The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

»Kemp says he still has “arrows left in the quiver” to fight coronaviru­s,

Governor says he’s ‘balancing’ safety and economics.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

Gov. Brian Kemp pushed back on criticism that he’s not doing enough to combat Georgia’s coronaviru­s outbreak, saying in a Tuesday interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on that he is trying to strike a balance between public safety and economic vitality, but that he has more “arrows left in the quiver.”

The governor told the AJC his order to ban many public gatherings, close bars and nightclubs, and authorize officials to shut down any business that doesn’t comply with social distancing requiremen­ts will help curb the disease without yet having to resort to drastic measures such as shelterin-place rules.

“You have to have the citizens go with you when you make those moves. I certainly don’t feel like we’re there. I think that would have devastated a lot of people, literally decades of what they have built up. A lot of people are acting responsibl­y,” he said.

“We cannot only think about what we’re dealing with today, but the future of our state two months from now, six months now and six years from now. I’ve been really balancing all these things,” Kemp added, saying there are some Georgians still “doubting the effects of the coronaviru­s” and others who want him to lock down the state.

The Republican has come under fire from some public health experts and other critics after he stopped short of ordering most Georgians to stay in their homes, closing restaurant­s or taking other stricter measures imposed by a growing number of governors as the pandemic worsens.

And on Tuesday, the Georgia Municipal Associatio­n urged the leaders of all 538 cities in the state to declare public health emergencie­s and shut down nonessenti­al businesses within their boundaries, pressing beyond the coronaviru­s restrictio­ns set by Kemp.

In the interview, Kemp said he welcomed the tougher restrictio­ns from local government­s and singled out Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, saying that he spoke several times with her before she implemente­d a shelter-in-place order across Georgia’s largest city.

And he said he was not worried about a patchwork of responses that have left some areas under voluntary curfews and others with scaledback restrictio­ns in place. He said new restrictio­ns on the Georgians considered most at risk of infection, as well as his other mandates, would cover local government­s that have taken fewer steps.

“For the counties that don’t want to do anything, we addressed that yesterday with social gatherings and social distancing, closing bars and nightclubs and making sure the medically fragile are staying home,” he said.

Pressed on when he might institute a statewide shelterin-place order, as an increasing number of governors have ordered, Kemp said there’s no line in the sand to make such a decision.

“I’d hate to say there’s a certain threshold. I’m continuing to rely on informatio­n I’m getting from public health. What our modeling is showing, what our hospital situation is,” Kemp said.

“We’ve seen in other countries just because you shelter in place (it doesn’t mean) there’s not going to be tremendous growth in coronaviru­s cases,” he said. “That’s why I think we need to focus on the elderly and the medically fragile.”

Still, he didn’t rule out taking more stringent measures, and he added that he has considered banning hospitals from performing elective surgeries to conserve lifesaving medical equipment and hospital beds.

“That’s why I’m just urging citizens to buckle down for the next two weeks. I feel like if we can do that and get the upper hand on this thing, we’ll be in good shape. If that changes, we’ve got arrows left in the quiver.”

He offered a window into his approach in a separate interview with News 95.5 and AM 750 WSB earlier Tuesday, describing this fight as a societal effort.

“The community is going to stop this virus. It’s not going to be the government or a medical provider right now,” he told the station. “Until we find the vaccine or a cure for this, and that is months if not years away, society can stop the spread of this and contain it.”

Kemp said he borrowed the notion from public health scientists leading the federal response and said it reminded him there’s no “playbook” to craft Georgia’s response.

“Nobody really saw this coming. We went from being in the best economy I’ve ever seen to wondering where we’re going,” he said. “But I personally think if everybody does the right thing in the next week or two to get a hold of this, we can come out of this and get back on a roll.”

 ??  ?? Gov. Brian Kemp
Gov. Brian Kemp

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