The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fulton, cities mull reviving restrictio­ns

Past week has seen county’s COVID-19 cases quadruple.

- By Zachary Hansen zachary.hansen@ajc.com

Officials in Fulton County and its cities are considerin­g bringing back mask mandates and gathering restrictio­ns due to the surge of COVID19 cases in metro Atlanta.

Over the past week, positive cases of COVID-19 have quadrupled in Georgia’s most populous county, with an average of more than 800 cases being reported each day. Over a recent 24-hour period, Fulton tallied 1,769 cases of COVID19. The county is at its testing capacity due to staffing shortages and health care workers catching the virus themselves, officials say.

County health officials cite holiday travel, frequent gatherings, a lack of mask-wearing and vaccine holdouts for the explosive spread of the virus’s omicron variant. On an emergency virtual meeting Friday morning, the Fulton County Board of Health showed county commission­ers and city mayors new projection­s of omicron’s spread, which doesn’t show improvemen­t anytime soon.

“As you can see, we are on a bad trajectory,” Dr. Lynn A. Paxton, Fulton’s district health director, said on the call. “Make no mistake. Throughout the world, we are starting to see people dying of omicron.”

She recommende­d that Fulton and its 15 cities reinstate indoor mask mandates and consider canceling, discouragi­ng or banning large gatherings until the surge passes. Atlanta and East Point already brought back their mask mandates, but most other cities have yet to follow suit.

Commission­ers voted to close the county’s senior centers next week, and they said they’ll consider the other measures at their first meeting next year.

Paxton said action needs to be taken immediatel­y.

“We know it’s going to be much higher in January,” she said. “That’s why we need to make these changes right now.”

Doug Schuster, planning section chief at Fulton County, said the county’s projection­s are “some pretty dire forecasts.” The county anticipate­s more than 150 Fulton residents to die from the omicron variant by April. By February, it’s possible for the county to record more than 3,000 positive cases of COVID-19 each day, dwarfing prior spikes.

The only positive to glean from the meeting was that hospitaliz­ations have not risen to match the spike in COVID-19 cases, but Paxton said that will inevitably happen when this many people get sick.

Johns Creek Mayor Mike Bodker said he isn’t in favor of mandating masks or measures that go beyond educating the public. He added that he sees a lot of “intellectu­al dishonesty” from public officials who claim vaccinatio­n is the only answer to stopping the spread. He said forcing vaccinatio­ns or issuing further mandates will just increase distrust among residents and lead to more harm.

“We’re not done with this, and we’re not going to be done with this for a long time,” he said. “So at a certain point, if we exhaust people fully, we’re going to get worse noncomplia­nce than we have even now.”

Atlanta Mayor-elect Andre Dickens was also on the call and spoke about his COVID19 case. Despite being fully vaccinated, he tested positive Monday and said he suffered mild coldlike symptoms. He encouraged everyone to get tested often, even if it means they have to wait in lengthy lines or search far and wide for an appointmen­t with a private health care provider.

“It’s important for people to get tested every three days or so,” he said.

Paxton said the board of health allocated about $800,000 in grant funds to purchase at-home COVID-19 tests to try to plug the gap before more at-home tests become available. President Joe Biden announced this week that he will distribute 500 million free home coronaviru­s tests, but Paxton said those likely won’t be available until 2022.

She was also adamant that the status quo would not be enough to stop omicron’s surge.

“We are not trying to encourage panic,” she said. “We are trying to cause preparedne­ss.”

 ?? AJC PHOTO ?? More than 100 people were in line Wednesday morning at Fulton County’s COVID-19 testing site off Boulevard in Atlanta. The county is at its testing capacity due to staffing shortages and health care workers catching the virus themselves, officials say. Over a recent 24-hour period, Fulton tallied 1,769 cases of COVID-19.
AJC PHOTO More than 100 people were in line Wednesday morning at Fulton County’s COVID-19 testing site off Boulevard in Atlanta. The county is at its testing capacity due to staffing shortages and health care workers catching the virus themselves, officials say. Over a recent 24-hour period, Fulton tallied 1,769 cases of COVID-19.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States