Houston Chronicle Sunday

‘They should stay home’

Once an oasis from the pandemic, Corpus Christi now has one of the fastest-growing outbreaks in Texas

- By J. David Goodman

CORPUS CHRISTI — As recently as early June, days went by with hardly anyone testing positive for the coronaviru­s. A single case one day. Three the next. Then zero. Zero. Zero.

Word spread that Corpus Christi, always a popular beachfront vacation spot for Texans from around the state, was a safe place to go. They didn’t even require masks indoors. It was an oasis from the virus.

“People in San Antonio, in Houston, Austin, even Dallas, knew that we had a low caseload,” said Peter Zanoni, the city manager. “It was a nice getaway from the rules, the regulation­s, the doom and gloom.”

It turned out that no place was safe.

Now the city of 325,000 has one of the fastest-growing outbreaks in Texas, a state where records for positive cases were set for four straight days last week, with nearly 11,000 recorded Thursday. Corpus Christi has seen more cases per capita than Houston and a rapidly mounting death toll: Of the 38 deaths recorded from the pandemic, 30 have come in July, including a baby less than 6 months old.

Local officials have been left scrambling to get ahead of an outbreak that went into overdrive without warning. As recently as June 15, the city had tallied 360 cases during the entirety of the outbreak; on Wednesday alone, there were 445.

The city’s two dozen contact tracers are so overwhelme­d that they are no longer able to seek detailed informatio­n about each new infection. Hospital beds have filled at an alarming rate, prompting pleas for additional staffing.

The surge in cases forced local leaders, businesses and residents to grapple with the uncomforta­ble reality that the same out-of-towners who help the city thrive economical­ly may have caused the outbreak. The feeling is less one of resentment than of frustratio­n at a seemingly impos

sible dilemma.

“I never thought in my wildest dreams that I’d be telling tourists, ‘Don’t come to our beaches,’” said Mayor Joe McComb, 72.

The speed of the spread is what struck researcher­s. Other vacation destinatio­ns have seen a rising number of cases, but the increase in Corpus Christi outstrippe­d even much larger major urban centers, said Dr. Christophe­r Bird, a professor at Texas A&M-Corpus Christi.

“The part that’s different here is just how fast we rose in the number of cases and how fast it spread,” said Bird, who has been modeling the outbreak for officials.

The reason for the rapid spread in Corpus Christi is not certain. Data gathered from cellphones indicated that movement around the city returned to pre-pandemic levels by early June, especially at restaurant­s.

“When I saw that, I knew it wasn’t a good sign,” Bird said.

Many pointed at the visitors from big cities.

“I think they should stay home,” said Jasmine Rodriguez, 24, a security guard at a La Michoacana grocery store. “There should be checkpoint­s and a mandatory stay-in-your-city.”

But some locals said they had no one but themselves to blame. People went to bars. They partied. They did not social distance or wear masks. The city did not require masks in most retail stores until last week, days before a statewide order.

“It’s us. Yeah, it’s us,” said Marilyn McCaleb, 62, speaking through a flower-print mask as she went grocery shopping at a local H-E-B. “They don’t wear their masks — maybe they do now, because they have to.”

Whatever the reason, the virus was almost nowhere, and then, seemingly overnight, it was everywhere. Bars. Restaurant­s. Graduation celebratio­ns. A draft party for a local baseball player picked up by a major league team. A chance encounter on the beach.

“I know because they would say to the contact tracers, ‘Oh, I was at the beach and some girls from San Antonio told us at the end of the night that they had COVID,’ ” said Annette Rodriguez, the public health director for Corpus Christi and surroundin­g Nueces County.

“‘And we shared a bottle.’”

The county attorney tested positive, as did many city workers. At one point, 10 percent of the firefighte­rs in the city were out sick or quarantini­ng because of possible exposure. At City Hall, staffers who were back in the office after months of working from home in the spring were told to return to remote work. Officials instituted a beach curfew and barred cars from the sands over the July Fourth holiday.

The contrast with even a few weeks ago could not be more stark.

At first, city officials had been able to jump on and contain what few small outbreaks there were: at a meat processing plant, a halfway house. Officials tested aggressive­ly and got those who were exposed to isolate. They felt confident in their approach.

Last month, the city stood out as an example of a place that had suffered economical­ly from pandemic-related shutdowns — with unemployme­nt at nearly 16 percent in early June — without actually experienci­ng much of a viral outbreak at all. Few residents knew anyone who had gotten sick.

Not only was tourism devastated, but another major industry in the city — its massive port for oil and gas exports — suffered from declining demand and plunging oil prices.

Then, as Texas reopened beginning May 1, Texans began flocking to Corpus Christi. It started on Memorial Day weekend and did not stop for weeks.

“The entire city was completely sold out. Every hotel. Every shortterm rental,” said Brett Oetting, the head of the Corpus Christi tourism bureau. “What happened during the entire month of June: Every weekend was a Memorial Day weekend.”

Hotels, restaurant­s and bars that had been starved for life surged back. But some business owners grew wary of the number of people suddenly flooding into town.

“It was horrible — it was so busy,” said Brigitte Kazenmayer, 59, the owner of popular breakfast spot JB’s German Bakery & Cafe. “People didn’t wear masks. They didn’t understand the 6 feet.”

Kazenmayer, who immigrated from Germany and fell in love with Corpus Christi, said that in June, the lines would snake out the door and across the parking lot.

“They came from Houston, Austin, San Antonio — and I think, why are you here? You bring it here!” she said of the virus. “But they like the beach. That’s why I’m here, too.”

But now it is the visitors from other parts of Texas who are wary of being around people in Corpus Christi.

At an RV campsite just a few steps from the beach, Billy Arocha, 34, prepared to grill as his three children played in a sprinkler. Arocha, from Floresvill­e, said he had considered canceling the trip when he saw the cases exploding in Corpus Christi.

“I’m scared,” he said, adding an expletive for emphasis.

When they were planning their stay, Arocha said, he considered going out to eat in a restaurant, “but not anymore.” He said he was not talking to anyone in town and only going to the beach when it was uncrowded.

The vacation had been meant as a much-needed break and a way to celebrate his wife’s birthday. But the mood had darkened over their festivitie­s.

“We just got a call that her aunt is close to dying from the coronaviru­s,” he said. “That virus is something else.”

 ?? Photos by Christophe­r Lee / New York Times ?? Visitors from Missouri enjoy the beach in Corpus Christi. Out-of-towners are seen as a contributi­ng factor in the local outbreak.
Photos by Christophe­r Lee / New York Times Visitors from Missouri enjoy the beach in Corpus Christi. Out-of-towners are seen as a contributi­ng factor in the local outbreak.
 ??  ?? Brittany Thangiah works her shift at Water Street Oyster Bar in Corpus Christi. Masks weren’t required until recently.
Brittany Thangiah works her shift at Water Street Oyster Bar in Corpus Christi. Masks weren’t required until recently.

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