The Day

Lamont gives leaders some leeway

Executive order allows officials to revert to Phase 2 of reopening under certain conditions

- By GREG SMITH and CLAIRE BESSETTE

Gov. Ned Lamont on Tuesday signed a new executive order giving leaders of municipali­ties, such as New London and Norwich, that are experienci­ng a surge in COVID-19 cases the authority to revert to more restrictiv­e limits on the number of people allowed at certain businesses and gatherings.

The governor’s office, in a statement, said the executive order was the 75th since Lamont enacted the emergency declaratio­n and the move “builds upon his efforts to encourage mitigation strategies that slow down transmissi­on of the virus.” Lamont on Monday appeared in New London, a city where the daily COVID-19 case rate reached 30.5 per 100,000 between Sept. 20 and Oct. 3.

The executive order, which takes effect Thursday, allows municipal leaders under certain defined conditions the discretion to revert to restrictio­ns in place prior to Oct. 8, when the state’s Phase 3 of reopening went into effect and allowed larger gatherings at places like restaurant­s and religious institutio­ns.

Municipali­ties allowed to revert would be identified by the Connecticu­t Department of Public Health by their higher infection rates: a twoweek average of more than 15 cases per day per 100,000 residents.

“It is essential for the sake of public health and safety to provide municipali­ties that have seen an increase in COVID-19 cases the authority and flexibilit­y to implement and enforce within their own jurisdicti­ons more restrictiv­e size and gathering limitation­s to curtail the rate of COVID-19 transmissi­on in those municipali­ties and throughout the state,” the executive order reads.

Phase 3, for example, allowed restaurant­s to open at 75% capacity indoors as opposed to 50% capacity during Phase 2. It also loosened restrictio­ns on indoor and outdoor gatherings, religious gatherings, libraries and indoor performing arts venues.

New London Mayor Michael Passero previously has said it would be a difficult decision to roll back the loosened restrictio­ns, especially considerin­g the small geographic size of the city.

“The City is currently conferring with Ledge Light Health District to determine whether or not a roll back to Phase 2 is a strategy that has merit for New London’s mere 5½ square miles in geographic size,” he said Tuesday.

The executive order indicates that DPH would report weekly on its website the average over a 14-day period of new cases per 100,000 residents, excluding long- term care facilities and correction­al institutio­ns.

As of 4 p. m. Tuesday, the state reported that New London County had seen 2,821 confirmed and 84 probable COVID-19 cases, increases of 67 and 1, respective­ly, from numbers reported Monday. The county has seen 97 confirmed deaths associated with the disease, up by one since Monday, while probable deaths remained unchanged at 30. Hospitaliz­ations related to the disease also remained unchanged, at 25.

The chief executive of a municipali­ty that meets the criteria will provide to the commission­er of the Department of Economic and Community Developmen­t written notice of the municipali­ty’s decision either to maintain Phase 3 restrictio­ns or revert to Phase 2.

Norwich city and school leaders and the Uncas Health District will meet at 4 p. m. Wednesday to discuss the governor’s latest executive order and whether to try to roll back some Phase 3 openings.

City Manager John Salomone said the group will review the latest Norwich COVID-19 numbers, whether they are trending up or down.

But he cautioned that the effects of tightening restrictio­ns could take a while to show up in the numbers.

“It’s really a no win,” Salomone said. “You tighten up, and you affect people economical­ly. And you have to weigh that with the effort to rein in the outbreak.”

The D PH declared a COVID-19 alert for Norwich on Oct. 1, offering assistance to add numerous free testing sites and contact tracing for people who tested positive or who were exposed to someone with the virus. Public schools and Norwich Free Academy reverted to fully remote learning for two weeks.

School officials will participat­e in Wednesday’s meeting. Superinten­dent Kristen Stringfell­ow told the school board Tuesday she hopes to have informatio­n to decide “before Friday” whether to return to hybrid learning next week.

Norwich City Hall and city offices have remained closed to the public since March, open by appointmen­t only, with municipal meetings held online or by teleconfer­ence. When the alert was issued, city inspectors stopped doing in-person inspection­s, and developers, contractor­s and homeowners are asked to drop off permit applicatio­ns in a drop box to be reviewed with telephone consultati­ons.

Mayor Peter Nystrom said many downtown Norwich restaurant­s were unable to take advantage of the state’s Phase 3 opening Oct. 8, because the same spacing and social distancing requiremen­ts remain in place and they don’t have enough space to expand indoor capacity.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States