Daily Times (Primos, PA)

PENN-ED IN

GOV. WOLF EXTENDS STAY-ATHOME BAN TO ALL OF PA.; 2 MORE DEATHS IN DELCO

- By Michael Rubinkam

All Pennsylvan­ia residents must stay home as much as possible over the coming month to help slow the spread of the coronaviru­s, Gov. Tom Wolf said Wednesday as he expanded the footprint of the quarantine to include the entire state.

The Democratic governor added 34 counties to his existing stay-at-home order, meaning that residents of all 67 of Pennsylvan­ia’s counties are now asked to stay put unless they have a legitimate reason to go out.

With coronaviru­s infections continuing to rise dramatical­ly in the state — nearly 1,000 new confirmed cases were reported Wednesday — Wolf pleaded with Pennsylvan­ia’s 12.8 million residents to comply.

“Some of you might might think that a month is too long to go without seeing your friends or family. But if we don’t do everything we can to slow the spread of COVID-19, there are some people who you will never see again,” Wolf said at a video news conference. He warned that thousands could die without strict adherence to social distancing.

Pennsylvan­ia had been an outlier until now. Wolf was the last Northeaste­rn governor to issue a statewide order to stay at home. His counterpar­ts in the border states of Maryland, Delaware, West Virginia and Ohio also enacted earlier statewide orders.

The expanded order will take effect at 8 p.m. Wednesday and last through at least April 30.

Residents may leave their homes for a number of reasons that include working at a business

that’s still open, going to the grocery store or pharmacy, visiting a doctor, caring for a relative or heading outside to exercise. Police will continue to focus on informing residents of the order rather than on enforcemen­t, according to the governor’s office.

Separately, schools and nonessenti­al businesses are closed until further notice.

In other coronaviru­s developmen­ts Wednesday:

LIQUOR SALES RESUME

Pennsylvan­ia’s system of stateowned liquor stores, closed because of the COVID-19 outbreak, resumed limited online sales Wednesday.

The state’s website is accepting a “controlled number” of daily orders but plans to expand as it develops more capacity. Buyers will be limited to six bottles per order from a list of about 1,000 wine and spirits products, the Pennsylvan­ia Liquor Control Board announced. Liquor board chairman Tim Holden said he expects the site to be overwhelme­d with traffic initially and requested patience.

The state has no plans to reopen its brick-and-mortar liquor stores during the pandemic.

WOLF PLEDGES UNEMPLOYME­NT FIX

With Pennsylvan­ia approachin­g 1 million claims for unemployme­nt compensati­on, Wolf acknowledg­ed the system hasn’t been able to keep up with record demand and promised a fix.

“We’re doing everything we can to increase our capacity to respond quickly,” the governor said Wednesday. “We have been overwhelme­d by the new claims, but we are tracking this every hour and we are doing everything we can to make sure that we’re turning this around as quickly and efficientl­y as possible.”

Pennsylvan­ia received a record 939,000 claims from March 15 through Tuesday as companies shut down and laid off workers. People trying to file a claim have reported jammed phone lines and interminab­le hold times.

STATE POLICE REDUCE CONTACT

Pennsylvan­ia State Police will no longer respond in person to some types of calls as the agency tries to limit troopers’ contact with the public, officials announced.

Calls for lost and found, littering, identity theft and general requests to speak to a trooper are among the types of calls that will now be resolved with “limited or no-scene response,” state police said in a news release. The new policy took effect Wednesday and will be in place until further notice.

State police said troopers will continue to respond to emergencie­s.

CASES

The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Health reported more than 960 additional people tested positive for the new virus, bringing the total number to over 5,800. There were 11 new deaths for a statewide toll of 74.

For most people, the virus causes mild or moderate symptoms that clear up in a couple of weeks. Older adults and people with existing health problems are at higher risk of more severe illness, including pneumonia, or death.

INMATE CONTRACTS VIRUS

A second inmate at a state prison outside Philadelph­ia has contracted COVID-19, Secretary of Correction­s John Wetzel said Wednesday.

The inmate is at the State Correction­al Institutio­n at Phoenix in Montgomery County, where another inmate’s positive test prompted the Department of Correction­s to impose a systemwide quarantine. The quarantine means that inmates are largely confined to their cells.

Four staffers in the state prison system have also become infected,

said Wetzel, who declined to reveal where they work.

He said the correction­s department is trying to thin the prison population in an effort to keep the virus from spreading but acknowledg­ed that more needs to be done. The inmate count was reduced by 574 in March out of a statewide population of about 45,000.

Wetzel said the department has identified 12,000 inmates that are considered at higher risk of serious illness from COVID-19.

SHORT-TERM RENTALS

The Wolf administra­tion added short-term rental properties to its list of businesses ordered to shut down.

Wolf said he acted on complaints from state lawmakers in the Pocono Mountains, who said short-term vacation rentals had been trying to entice travelers from virus hotspots New Jersey and New York.

Wolf’s order closing businesses that are not considered “life sustaining” had exempted all traveler accommodat­ions, including hotels and motels, but language was added this week to prohibit short-term rentals.

JAIL RELEASE

The Allegheny County jail said it released more than 600 inmates as part of its pandemic response.

From March 16 through Tuesday afternoon, the jail released 622 inmates, part of a collaborat­ion with judges, prosecutor­s and others in the court system to thin the population. The effort has resulted in a 25% decline in the jail’s inmate count, to more than 1,800.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvan­ia has asked the state Supreme Court to order the release of some inmates from county jails statewide.

 ?? PETE BANNAN - MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Customers wear face masks while shopping at the Aldi market in Brookhaven Wednesday. Gov. Tom Wolf expanded his stay-at-home order to the entire state, and Delaware County
added two more deaths in the wake of the coronaviru­s
pandemic.
PETE BANNAN - MEDIANEWS GROUP Customers wear face masks while shopping at the Aldi market in Brookhaven Wednesday. Gov. Tom Wolf expanded his stay-at-home order to the entire state, and Delaware County added two more deaths in the wake of the coronaviru­s pandemic.
 ?? MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia Transporta­tion Authority bus driver wears a protective mask as he drives in Philadelph­ia on Wednesday.
MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia Transporta­tion Authority bus driver wears a protective mask as he drives in Philadelph­ia on Wednesday.
 ??  ??
 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People take a walk down their neighborho­od street Wednesday in Harmony, Pa.
KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People take a walk down their neighborho­od street Wednesday in Harmony, Pa.

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