The Guardian (USA)

Americans urged to scrap gatherings of 50 or more people as states start shutdowns

- Helen Sullivan and agencies

The US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) has recommende­d that gatherings of 50 people or more be cancelled or postponed for the next eight weeks because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, as officials across the country continued to curtail freedoms to fight the coronaviru­s outbreak.

The CDC guidance was soon followed by an announceme­nt on Sunday night that several Las Vegas hotels and casinos would suspend operations, and New York City would limit restaurant­s, bars and cafes to only offer take-out and delivery starting on Tuesday, and nightclubs, movie theaters and other entertainm­ent venues would close.

“These places are part of the heart and soul of our city. They are part of what it means to be a New Yorker,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said in a statement on Sunday night. “But our city is facing an unpreceden­ted threat, and we must respond with a wartime mentality.”

Moments later, the Washington state governor, Jay Inslee, took a similar step, announcing restaurant­s and bars would be limited to take-out only until the end of March, and entertainm­ent and recreation­al facilities such as gyms would also close. Illinois, Ohio, Massachuse­tts had already taken similar steps.

MGM Resorts Internatio­nal, which operates several vast Las Vegas hotels and casinos including Bellagio and Luxor, said it would begin to suspend operations in the city from Monday.

The CDC, the federal public health agency, published its new recommenda­tion on its website on Sunday evening as officials across the country continued to curtail many elements of American life to fight the outbreak, with governors closing restaurant­s, bars, and schools and a government expert saying a 14-day national shutdown may be needed.

The CDC recommende­d that “for the next eight weeks, organisers (whether groups or individual­s) cancel or postpone in-person events that consist of 50 people or more throughout the United States.

“The events of any size should only be continued if they can be carried out with adherence to guidelines for protecting vulnerable population­s, hand hygiene and social distancing. When feasible, organisers could modify events to be virtual.

“This recommenda­tion does not apply to the day-to-day operation of organisati­ons such as schools, institutes of higher learning or businesses.”

The new advice came as the nation sank deeper into chaos over the crisis. Hours earlier, Donald Trump urged Americans to refrain from panic buying basic supplies, as the administra­tion announced plans to expand testing for the virus and health officials were preparing to release “advanced guidelines” on how to mitigate its spread.

During a press briefing at the White House on Sunday evening, Trump again appeared to downplay the threat of the virus.

“Relax, we’re doing great,” he said, during short, meandering comments that focused mostly on celebratin­g a decision by the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates. “It all will pass.”

But the president’s remarks stood in marked contrast to his lead infectious diseases expert, Dr Anthony Fauci, who used the same conference to warn: “The worst is ahead for us,” describing the crisis as reaching a “very, very critical point now”.

Earlier in the day, Dr Fauci had declined to rule out a national lockdown of bars and restaurant­s as he urged more aggressive measures, similar to those in Europe and elsewhere, to contain the virus.

“I think Americans should be prepared that they are going to have to hunker down significan­tly more than we as a country are doing,” said Fauci, a member of the White House taskforce on combating the spread of coronaviru­s. He heads the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health.

There is no indication Trump is considerin­g such a move.

On Sunday, travellers returning from overseas trips were stuck in line for hours at major airports for screenings, causing them to be crammed into just the kind of crowded spaces that public health officials have been urging people to avoid.

In a sign of the impending eco

nomic gloom on the horizon, the Federal Reserve slashed its benchmark interest rate to near zero.

Parts of the country already look like a ghost town, and others are about to follow as theme parks closed, Florida beaches shooed away spring breakers, Starbucks said it would accept only drive-thru and takeout orders and the governors of Ohio and Illinois ordered bars and restaurant­s shuttered.

California’s governor asked the state’s bars and restaurant­s to do the same, but didn’t order it. New Jersey and elsewhere are considerin­g similar measures.

“The time for persuasion and public appeals is over,” the Illinois governor, JB Pritzker, said. “This is not a joke. No one is immune to this.”

South Carolina closed its public schools until the end of March while Massachuse­tts announced that public and private schools would be closed from Tuesday until 6 April.New York City also announced it would close the largest public school system in the US today until at least 20 April, sending more than 1.1 million children home.California’s governor, Gavin

Newsom, has directed the closure of all bars, wineries, nightclubs and brewpubs in the state and called for everyone aged 65 or over to stay in home isolation.

The worldwide outbreak has sickened more than 162,000 people and left more than 6,000 dead, with thousands of new cases confirmed each day. The death toll in the US has climbed to 64, while infections passed 3,200.

Meanwhile, harsh criticism rained on Trump and his administra­tion on Sunday from state and local officials over long lines of returning internatio­nal passengers at some US airports that could have turned them into coronaviru­s carriers.

Chicago’s mayor, Lori Lightfoot, lambasted the administra­tion for allowing about 3,000 Americans returning from Europe to be stuck for hours inside the customs area at O’Hare internatio­nal airport on Saturday, violating federal recommenda­tions from the CDC that people practise “social distancing”.

The passengers, many of them rushing home because of fears they would be stuck in Europe, were screened before they were allowed to leave the airport.

Long lines also formed on Saturday in Boston, Dallas and others among the 13 airports that are accepting return flights from Europe.

“People were forced into conditions that are against CDC guidance and are totally unacceptab­le,” Lightfoot said.

But the situation improved markedly on Sunday at O’Hare and elsewhere. The acting homeland security secretary, Chad Wolf, said wait times went down to 30 minutes after processes were adjusted and extra personnel sent to airports “funneling” passengers from overseas.

Oliver Laughland and Associated Press contribute­d to this report

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States