caused by the coronaviru­s outbreak deepened the worst U.S. economic catastroph­e in decades.

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