Santa Fe New Mexican

Texas, other states reopen as cases fall

Gov. Abbott to drop mask mandate, capacity limits for businesses, worrying federal health officials

- By Julie Bosman and Lucy Tompkins

Texas said Tuesday that it was lifting its mask requiremen­t and would allow businesses to fully reopen, the most expansive step by any state to remove coronaviru­s restrictio­ns as Americans across the country are eager to emerge after a year of isolation in the pandemic.

The move by Texas, with its 29 million residents, goes further than similar actions in other states and cities that are rushing to ease as many limits as they can.

“It is now time to open Texas 100%,” Gov. Greg Abbott said, adding that “COVID has not suddenly disappeare­d,” but state mandates are no longer needed.

All around the country, governors and mayors are calibratin­g what is feasible, what is safe and what is politicall­y practical.

In Chicago, tens of thousands of children returned to public school this week, while snow-covered parks and playground­s around the city that had been shuttered since last March were opened. Mississipp­i ended its mask mandate, too. Restaurant­s in Massachuse­tts were allowed to operate without capacity limits, and South Carolina erased its limits on large gatherings. San Francisco announced that indoor dining, museums, movie theaters and gyms could reopen on a limited basis.

But federal health officials have worried that state and local leaders may be moving too fast.

“I know people are tired; they want to get back to life, to normal,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Monday. “But we’re not there yet.”

The divergent guidance has left

many Americans in a quandary: wondering whether to follow the lure of optimism, as some officials in California, Michigan and North Carolina endorsed widespread reopenings of businesses and schools, or to heed their own lingering concerns about the virus and the warnings of federal health officials who have said it is premature to lift too many limits.

As Kitty Sherry, 36, sent her son, Jude, off to his Chicago elementary school this week for the first time in nearly a year, she felt caught in a middle ground between elation and worry.

“There’s a part of me that’s really excited that he’s back in school,” Sherry said. But she said she worried about the health risk to teachers, and said her family was still avoiding restaurant­s and other indoor spaces because of the pandemic. “It’s not over yet,” she said. “So there’s not too much celebratin­g.”

Government officials have sent mixed, often cautious messages to the public. Dr. Anthony Fauci, President Joe Biden’s chief medical adviser for COVID-19, said this week that for small groups of people who have all been fully vaccinated, there was low risk in gathering together at home.

Activities beyond that, he said, would depend on data, modeling and “good clinical common sense,” adding that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would soon have guidance for what vaccinated people could do safely.

The message that many Americans are hearing from their elected officials, including leaders from both parties, is upbeat.

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan said Tuesday that she was easing restrictio­ns on businesses and allowing family members who have tested negative for the coronaviru­s to visit nursing home residents. Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachuse­tts said that while residents should continue to wear masks in public, it was time for more limits on businesses to be eased.

In Kentucky, all but a handful of school districts are now offering in-person classes, while the state races to vaccinate teachers as quickly as possible. Gov. Andy Beshear told reporters last week that the state’s falling infection statistics showed that immunizati­ons were beginning to have an effect.

“It means vaccinatio­ns work,” he said. “We’re already seeing it. We’re seeing it in these numbers. It’s a really positive sign.”

In Texas, Abbott’s lifting of limits goes into effect March 10. Some Democrats sharply criticized the idea, saying it suggests a more optimistic picture of the state’s progress with the coronaviru­s than the reality.

There are reasons for optimism: Vaccinatio­ns have increased significan­tly in recent weeks, and daily reports of new coronaviru­s cases have fallen across the country from their January peaks.

The positive signs come with caveats. Though national statistics have improved drasticall­y since January, they have plateaued in the past week or so, and the United States is still reporting more than 65,000 new cases a day on average — comparable to the peak of last summer’s surge, according to a New York Times database. The country is averaging more than 2,000 deaths per day, though deaths are a lagging indicator because it can take weeks after being infected with the coronaviru­s to die from it.

New, more contagious variants of the virus are circulatin­g in the country, with the potential to push case counts upward again. Testing has fallen 30 percent in recent weeks, leaving experts worried about how quickly new outbreaks will be known. And millions of Americans are still waiting to be vaccinated — including workers in restaurant­s, which are now open in vast numbers across the country.

In states like Florida and South Dakota, schools and businesses have been widely open for months, and many local and state officials across the country have been easing restrictio­ns since last summer. Still, the pace of reopenings has quickened considerab­ly in the past few days.

“We’re, hopefully, in between what I hope will be the last big wave, and the beginning of the period where I hope COVID will become very uncommon,” said Robert Horsburgh, a public health researcher at the Boston University School of Public Health. “But we don’t know that. I’ve been advocating for us to just hang tight for four to six more weeks.”

Jennifer Nuzzo, an epidemiolo­gist at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, said that there are signs that the country may be through the worst of the pandemic. But she is still worried that states are reopening too hastily, repeating the same mistakes made in earlier periods of the pandemic when loosened restrictio­ns were followed by new spikes in cases.

“Rather than opening a few lower-risk things and seeing just to make sure it doesn’t change the numbers, it just feels like they’re just kind of opening the floodgates,” Nuzzo said.

Most schools across the country are open to students, at least partially in person, and evidence suggests they have done so relatively safely. But school reopenings for some districts have been delayed repeatedly by outbreaks in communitie­s where other types of restrictio­ns remain lifted.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Alyssa Dooley makes a cocktail Tuesday at Mo’s Irish Pub in Houston. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced Tuesday he is lifting business capacity limits and the state’s mask mandate.
DAVID J. PHILLIP/ASSOCIATED PRESS Alyssa Dooley makes a cocktail Tuesday at Mo’s Irish Pub in Houston. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced Tuesday he is lifting business capacity limits and the state’s mask mandate.

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