Imperial Valley Press

Nation’s capital aims to start reopening May 29

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WASHINGTON (AP) — After weeks of insisting the Washington, D.C., area is not ready to end its pandemic-induced lockdown, Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser now says the numbers are pointing to the start of a gradual reopening process at the end of the month.

Bowser on Thursday penciled in Friday, May 29 as a potential start date for phase 1 of the District of Columbia’s proposed three- phase reopening plan. That includes restaurant­s allowing outdoor patio seating, non-essential businesses offering curbside pickup and hair salons and barbers operating by appointmen­t at limited capacity.

Bowser emphasized the gradual nature of the process and warned residents not to expect the lives they had in February to return in full any time soon.

“Let’s be clear on what this is and what this isn’t,” Bowser said. “This is not an on-off switch.”

Bowser had previously set the nation’s capital on a timeline that would have it beginning to reopen on June 8 at the earliest. That’s later than most jurisdicti­ons around the country and a stark contrast to the sense of urgency to reopen coming from the White House.

“The mayor’s more conservati­ve approach … is the right way to go,” said Eleanor Holmes Norton, Washington DC’s non- voting delegate to the House of Representa­tives.

Although there have been one or two small protests to reopen DC faster, Norton said, “there was not an overwhelmi­ng desire on the part of District of Columbia residents to open up.”

The number of newly identified infections has fluctuated from day to day. But Bowser and Health Department Chief Dr. LaQuandra Nesbitt say they put more faith in indicators that track the exact onset of symptoms as a better metric for determinin­g the state of community transmissi­on.

 ?? AP Photo/Patrick Semansky ?? A man wears a face mask to protect against the spread of the new coronaviru­s on his forehead as he walks past a closed store in the Georgetown neighborho­od of Washington on Thursday.
AP Photo/Patrick Semansky A man wears a face mask to protect against the spread of the new coronaviru­s on his forehead as he walks past a closed store in the Georgetown neighborho­od of Washington on Thursday.

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