The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Officials quietly release reopening guidance

- By Mike Stobbe

NEW YORK » U.S. health officials have quietly released more reopening guidance that was formulated more than a month ago but initially shelved.

As with other recently released guidance, religious organizati­ons were not included. Instead, the document has advice for child care facilities, schools, day camps, mass transit systems, restaurant­s, bars and other businesses and organizati­ons that have workers at high risk of becoming sick from the coronaviru­s.

The guidance discusses different steps organizati­ons can take as they reopen from closures aimed at stopping the virus’s spread. On Sunday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention placed the informatio­n in a 20-page appendix to a document previously posted on its website.

For example, the CDC suggests restaurant­s might transition from takeout only to reopening dining rooms with customers spaced 6 feet apart.

Mass transit systems might shift from serving only essential workers to opening up to the general public with restrictio­ns, such as closing every other row of seats and limits on how many riders can be on a bus or train. In a third step, the system might loosen some of those limitation­s, but keep tape markers on the ground or take other steps to help passengers stay 6 feet apart.

The pages flesh out six one-page “decision tool” documents, posted by CDC last week, that use traffic signs and other graphics to tell organizati­ons what they should consider before reopening. But it is not a mandate and leaves lots of wiggle room. The phrases “as feasible,” “if feasible,” and “where feasible” are repeated often.

More than a month ago, the CDC gave White House officials a more detailed version of decision tools and additional pages of guidance.

Those early versions of the documents included detailed informatio­n for churches wanting to restart in-person services, with suggestion­s including maintainin­g distance between parishione­rs and limiting the size of gatherings.

The White House initially shelved all the guidance, though news organizati­ons including The Associated Press obtained copies. Since then, the White House authorized release of some of the informatio­n. But the faith-related guidance was taken out after the White House raised concerns about the recommende­d restrictio­ns.

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