Las Vegas Review-Journal

Give Nevada’s rural counties more discretion on virus

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Nevada is a vast and wideopen state, with the great majority of its 3.1 million residents living in the Las Vegas and Reno areas. It’s no surprise then, that Clark and Washoe counties — home to Las Vegas and Reno, respective­ly — have been most significan­tly impacted by coronaviru­s cases and deaths in terms of sheer numbers. Add to that list Humboldt County — population 17,000, in the northwest part of the state — as its per capita case and death rates exceed those endured in the state’s urban centers.

Over the past three weeks, however, the coronaviru­s has gradually subsided even in Nevada’s harder hit regions. Meanwhile, the virus never gained a foothold in most of the state’s 17 counties, at least eight of which have yet to see a single resident succumb to the respirator­y disease. Which leads us to the obvious question: As Gov. Steve Sisolak ponders how to implement Phase Two of his reopening plan, why are residents of rural Nevada still subjected to the same restrictio­ns imposed in the state’s population centers?

During a briefing early this month, the governor implied he would allow county officials to tailor reopening plans to suit the unique circumstan­ces of their own regions. What he actually meant, however, was that counties could stray from gubernator­ial edicts only if they imposed even stricter restrictio­ns on economic activity and social gatherings. This effectivel­y means that folks in places such as Austin, Ely, Tonopah and Winnemucca continue to fall under the same virus mandates as those in

Las Vegas. This doesn’t make a lot of sense.

Gov. Sisolak previously expressed concern that allowing sparsely populated areas to ease lockdowns earlier than others may hasten the spread of the coronaviru­s by luring stir-crazy urbanites to the Nevada outback. But that fear seems more like a flimsy justificat­ion for the status quo.

In truth, Gov. Sisolak would be following the lead of other Democratic governors if he sanctioned rural counties moving at a faster pace. In New York, Gov. Andrew Cuomo has given the OK for communitie­s in the western part of his state — including Buffalo — to ease lockdowns more aggressive­ly than New York City and surroundin­g environs. In Michigan, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer announced this week that bars and restaurant­s in northern state counties — including the entire upper peninsula — may again serve customers in-house beginning Friday. California Gov. Gavin Newsom has also given the go-ahead for several northern Golden State counties to move forward before those in Los Angeles or the Bay Area.

Gov. Sisolak this week is expected to offer more details on further easing the lockdown that has devastated the state’s economy. He should take that opportunit­y to also give rural county and city leaders more freedom to move forward at their own discretion.

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