Baltimore Sun

City to reopen slowly

Officials make late decision to partially open movie theaters

- By Talia Richman

Baltimore Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young said Wednesday that the city won’t move into Stage Three of the coronaviru­s recovery plan announced by the governor, although it will loosen restrictio­ns further in some areas, including restaurant­s and movie theaters.

Gov. Larry Hogan announced Tuesday that Baltimore City and the state’s counties could allow all businesses to reopen, including theaters, and permit more people to attend indoor events, such as worship services.

Young said at a news conference

Wednesday that while parts of the state may feel ready for more reopening steps, in Baltimore,

“we do not want to erase the gains we’ve made over the past month.”

Local jurisdicti­ons have the authority to be more restrictiv­e than the state. Hogan did not give local jurisdicti­ons a heads-up that he was lifting restrictio­ns Tuesday, leaving them to scramble to figure out how to respond.

The city will allow restaurant­s to open further for indoor dining at 50% of their capacity at some point next week, Young said during a Wednesday morning press conference. The details still were being ironed out, and no updated executive

order was published.

City officials went back and forth Wednesday over whether to allow movie theaters to open. Originally, Young said nothing would change for now. Then, around 10 p.m., a city spokesman confirmed that theaters will be allowed to open Friday to 25% of their capacity.

It’s unclear what other restrictio­ns could be loosened, with Young saying more informatio­n would be coming at a later date.

The state is moving to allow all businesses to open, subject to local restrictio­ns, including movie theaters and live entertainm­ent venues. The establishm­ents can open at 50% capacity, or up to100 people at indoor venues and 250 at outdoor venues — whichever is less. Places of worship can increase capacity from 50% to 75%.

In the city, still operating under Young’s Aug. 7 executive order, restaurant­s can offer outdoor service and 25% indoor capacity. Indoor and outdoor gatherings are capped at 25 people. Religious institutio­ns and indoor recreation establishm­ents cannot exceed 25% of their capacity.

Hogan’s plan doesn’t exactly match the road map the state released in late April. The riskiest activities were not supposed to resume until there was a vaccine or “effective therapeuti­cs” to treat people sick with COVID-19. Those activities include largescale gatherings, the opening of “high capacity” bars and entertainm­ent venues, returning to regular visitation policies at hospitals and large religious gatherings.

The governor said Tuesday that the plan has been “evolving” as more is learned about the virus.

The web of shifting regulation­s have been confusing for businesses and residents, who are getting mixed messages from the governor and their local leaders. Some business owners have complained the patchwork approach puts them at a disadvanta­ge.

Baltimore County Executive Johnny Olszewski Jr., for example, announced Wednesday afternoon that he will allow enclosed and outdoor theaters to reopen Friday, along with allowing retail and religious facilities to expand their indoor capacity.

He said his decision to align with the state is an attempt to make sure Baltimore County businesses are not on “unequal playing fields” compared to those in surroundin­g jurisdicti­ons that chose to follow Hogan’s lead like Harford County.

Within minutes of Hogan’s announceme­nt Tuesday night, the Senator Theatre in Baltimore City announced a Friday night showing of Christophe­r Nolan’s film “Tenet.” Shortly after Young’s news conference, though, the advertisem­ent disappeare­d from the theater’s website.

Then, later Wednesday night, the theater wrote in a Facebook post that it would open Friday, with “very limited” seating and a slew of safety measures in place.

“Some people would say that it’s not worth opening for 25 people, and that’s a valid financial argument,” said Kathleen Lyon, co-owner of the Senator and Charles theaters. ”But we are going to do it because we would like to turn the lights on. We have spent the last six months working for this day. We have done the upgrades and updated all the systems to keep people safe and we’re ready to go.”

Lyon said she’s not trying to defy Young. She interprete­d his Aug. 7 executive order, which allows indoor recreation establishm­ents to operate at 25% capacity, to now apply to her business.

City solicitor Dana Moore said around 9 p.m. Wednesday night that her interpreta­tion was that movie theaters could not yet reopen. Earlier in the evening, city spokesman James Bentley said that “like anybody else that opens in opposition of the mayor’s executive order, enforcemen­t will look into it.”

The mayor reversed course about an hour later, and will allow theaters to open up.

Lyon said Labor Day weekend is traditiona­lly one of the biggest weekends of the year for the film industry, and that if theaters in Baltimore are closed, people “will just go a few miles downthe road and see it in another county.”

Michael Ross, executive director of Baltimore Center Stage, described the back-toback announceme­nts as “a whirlwind.”

“One day, we’re open,” he said, “and the next day, we’re not.”

He’s not sure if the announceme­nt will have an immediate impact on Baltimore’s official state theater, which has no live performanc­es scheduled until January.

”It does give us hope that the state is moving to Stage 3, even if the city is not,” he said. “The most important thing is that the numbers keep coming down and we can get back to performing safely.”

Business owners have pressured Young to move more quickly, even as public health officials urge restraint. There’s a higher risk of coronaviru­s transmissi­on in indoor settings.

Baltimore’s pace has drawn ire from vocal restaurant owners. Sergio Vitale, chef and owner of Aldo’s Ristorante Italiano in Little Italy, said Young’s decision puts the mayor “behind the curve again.”

Young said Wednesday it was important to focus on “harm reduction” from the coronaviru­s while heading into the Labor Day holiday weekend, and he sought to discourage families from holding cookouts or other parties.

“We’re still in a pandemic,” the mayor said, “one that’s built to spread rapidly in large groups.”

Baltimore’s coronaviru­s data recently has been trending in a positive direction, but the pandemic still has hit the city hard with more than 14,500 confirmed cases and 428 deaths. It was only last month that the White House singled out Baltimore as one of the nation’s areas of concern for an outbreak.

Recognizin­g that the pandemic continues to bring economic devastatio­n, Young also on Wednesday announced an expansion of the city’s rental assistance fund.

The $30 million eviction prevention program builds on efforts announced earlier this year, and is slated to start in late September.

The program is designed to cover six months of back rent and utilities or to relocate families. It also will go toward paying for legal services for tenants facing eviction. Families can apply at bmorechild­ren.com.

To qualify, households must bring in 50% or less of the average medium income, demonstrat­e a COVID-19 related financial hardship and provide proof of pending eviction proceeding­s.

The program draws from federal coronaviru­s relief funding, as well as city money. It includes $2.75 million from the city’s Affordable Housing Trust Fund.

Officials say the help comes at a dire time. The percentage of city residents who are falling behind on rent exploded from 10% in March to 28% in June. Advocates have warned of a looming “evictions crisis” as courts reopen.

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