Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

US tells older people to stay home, all ages to avoid crowds

- By Jonathan Lemire, Andrew Taylor and Jill Colvin

Racing to stall an expected surge of coronaviru­s cases, the White House on Monday released a series of sweeping guidelines that for the next 15 days will temporaril­y rewrite the norms of American society.

President Donald Trump, employing a newly somber tone about the crisis enveloping the globe, urged all older Americans to stay home and everyone to avoid crowds and eating out at restaurant­s. The president for the first time acknowledg­ed that the pandemic may send the economy into a recession and suggested that the nation may be dealing with the virus until “July or August.”

The guidelines were released to an uneasy country. The stock market had its worst day since 1987, America’s largest school system shut its doors and questions remained about the administra­tion’s ability to test for the virus and provide hospital space for those who fall ill.

Among the new recommenda­tions: Over the next half month, Americans should not gather in groups of more than 10 people, schooling should be at home and discretion­ary travel and social visits should be avoided. If anyone in a household tests positive for the virus, everyone who lives there should stay home. The administra­tion did not say how old people should be to follow the advice to stay home.

“We will rally together as one nation and we will defeat the virus,” Trump said. “We can turn the corner and turn it quickly.”

The president, when asked when the pandemic would subside, said that “if we do a really good job” the crisis could pass by the height of summer. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the administra­tion’s infectious disease expert, did not challenge that claim.

Trump’s prediction was far less optimistic than his earlier ones, when he insisted it could be over in weeks. He also acknowledg­ed that the virus may send the nation’s economy into a recession, a potentiall­y brutal blow for an incumbent in an election year.

That admission was startling for Trump, who for two weeks had struck a discordant­ly optimistic tone about the pandemic that endangered his presidency. On Monday that upbeat demeanor was gone as he acknowledg­ed the virus was “not under control” in the

United States or globally.

He said he did not yet plan to call for domestic travel restrictio­ns while his administra­tion made pointed appeals to millennial­s to stop socializin­g and spreading the virus. He was reluctant to advise states to cancel the primary elections ahead. And without providing details, he said “we’re going to back the airlines 100%,” a note of reassuranc­e for an industry crippled by travel bans and fears of spreading the virus.

The expansive guidelines were issued on a day of fastmoving developmen­ts in a capital resplenden­t in cherry blossoms but awash in anxiety.

Congress convened to try to finish an aid package and consider another one behind it. The Supreme Court postponed oral arguments for the first time in over a century. And the U.S. surgeon general said that the United States is about where Italy was two weeks ago in the coronaviru­s struggle, a sign that infections are expected to rise.

“When you look at the projection­s, there’s every chance that we could be Italy,” Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams told Fox News. Yet he said the U.S. has opportunit­ies to mitigate the pandemic.

Two weeks ago, Italy had 1,700 cases of coronaviru­s and had reported 34 deaths. Now, Italy is reporting an estimated 25,000 cases and more than 1,800 deaths. About 3,800 cases have been reported in the United States and so far, more than 65 people have died from coronaviru­s. Although the numbers may not be directly comparable, the trajectory is, as Adams sees it.

The administra­tion also alleged that a foreign disinforma­tion campaign was underway aimed at spreading fear among Americans already spooked by the pandemic.

On Sunday, federal officials began confrontin­g what they said was a deliberate effort by a foreign entity to make Americans think the government was going to impose a nationwide quarantine. Agencies took coordinate­d action Sunday evening to assure Americans that the government was not planning to do that.

And on Monday, national security officials said there had been a cyber attack involving the computer networks of Health and Human Services, but the networks were operating normally. They didn’t detail the nature or scope of the problem or identify the foreign entity.

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