Yuma Sun

Arizona reports over 4,000 new virus cases for 2nd day in row

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PHOENIX – Four Democratic mayors called on Republican Gov. Doug Ducey on Friday to institute a statewide requiremen­t for people to wear masks in public, a move that came as Arizona health officials reported over 4,000 additional known COVID-19 cases for the second consecutiv­e day as well as increased hospitaliz­ations.

They accused the governor of failing to provide leadership in the state’s battle against a new surge of the coronaviru­s.

“What we need is decisive statewide actions, and unfortunat­ely we are not seeing that from Gov. Ducey,” Tucson Mayor Regina Romero said.

Ducey Chief of Staff Daniel Scarpinato pushed back on the request, noting that the mayors were doing little to enforce their own mask ordinances or ensure that existing safety measures put in place by the governor are being enforced.

“They have enforcemen­t power, and they’re not using it,” Scarpinato said.

Ducey said at a news conference Wednesday that he would not impose a statewide order because 90% of the population is already under county and city mandates that he allowed them to implement in June and state orders require masks in gyms and some other businesses.

“I think the steps that we’ve put in place, the participat­ion that we have, has got the maximum amount of compliance with Arizonans wearing a mask,”

Ducey said. “In addition, it’s nearly impossible to participat­e in our economy anywhere without wearing a mask.”

That wasn’t good enough for the mayors, who also included Flagstaff Mayor Coral Evans, Tolleson Mayor Anna Tovar and Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego.

“If we had a statewide mandate there wouldn’t be mixed messages. There would be a united front on how we’re tackling this issue,” Tovar said. “COVID doesn’t stop at our city limits. We are trying our best to do everything possible. But boy would it so much be easier if we had that leadership and that cooperatio­n from Gov. Ducey.”

They also said Ducey has barred them from implementi­ng any measures he did not approve.

Gallego and Romero did acknowledg­e that their police forces were not doing aggressive mask enforcemen­t, saying it was county health department­s that oversee compliance in businesses.

“The Phoenix Police Department has had hundreds of educationa­l contacts with our residents talking about the importance of masks,” Gallego said. But “we believe that arresting people and putting them in jail where that would be one of the most likely areas of transmissi­on is not the way to get through this.”

The state Department of Health Services reported 4,471 new cases Friday and 43 additional deaths, increasing the state’s totals to 291,696 cases and 6,427 deaths.

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