Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

1 infection noted at S.D. biker rally stirs little alarm

- HANNAH KNOWLES

As hundreds of thousands flocked to rural South Dakota for a motorcycle rally this month, sparking fears of a coronaviru­s super-spreader event, photos captured people crowding the streets without masks and packing businesses — including a bar on Main Street, One-Eyed Jack’s Saloon.

Now state health officials say a person who visited One-Eyed Jack’s for about five hours has tested positive for the coronaviru­s and could have transmitte­d the virus to others at the time.

South Dakota health officials expressed little alarm about the case and others confirmed among rally attendees at a Thursday news conference. Four days after the event finished, they said they are aware of fewer than 25 infections among people who attended in the 14 days before illness set in. That includes some cases reported from outside South Dakota.

They also acknowledg­ed that they do not know the extent of the exposures and cannot track them down, saying they put out a public notice about One-Eyed Jack’s because the infected patron could not detail the people the person was in close contact with.

Experts nationwide have focused on bars as places ripe for spreading the coronaviru­s, and with symptoms taking as long as two weeks to show up, the health consequenc­es of the annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally are still emerging.

The event’s true impact may be impossible to track, said Benjamin Aaker, president of the South Dakota State Medical Associatio­n. For every case that’s identified, there are probably many more that South Dakota officials will never hear about: the people who never got tested but passed the virus on, the people further down those chains of transmissi­on who will never be linked to the rally.

The person at One-Eyed Jacks, Aaker said, is “someone whom state health officials would be wise to be watching and trying to contact-trace. Now are they going to be able to do that with the motorcycle rally … with folks so close together and not knowing who’s there? I don’t know that they’ll be able to contact-trace very well.”

“And that’s one of the big problems that we will be experienci­ng the next 10 to 14 days” after the festivitie­s end, Aaker warned.

NO MANDATES

The motorcycle rally, a 10day extravagan­za held every summer, draws people from around the country. With the coronaviru­s still rampant in many parts of the United States over the summer, most Sturgis residents polled by the city were against holding the rally Aug. 7-16.

But the rally is hugely important to the local economy, and authoritie­s went ahead. They asked visitors to social-distance and wear masks, but did not mandate those precaution­s at one of the biggest public gatherings of the pandemic.

Preliminar­y data suggests the pandemic did little to depress turnout. An attendance count is still in the works, but according to Sturgis, 462,182 vehicles were counted entering the city limits over the course of the event, representi­ng just a 7.5% dip from last year’s traffic.

“It was a good rally,” said Christina Steele, a spokeswoma­n for the city of Sturgis. “People had fun.”

While some residents expressed concerns during the rally to the media, decrying the absence of masks, Steele told The Washington Post that the city has not gotten many comments from residents, beyond her own chats with a couple of people who said they felt attendees were “relaxed and happy to be there.”

“It could be one or two, could be more,” Steele said of coronaviru­s cases linked to the event. “But you know, it’s to be expected. Coronaviru­s is in South Dakota. It has been for months.”

The state health department has released informatio­n on two people with the coronaviru­s who were at the rally — the two cases, according to officials, were such that authoritie­s couldn’t work with the infected individual to determine close contacts.

On Aug. 14, officials announced that an employee at a bar in nearby Hill City had tested positive and could have passed the coronaviru­s to others while working Aug. 9-11 from 11 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Then, this week, they announced the exposures at One-Eyed Jack’s. The person visited the saloon from noon to 5:30 p.m. on Aug. 11 while the person was able to transmit the virus, a news release states.

LITTLE INFORMATIO­N

State health officials did not say where the One-Eyed Jack’s visitor is from or how many people that person and the Hill City employee might have exposed at the bars or at the broader rally. The state health department did not immediatel­y answer follow-up questions about those and other rally-linked cases after Thursday’s news conference.

Officials say they are doing contact-tracing to the extent possible and urging people who might have been in contact with those infected to monitor themselves for symptoms for 14 days.

The state’s coronaviru­s dashboard shows that new known coronaviru­s cases in Meade County, which includes Sturgis, have risen since the rally began, though daily cases remain in the single digits. Average new infections have ticked up only slightly in South Dakota as a whole over the past two weeks.

On Monday, the latest day for which data is posted, the county reported a record of nine new cases.

The day before the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally began, it reported two.

Aaker, the head of the state medical associatio­n, said that a rise in new cases was probably seeded before the rally.

The state medical associatio­n urged people arriving for the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally to mask up, wash their hands and social-distance. Aaker says he didn’t attend.

But “from what I saw on the news,” he said, “we could have done better.”

 ?? (AP/Invision/Amy Harris) ?? Fans crowd in during a performanc­e last week by the band Saul at the Iron Horse Saloon in Sturgis, S.D., during the 80th annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally.
(AP/Invision/Amy Harris) Fans crowd in during a performanc­e last week by the band Saul at the Iron Horse Saloon in Sturgis, S.D., during the 80th annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally.

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