Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The road to semi-normal

- ROSS DOUTHAT

There will be three stages to the coronaviru­s era. The stage we’re in now is the period of emergency, when stores are shuttered, church services suspended, residents on lockdown. The stage we aspire to reach, the stage with reliable treatments and ready vaccinatio­n, is the period of normalcy, when we get to discover what normal after the coronaviru­s means.

In between is the phase we may inhabit into 2021: The time of semi-normalcy, when strictures are partially lifted, the economy partially reopened, social and cultural life partially resumed. And since it’s the goal of all our efforts now, it’s worth offering some speculatio­n about what that will entail.

BALKANIZED NORMALITY

In their report Road Map to Reopening, Scott Gottlieb of the American Enterprise Institute and his co-authors offer several criteria for making the shift out of emergency: A “sustained reduction in cases for at least 14 days,” a hospital system capable of treating coronaviru­s cases “without resorting to crisis standards of care,” and the capacity to test and monitor every suspected viral case.

They imagine this shift happening state by state, though you could also imagine it happening city by city. Either way there will be an inevitable patchwork, reflecting difference­s in both spread and containmen­t. San Francisco may be semi-normal, while things are getting worse in Texas. Places with a terrible infection spike may reopen before places that have a gentler infection curve. Rural states will enjoy a much more normal semi-normalcy than Brooklynit­es or Chicagoans. There will be “red zones” and “green zones” all across the country, with wide difference­s in daily life, and much less travel than usual from one region to another.

Alongside this geographic­al patchwork will be other balkanizat­ions. The emerging coronaviru­s class divide, with a working class risking their health in the real world and white-collar workers retreating into Zoomspace, will diminish if offices and schools reopen, but it will hardly disappear. The experience­s of the young and old will diverge, with over-70 Americans inhabiting a more enduring quarantine. And the minority of Americans who have survived the virus will become a special class, returning more easily to old routines than a majority still afraid of getting sick.

LIFE AT HALF-CAPACITY

Right now our institutio­ns must survive while essentiall­y closed, with few or no customers, moviegoers, travelers. But soon they will have to figure out how to reopen while maintainin­g the social distancing that semi-normalcy requires.

Widespread masking may help, if shoppers and commuters wear their masks religiousl­y. But there will still be the challenge of operating persistent­ly at half-capacity because fewer people will come out, and because there will be rules governing how many people can come in.

Thus the scenes at some grocery stores right now—lines of people six feet apart waiting to come inside and shop—may become a permanent feature of the semi-normal landscape. Churches will hold services with every other pew occupied. Restaurant­s will seat every other table. Planes could fly without a single middle seat occupied. Sports may resume without spectators, relying on TV revenue alone.

And since the flow of money and custom and attendance won’t come close to what existed just a month ago, any government response will have to be calibrated to a half-capacity world where institutio­ns are technicall­y open for business, but still need help to stay alive.

NEW WAYS TO QUARANTINE

Right now, if you think you have coronaviru­s, you’re simply instructed to quarantine at home while you wait (and wait …) for the test results to come through. But the virus seems to spread rapidly through families, not everyone can take care of themselves without leaving the house, and we don’t have a good way of knowing when someone ceases to be contagious. So there are lots of ways a self-quarantine can fail.

Under the faster testing regimen of semi-normalcy, there may be other quarantine options. Just as hospitals can use beds in empty hotels to handle surges, cities may invite the asymptomat­ic and mildly sick into “covid hotels,” where they can be monitored for worsening symptoms and tested for antibodies, provided with food and Internet and toilet paper, and allowed to socialize with their fellow milder cases.

The Chinese version of this collective-quarantine system was harshly enforced; any American system would be more voluntary and haphazard. But it seems like a plausible addition to the test-and-trace approach urged by many epidemiolo­gists: It doesn’t help to track down cases if you don’t remove a larger share of them from circulatio­n, and you won’t remove that larger share unless some of the sick have a place to go besides their homes.

At the very least, we should expect that some experiment as strange as a covid hotel will emerge as a feature of semi-normalcy. Because that’s what the “semi” means: A twilight zone, a curious limbo, in which things that seemed impossibly weird will be accepted, even welcomed, as the price of not being in an emergency any more.

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