Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Self-isolate, Missouri lake’s Memorial Day visitors urged

- SUMMER BALLENTINE AND JIM SALTER

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Leaders in Kansas City, St. Louis and the state of Kansas urged people who partied close together at Lake of the Ozarks over the Memorial Day weekend to self-quarantine for two weeks, amid fears that the gatherings documented in social media postings will lead to a resurgence of the coronaviru­s.

Big crowds were reported at swimming pools, bars and restaurant­s at the central Missouri lake that draws hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Video and photos posted on social media showed people without masks partying and swimming together in close proximity, seemingly ignoring guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and from the state, to keep at least 6 feet apart.

At least some of the images showed people in the Anderson Hollow Cove area of the man-made lake that’s been nicknamed “Party Cove.”

It appeared unlikely any businesses or individual would face reprimand. Although Missouri’s social distancing order gives enforcemen­t authority to both the state and local health department­s, Republican Gov. Mike Parson said enforcemen­t responsibi­lity lies with the local department­s.

“I’m not going to send the National Guard, I am not going to send the Highway Patrol to monitor this,” Parson said at a news conference, where he expressed disappoint­ment for the disregard for social distancing at the lake.

The incidents took place mostly in Osage and Camden counties. Osage County has had so few coronaviru­s cases that an ordinance allowing for enforcemen­t lapsed last month, Health Administra­tor Shawn Brantley said. Camden County’s health director did not respond to an email message seeking comment.

“The problem is everybody’s going back home,” Parson said. “Everybody’s going back to different districts, different towns and everything, which kind of complicate­d the issue, to say the least.”

St. Louis County Executive Sam Page asked his local health department to issue a travel advisory, saying the activity at the lake raised new concerns just as the county was beginning to reopen after weeks of closure.

“This reckless behavior endangers countless people and risks setting us back substantia­lly from the progress we have made in slowing the spread of COVID-19,” Page, a Democrat, said in a statement.

St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson and Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas, both Democrats, took to Twitter to express their disappoint­ment with the close-together crowds at the lake, which draws significan­tly from the metropolit­an areas on both sides of the state, as well as from neighborin­g states, including Arkansas, Illinois,

Kansas and Iowa.

“If you were part of a group that didn’t socially distance or wear masks, please, for the health of your family, coworkers and friends, stay home for the next 14 days,” Krewson wrote in one tweet.

Kansas City Health Director Rex Archer echoed Krewson’s call for a 14-day self-quarantine for anyone who failed to practice social distancing at the lake, as did the Kansas health department.

Parson allowed businesses and attraction­s to reopen May 4, but the state order requires 6-foot social distancing through at least the end of May. St. Louis and St. Louis County are just now phasing in reopening because covid-19, the illness caused by the virus, was so devastatin­g there. More than half of Missouri’s 12,291 confirmed cases have occurred in those locations, along with more than two-thirds of the state’s 686 deaths.

Missouri’s health director, Randall Williams, said his office will work with health officials around the Lake of the Ozarks to determine whether additional testing should be conducted in the coming weeks.

Parson emphasized that many Missourian­s made “safe and responsibl­e choices” in gatherings throughout the holiday weekend. Parson said he was able to go to his home church, which accommodat­ed attendees by providing three services and escorting people to seats to ensure separation.

 ?? (AP/Kansas City Star/Shelly Yang) ?? People crowd together at Coconuts Caribbean Beach Bar & Grill on the Lake of the Ozarks in Gravois Mills, Mo. Big crowds were seen all around the popular central Missouri lake in the past few days.
(AP/Kansas City Star/Shelly Yang) People crowd together at Coconuts Caribbean Beach Bar & Grill on the Lake of the Ozarks in Gravois Mills, Mo. Big crowds were seen all around the popular central Missouri lake in the past few days.

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