The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Restrictio­ns easing in 24 counties

Rural regions have seen far fewer infections, deaths than rest of the state

- By Marc Levy and Michael Rubinkam

About 1.5 million Pennsylvan­ia residents will be able to freely leave their homes next week, and retail shops and other businesses will be able to reopen, as Gov. Tom Wolf on Friday

lifted some pandemic restrictio­ns on 24 largely rural counties.

All of the counties moving from “red” to “yellow” in Wolf’s colorcoded reopening plan are in the northwest and north-central regions of Pennsylvan­ia, which have seen far fewer coronaviru­s infections and deaths than most of the rest of the state. The most heavily populated areas, including Philadelph­ia and Pittsburgh, will remain locked down, Wolf said.

The changes are to take effect next Friday, May 8. Stay-at-home orders will be lifted, gatherings of up to 25 people will be allowed, and retail shops can start to reopen, though gyms, barber shops, nail salons, casinos, theaters and other such venues will remain closed and other restrictio­ns will remain in place.

“Every Pennsylvan­ian should feel proud of the work we all did to flatten this curve, and every Pennsylvan­ian should take this moment to feel motivated by the success that we have had,” said Wolf, who neverthele­ss urged vigilance by residents and businesses to prevent an outbreak that could lead him to issue new shutdown orders in the areas where they’re being lifted.

“They must continue to abide by the underlying message of yellow: Proceed with caution,” Wolf said at a video news conference.

The counties where pandemic restrictio­ns will be eased are: Bradford, Cameron, Centre, Clarion, Clearfield, Clinton, Crawford, Elk, Erie, Forest, Jefferson, Lawrence, Lycoming, McKean, Mercer, Montour, Northumber­land, Potter, Snyder, Sullivan, Tioga, Union, Venango and Warren.

Counties in the Pittsburgh area and some in south-central Pennsylvan­ia could be next to see an easing of restrictio­ns, Wolf said, though he did not offer a timetable.

His administra­tion also revealed details Friday about its strategy for mass testing — establishi­ng a goal that 250,000 people are tested each month, up from about 180,000 currently — and released a contact tracing plan to contain fresh outbreaks, though health officials did not say how many tracers will be required to cover a state with 12.8 million people. Contact tracers identify people whom COVID-19 patients have been in contact with so they can be tested and isolated.

Smartphone users will be able to enroll in a voluntary program that will use Bluetooth technology to determine who may have come into contact with someone infected with the virus. It will send an alert to that smartphone if it was within a certain range of the infected user’s phone for a certain period of time, according to the Health Department. Officials did not say when the program will be deployed.

Wolf has said that shutdown measures he ordered starting in March have succeeded in preventing hospitals from becoming overwhelme­d with patients with COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus. New infections have been trending down in many counties.

An analysis by The Associated Press shows that only 27 of the state’s 67 counties reported too many new virus cases over the past two weeks to qualify for a gradual easing of restrictio­ns under Wolf’s reopening plan. But Wolf has grouped the state’s counties into six geographic regions, and health officials

are also looking at regional case counts as they decide which counties merit considerat­ion.

Health officials also say the incidence of new cases isn’t the only metric they’re looking at. Expanded virus testing, sufficient hospital capacity and the ability to quickly identify and contain flare-ups through contact tracing must also be in place.

The coronaviru­s has infected 47,000 Pennsylvan­ia residents and killed more than 2,300, according to the latest Health Department statistics, while the state’s efforts to contain the virus have caused economic devastatio­n, throwing nearly 1.7 million Pennsylvan­ia residents out of work since mid-March.

Schools statewide remain closed for the rest of the academic year, and visitation restrictio­ns on prisons and nursing homes remain in place. Wolf’s administra­tion will continue to recommend that people wear masks in public, and mandate that businesses and commercial buildings that serve the public deny entry to customers not wearing them.

Meanwhile, Wolf has begun loosening some restrictio­ns on business sectors. On Friday, golf courses, marinas, guided fishing trips and privately owned campground­s statewide were permitted to reopen, and constructi­on work was permitted to resume.

Poultry plant protest

A car caravan of activists protested Friday outside the facilities of a Lebanon County poultry processor where they say dozens of workers have been infected with the coronaviru­s.

At least one worker at Bell & Evans has died, and the husband of another worker who tested positive also died, according to Make the Road Pennsylvan­ia, an advocacy group for Hispanic immigrants, which is advocating on behalf of the plant workers.

Activists say the family-owned company has failed to keep workers safe and hasn’t been transparen­t about the extent of the outbreak. They want the plant shut down for cleaning, among other demands.

“Bell & Evans has failed to protect these workers and that failure cost their lives,” said Maegan Llerena, the group’s executive director.

An email was sent to the company seeking comment.

Cases

Pennsylvan­ia’s COVID-19 death toll rose by 62 to 2,354, the state Health Department reported Friday.

About 1,200 additional people tested positive for the virus that causes the disease, bringing the statewide total to about 47,000, according to the department.

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A worker measures along a new stretch of asphalt as paving resumes on Interstate 79 on Friday in Cranberry Township, Pa.
KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A worker measures along a new stretch of asphalt as paving resumes on Interstate 79 on Friday in Cranberry Township, Pa.

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