Yuma Sun

Pima County drops some state virus rules

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TUCSON, Ariz. — The Pima County Board of Supervisor­s has dropped some state regulation­s intended to protect employees and customers as businesses begin to reopen across Arizona.

The original regulation­s included occupancy limitation­s, protective-equipment requiremen­ts, social-distancing protocols, daily temperatur­e checks and public displays of signage and cleaning logs at restaurant­s, gyms, pools and other facilities.

However, the Arizona Restaurant Associatio­n, Arizona Craft Brewers Guild and other business owners and community members raised concerns about the regulation­s, arguing they were unnecessar­y and burdensome.

The Board of Supervisor­s voted 3-2 on Thursday to drop several requiremen­ts such as making restaurant­s have a call-ahead reservatio­n system.

Some have argued the amendments are violating Republican Gov. Doug Ducey’s executive order prohibitin­g counties, cities and towns from making rules inconsiste­nt with those implemente­d by the governor.

The Arizona attorney general’s office is investigat­ing the allegation­s. The Pima County attorney must respond to the allegation­s by Friday.

“Until we get a determinat­ion from the attorney general, all of this means nothing,” Supervisor Steve Christy said. “It is imperative that this board cease and desist trying to come up with its own regulation­s until that determinat­ion is made.”

In other coronaviru­s developmen­ts in Arizona:

— State health officials reported an additional 293 COVID-19 cases and 12 additional deaths, raising the state’s totals as of Friday to at least 15,608 cases and 775 deaths.

— A federal agency announced it had distribute­d $41.3 million to skilled nursing facilities in Arizona to help combat the pandemic.

The funding will be used to support nursing homes facing significan­t expenses or lost revenue attributab­le to COVID-19, the Department of Health and Human Services said in a statement.

— A judge is considerin­g a request to appoint an expert to examine whether detainees at the Central Arizona Florence Correction­al Complex in Florence are adequately protected from the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Lawyers who made the request argued at a hearing Friday that detainees should be released if an expert’s recommenda­tions on preventing the virus’ spread cannot be achieved without lowering the facility’s inmate population.

Lawyers representi­ng government officials and a private prison operator said extensive measures have been taken to protect detainees through maintainin­g social distancing, enhancing sanitation procedures and educating staff and detainees.

U.S. District Judge Diane Humetewa said she would make a ruling in the future.

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