The Sentinel-Record

Governors face competing voices as reported virus cases rise

- MICHELLE L. PRICE

LAS VEGAS — As Nevada prepared to start reopening parts of its economy last month, a team of medical experts recommende­d to Gov. Steve Sisolak that he require people wear masks in public to help stop the spread of the coronaviru­s.

The governor promoted masks but resisted making them a requiremen­t, saying he feared the rule could create a backlash for businesses trying to enforce the order on customers.

With reported coronaviru­s cases rising the past four weeks, Sisolak on Wednesday finally decided to take their advice and impose the mandate, saying it was necessary to protect people and keep businesses open.

“People aren’t wearing these,” he said, holding up and waving a cloth face mask. “It is troubling and it is really discouragi­ng that this has become a partisan issue about whether or not people want to wear a mask.”

Sisolak’s slow-stepping into the mask requiremen­t reflects a fraught decision-making process among many governors as they listen to a variety of sometimes competing voices on how on to respond to the spreading virus outbreak. The result is sometimes confusing and creates mixed messages for the public.

With reported coronaviru­s cases rising rapidly in many states, governors are getting lots of advice on what they should do. Unions want to be sure workers are protected on the job. Many business owners say they can’t afford another forced shutdown. Public health officials urge them to make mask-wearing a statewide requiremen­t. At the same, governors are facing blowback on the right over business restrictio­ns and mask regulation­s.

Dr. Brian Labus, an assistant professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas School of Public Health and a member of the medical team advising Sisolak, said he knows the governor has to weigh public health advice against political and economic considerat­ions.

“We were told not to think about all those other things. Don’t make political decisions. There will be other groups that will do that,” Labus said.

Nevada’s governor has a panel of rural and urban county officials and economic advisers giving him input, along with his medical advisory team. Labor groups, politician­s and businesses also bend his ear with unsolicite­d feedback.

The competing voices on how to reopen their state’s economy and what restrictio­ns to impose have led to similar push-and-pulls for governors across the U.S. The decision-making has taken on new urgency as reported cases of the virus continue to rise and governors consider whether to pause or backtrack on their loosening of restrictio­ns. The number of confirmed new coronaviru­s cases per day in the U.S. hit an all-time high of 40,000 Friday.

Some states, including Texas and Florida, have begun reversing some earlier steps intended to reopen their economies.

In Utah, coronaviru­s cases have been surging since most businesses were allowed to reopen in May. Gov. Gary Herbert, a Republican, has paused lifting any more restrictio­ns and has strongly encouraged people to wear masks.

He faces strong opposition if he tried to make it a mandate. An interest group founded by a conservati­ve activist to push back against coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, Utah Businesses Revival, has actively campaigned against mask wearing or any

renewed restrictio­ns on economic activity. They and others have held protests that included an anti-mask demonstrat­ion at the Utah Capitol.

North Carolina’s governor, Democrat Roy Cooper, earlier this week announced a statewide mask rule and three-week pause on further reopenings, moves that were supported by a nurses associatio­n. But Cooper has faced pushback from Republican lawmakers and small businesses that are still shuttered, including bars, gyms and bowling alleys, which have tried to overturn the governor’s orders through legal action or legislatio­n.

South Carolina’s top infectious disease expert this week said a statewide requiremen­t that people wear masks indoors would be a great help in what she said was a “critical juncture” in fighting COVID-19.

That advice from state Epidemiolo­gist Dr. Linda Bell runs against the public stance of Republican Gov. Henry McMaster, who continued to say this week that a mask requiremen­t would step on personal liberties and be too hard to enforce. McMaster has largely sided with business interests throughout the pandemic.

“If we could go to the epidemiolo­gical extreme, we would close everything down and have everyone stay inside and have everyone wear masks. But the country would fall apart,” McMaster said Friday in his first news conference with health officials in more than two weeks.

As West Virginia has seen a spike in reported virus cases, Gov. Jim Justice fired his public health commission­er Wednesday. While the departure was over a data dispute, the move exposed a philosophi­cal rift between Dr. Cathy Slemp’s plea to “stay true to the science” as new outbreaks emerge and the Republican governor’s aggressive schedule to reopen businesses to get the state economy moving again.

National Nurses United, an umbrella organizati­on for nurses unions across the country, called on governors in states with rising cases to reimpose strict limits on businesses until stronger protection­s are in place, including more protective equipment for health care workers and more robust testing and contact tracing.

Stephanie Roberson, the director of government relations for the California Nurses Associatio­n, an affiliate of the national group, said Gov. Gavin

Newsom’s office has heard her group’s concerns but didn’t seem to be listening.

“We need to look at the science, and the science is telling us that we have a significan­t uptick and we’ve got to pull back,” Roberson said.

Newsom and state health officials have said the goal of the stay-at-home order imposed in mid-March was to prepare the state’s hospitals for a surge. Earlier this week, he touted the importance of opening businesses to ensure the health of California’s economy while warning that if health conditions grow dire, the state could be forced to shut them back down.

“We don’t intend to do that, we don’t want to do that,” he said.

But on Friday, Newsom was forced to act. He urged Southern California’s Imperial County to reimpose stay-home orders amid a surge in cases.

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