The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Pa. converts liquor stores for online fulfillmen­t

- By Mark Scolforo, Marc Levy and Michael Rubinkam

HARRISBURG » Workers are returning the job at more than 100 shuttered stateowned liquor stores to help process online orders, Pennsylvan­ia’s liquor agency said Thursday.

Gov. Tom Wolf’s office gave the OK to reopen 106 of the state system’s 600 stores to help with online fulfillmen­t, a Pennsylvan­ia Liquor Control Board spokeswoma­n said. They remain off-limits to the public and are not engaging in retail sales.

The store closings have been widely unpopular, especially since the state’s swamped online ordering system has been unable to meet customer demand in a state where the liquor board controls the overwhelmi­ng majority of retail sales of hard alcohol.

The agency said 46 facilities have begun performing the work, most of them starting over the past few days, and dozens of additional stores are expected to open through the weekend.

The stores are getting enhanced sanitation and social distancing measures and to limit the number of employees per location, to help avoid transmissi­on of the new coronaviru­s.

Wolf, a Democrat, closed the stores about a month ago.

Wendell Young IV, president of Local 1776 of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union, which represents about 3,500 of the store clerks, said the PLCB plan is designed to meet a crushing demand for online sales.

Before the COVID-19 crisis, online sales had been a small part of the state liquor system’s $2.7 billion in annual sales. The agency also sells much of the wine consumed in the state.

Through online fulfillmen­t centers in Pittsburgh and the Philadelph­ia suburbs, the agency was able to fill only about 9,600 orders worth $2.1 million from April 1-8.

On Wednesday, the system more than doubled its daily capacity, filling 4,400 orders. The PLCB said it expects to reach 10,000 orders a day or more in the near future.

Young said the liquor board has also been reconfigur­ing the 13 centers that it runs across Pennsylvan­ia to fill orders for restaurant­s and other licensees. Those centers are not open to the public, but instead will be packaging online orders for delivery.

Producers, breweries, wineries and distilleri­es, and privately owned beer distributo­rships, have been permitted to sell during the shutdown of nonessenti­al businesses.

In other coronaviru­srelated developmen­ts in Pennsylvan­ia:

WOLF WARNS OF BIG BUDGET DEFICIT

Pennsylvan­ia is facing a projected budget deficit of up to $5 billion, Wolf warned in a letter to President Donald Trump.

The letter, dated Wednesday, backed calls from other governors for another $500 billion in federal aid for states fighting the spread of the coronaviru­s. It was issued with two other Democratic governors, Tony Evers of Wisconsin and Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan.

Trump narrowly won all three states in 2016, all of which had long backed Democrats in presidenti­al contests.

Wolf said the projected deficit ranging between $4.5 billion and $5 billion will make it more difficult for the state to support workers and businesses as it attempts to rebuild its economy.

Over the weekend, Republican Gov. Larry Hogan of Maryland and Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York issued a call for the additional $500 billion. Hogan is chairman of the National Governors Associatio­n and Cuomo is the vice chair.

CASES

Pennsylvan­ia’s COVID-19 death toll rose by 60 to 707, the state health department reported Thursday, with more than 1,200 additional people testing positive for the new coronaviru­s.

Nursing homes have been hit especially hard. More than half of the state’s fatalities have occurred in more than 300 nursing and personal-care homes scattered throughout Pennsylvan­ia, according to the Department of Health. Nearly 3,300 longterm care residents have contracted the virus.

Statewide, more than 27,700 people have tested positive, according to the latest health department statistics.

For most people, the virus causes mild or moderate symptoms that clear up in a couple of weeks. Older adults and people with existing health problems are at higher risk of more severe illness, including pneumonia, or death.

BERKS SOUNDS ALARM

A sharp rise in coronaviru­s cases threatens to overwhelm hospitals in Berks County, officials said Thursday.

Tower Health’s Reading Hospital and Penn State Health St. Joseph released a model that shows a looming shortage of regular hospital beds and ICU beds. Hospital officials said they are working to avoid that worst-case scenario by creating additional bed capacity, adding staff and procuring supplies.

The hospital executives took part in a news conference arranged by the Berks County commission­ers.

Board chairman Christian Leinbach said virus cases are rising at a sharper rate in Berks than in neighborin­g counties. He chided Berks residents and businesses for failing to adhere to social distancing guidelines.

“The numbers are bleak in Berks County,” Leinbach said. “We are not doing well. Businesses and individual­s are not doing enough of the basic things, like wearing a mask.”

More than 1,400 Berks County residents have tested positive for the virus, according to the state health department. Leinbach, citing data from the coroner’s office, said 52 have died.

 ?? LINDSEY SHUEY/THE REPUBLICAN-HERALD VIA AP ??
LINDSEY SHUEY/THE REPUBLICAN-HERALD VIA AP

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