Orlando Sentinel

Guidelines to come for state offices

- By Ana Ceballos

TALLAHASSE­E — More than a month after Gov. Ron DeSantis began restarting Florida’s economy, his administra­tion has not issued guidance for how state agencies should reopen offices to workers and the public.

Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, many state workers have been working from home and have been following telework and sick leave policies issued in March by the Department of Management Services, an executive agency that oversees state personnel matters.

But the department had not outlined return-to-work protocols as of Tuesday, nearly two weeks after DeSantis moved into the second phase of the state’s economic reopening plan, which including allowing expanded operations at restaurant­s and reopening bars and gyms. The first phase started in early May.

“Discussion­s are ongoing as to the reopening of state buildings. The work from the state agencies has been ongoing with some employees working from the office or teleworkin­g,” Helen Aguirre Ferre, a spokeswoma­n for the governor, told The News Service of Florida in an email Monday.

Ferre did not answer repeated questions about the administra­tion’s plan to reopen state offices or why DeSantis’ timeline for reopening has been different for businesses.

At least one DeSantis administra­tion agency, the Department of Health, has put in place an internal reopening plan.

On June 8, department officials sent an email to employees noting that “phase 2 of the Return from Telework Plan” had officially kicked off, according to a copy of the email obtained by the News Service.

The second phase of the plan allows 50 percent of department employees to return to the office and reopens department buildings and offices to the public with social distancing measures, the email said.

“The division director or other designated authority has complete discretion in selecting which employees will return to work under phase two,” the email said.

When Department of Health employees arrive at work, they will be “encouraged” but not required to wear face masks in the office, according to department guidelines.

“Employees may wear masks at their discretion. The department will have masks available upon request,” department officials said in the email.

The use of cloth face coverings is recommende­d in all business areas by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, unless a person has trouble breathing, is unable to tolerate wearing it or is unable to remove it without assistance.

Other guidelines from the Department of Health include cleaning high-touch and high-traffic areas in offices “at least daily,” asking employees to avoid handshakes and close quarters and screening visitors for signs and symptoms of COVID-19 prior to entering a buildings.

Alberto Moscoso, a spokesman for the Department of Health, did not respond to repeated requests for informatio­n about whether the department would open offices across the state or if it would exclude offices in counties where COVID-19 is more concentrat­ed.

Attorney General Ashley Moody and Agricultur­e Commission­er Nikki Fried, who operate their offices independen­tly from the DeSantis administra­tion, have been considerin­g county-level data as they move forward with reopening plans.

Moody’s office crafted a reopening plan with the help of medical profession­als at the University of Florida that began to allow up to 25 percent of department employees to return to the office on a voluntary basis on June 2.

“High-risk individual­s will continue to work from home,” Lauren Cassidy, a spokeswoma­n for Moody’s office, said at the time. “Additional­ly, masks will be required and provided in communal spaces.”

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