Rome News-Tribune

Gov. Kemp renews COVID-19 restrictio­ns, suspends local mask mandates

- By Jeff Amy and Ben Nadler

Georgia’s Gov. Brian Kemp is explicitly banning Georgia’s cities and counties from ordering people to wear masks in public places. He voided orders on Wednesday that at least 15 local government­s across the state had adopted even though Kemp had earlier said cities and counties had no power to order masks.

The Republican governor has instead been trying to encourage voluntary mask wearing, including telling fans that reduced infections from mask-wearing would make college football season possible.

Kemp’s move is likely to infuriate local officials in communitie­s that had acted, including Atlanta, Augusta, Savannah, Rome and the governor’s hometown of Athens-clarke County. Overall, mask orders by Wednesday were covering 1.4 million of Georgia’s more than 10 million residents.

Kemp’s new order also bans local government­s from requiring masks on public property, which void requiremen­ts that some government­s have imposed for citizens to wear masks inside city and county buildings.

Wednesday’s numbers showed nearly 2,800 people hospitaliz­ed statewide with the COVID-19 respirator­y illness, the highest on record and a number that’s nearly doubled since the beginning of the month. The state reports 84% of hospitals’ available critical beds are in use, although some hospitals say they have opened up more space and have more room.

Georgia overall had nearly 128,000 confirmed infections and nearly 3,100 deaths overall as of Wednesday, although experts say many more people get the illness but are never tested. For most people, the new coronaviru­s causes mild or moderate symptoms. Most recover, but some can become severely ill or die.

Local officials and Democrats had argued cities and counties had the power to move ahead because Kemp hadn’t specifical­ly banned mask orders. His orders barred local government­s from enacting any coronaviru­s restrictio­ns beyond his orders and he called the local mask mandates “legally unenforcea­ble.”

“It is increasing­ly clear from medical and scientific data that droplet and aerosol transmissi­on of COVID-19 are an enormous community risk, so I made the decision to supplement the governor’s order with a local mask requiremen­t to provide for greater community safety,” Kelly Girtz, mayor of the Athens-clarke County unified government, said in an email.

Savannah opened the floodgates when its mayor announced in late June that residents and visitors would be required to wear face coverings inside stores and other public spaces or face a $500 fine.

The back-and-forth comes as rising hospitaliz­ations have the state seeking new hospital beds to handle the record-setting number of people admitted with the virus. Kemp’s administra­tion on Tuesday signed a deal with Piedmont Healthcare, one of four large hospital systems in the Atlanta area, to open 62 beds in a new tower at the system’s main Atlanta hospital. The state is providing nurses to staff the beds off a contract with a private staffing company.

The trend of deaths had hit a low in Georgia on July 9, when the state averaged only 12 newly reported deaths a day over the previous week. Newly reported deaths sometimes happen weeks earlier. But the trend of deaths has since been rising, following upward trends in cases and hospitaliz­ations that began in early June. Georgia is now averaging 24 deaths over the past week, the highest level in nearly four weeks.

Kemp on Wednesday extended some parts of his executive orders governing the state’s response to the pandemic until July 31. It extends the ban on gatherings of more than 50 people, renews rules about how businesses can operate and orders nursing home residents, senior home residents and other people with medical conditions to shelter in place. The overall state of emergency will run through at least Aug. 11.

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