County orders hotels to close to most guests,
As more South Floridians tested positive for the coronavirus, Miami-Dade County on Saturday announced it was restricting hotel stays to help curb the spread of the highly contagious illness.
In an order released Saturday morning, Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez said hotels, motels and other lodging businesses can’t accept new reservations, but he allowed for a host of exceptions, including medical personnel, journalists, first responders and “persons unable to return home” because of the global pandemic’s effect on travel.
The order, which also limits guests to two per room, was effective immediately.
“The exceptions are meant to ensure that only those who must be in Miami-Dade County because they are helping in this emergency, or those who have nowhere else to go, such as domestic-violence victims or stranded visitors — they’re able to get a place to stay,” Gimenez said in a video message released on Saturday.
The mayor’s new restrictions appear to be less stringent than originally suggested. On Friday night, Miami Beach said it was closing all of its hotels and motels except for “essential lodgers” — a move Gimenez said he would follow. “I am ordering the closure of all hotels, commercial lodging establishments and short-term rentals in Miami-Dade County,” Gimenez said on Friday night.
The county’s new restrictions are designed to cut down on
people interacting with each other, a way to slow the spread of the highly contagious virus that brought the world’s economy to a standstill and killed thousands across the globe. Miami-Dade County has already ordered the shutdown of parks, beaches, movie theaters, gyms and dine-in restaurants — pretty much anywhere people gather.
The danger for citizens only heightened on Saturday as the confirmed number of cases of COV-19 in the United States surpassed 21,000. The Florida Department of Health said there were now 603 confirmed cases of COV-19 in the state, with 12 deaths. In Miami-Dade, there have been 142 confirmed cases.
Among those now recorded as being infected in South Florida: a University of Miami student, and someone associated with the Broward school district.
Among other developments announced on Saturday:
Leaders in the U.S. Congress raced to try and hammer out a financial rescue program that will pump trillions in the tanked economy that had left millions jobless around the country.
Key West, in Monroe County, ordered all non-essential retail and commercial businesses to be closed by 5 p.m on Monday.
Gov. Ron DeSantis announced the closure of all restaurants at rest stops on the Florida Turnpike.
Puerto Rico announced its first coronavirus-related death: a 68-year-old Italian woman who had been aboard the Costa Luminosa cruise ship.
In Miami-Dade County, hospitality leaders were still struggling to digest Mayor Gimenez’s order on Saturday’s order, which also allows individual cities to impose stricter rules. Miami Beach, the international hotspot that attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors from across the globe every year, is doing just that. On Friday, the city said all “commercial lodging establishments” — including hotels, hostels, dormitories, motels and short-term rental units — must be “fully closed to guests and renters” by 11:59 p.m. on Monday.
Countywide, there was confusion about what Gimenez’s order entailed.
In a press release, his office said “there is some flexibility in the Mayor’s Order to ensure people staying at hotels, motels and other commercial lodging in Miami-Dade County can make plans to depart the premises and return to their residences. There are also certain exceptions that allow stranded customers whose flights have been canceled to remain in their current accommodations for the time being.”
Police departments say they will field complaints about unauthorized guests. Miami Police spokeswoman Kenia Reyes said that as of Saturday evening, no complaints were fielded.
In Miami, a police force will knock on the doors of businesses — including hotels and motels — to remind them of the county ordinances in place.
Miami-Dade Police Detective Alvaro Zabaleta, a spokesman, said county officers are doing likewise with hotels and motels, reminding them of the county’s closures and fielding complaints. Violating the county orders is a misdemeanor, Zabaleta said.
“We want to work with the community and educate them on the compliance of the executive order,” Zabaleta said. “We’re going to use common sense.”
Miami Herald staff writers Martin Vassolo, Douglas Hanks and Charles Rabin contributed to this report.