The Oklahoman

Stitt bows to pressure, releases feds report

Coronaviru­s task force report puts state in `red zone;' recommends statewide mask mandate

- By Carmen Forman Staff writer cforman@oklahoman.com

Following complaints from local Oklahoma officials who say they have been kept out of the loop, Gov. Kevin Stitt said his administra­tion will make public coronaviru­s reports the state receives from the White House.

St it th as not been releasing the reports from the White House Coronaviru­s Task Force, nor implementi­ng many of the public health recommenda­tions in those reports.

Tulsa Mayor G.T. Bynum, a Republican, said t he city had not received copies of reports that have been critical of Oklahoma's handling of the pandemic. U.S. Rep. Kendra Horn, D- Oklahoma City, on Friday accused Stitt of hiding the task force' s recommenda­tions.

The latest report, first published by the Center for Public Integrity, shows Oklahoma is one of nine states in the “red zone” for coronaviru­s infections because of more than 100 COVID-19 cases per 100,000 people.

The report recommends Oklahoma implement a statewide mask mandate, close gyms and bars and limit social gatherings to curb the virus. The report also lists specific guidance for counties, such as Tulsa, that are seeing high rates of COVID-19 infections.

Horn said she also finds it troubling Stitt isn't adopting the task force's state-level recommenda­tions.

“Our communitie­s can't make the best decisions, schools — all of the people who are trying to do the best they can — cannot do that in the absence of informatio­n,” Horn said. “And they particular­ly can't do that when the informatio­n that is coming out of the governor's office flatly contradict­s the recommenda­tions and informatio­n coming out of the coronaviru­s task force.”

Stitt said he received the l atest report on Monday, a day after he met with White House Coronaviru­s Response Coordinato­r Dr. Deborah Birx, who visited Tulsa as part of a multistate tour. After her visit, Stitt said she was compliment­ary of Oklahoma's efforts, and didn't make any recommenda­tions for the state in its efforts to deal with the deadly virus.

Birx was not made available to the media before, during or after her meeting with Stitt and other state officials, although she has fielded questions in other states where she has made similar visits.

A spokeswoma­n for Stitt said the governor and Birx did not discuss the latest task force report during their meeting Sunday.

The latest task force report was shared this week with the Oklahoma City-County Health Department and t he Tulsa

Health Department, Stitt said in a statement.

As of Thursday, Bynum said Tulsa still hadn't received a copy.

“That's all data that, of course, we would like to know,” Bynum said. “If there's informatio­n being shared about Tulsa, we would certainly want to know about it.

The governor last week seemed surprised it had not been shared with us.”

Bynum said he also was surprised when Birx said Sunday that eight White House reports had been issued. He said he was only aware of one that had been previously leaked to the media.

Stitt said Friday he will ask that the White House reports be made publicly available to everyone.

“We have asked the Oklahoma State Department of Health (OSDH) to begin making the reports publicly available each week by posting them to the coronaviru­s.health.ok.gov dashboard,” he said.

Stitt also defended the coronaviru­s prevention measures taken by his administra­tion. He pointed to a recently issued Public Health Advisory that recommends Oklahomans age 11 and older in counties with moderate or high risk of COVID-19 transmissi­on wear a face mask in public.

The advisory also recommends all Oklahomans in communal living facilities and those who are at a higher risk of facing complicati­ons from the virus wear a mask in public settings.

 ?? [PROVIDED] ?? Gov. Kevin Stitt talks to White House Coronaviru­s Response Coordinato­r Dr. Deborah Birx during her visit to Tulsa on Sunday.
[PROVIDED] Gov. Kevin Stitt talks to White House Coronaviru­s Response Coordinato­r Dr. Deborah Birx during her visit to Tulsa on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States