As U.S. coronavirus death toll tops 51,000, handful of states move
toward reopening
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[April 25, 2020]
By Rich McKay
ATLANTA (Reuters) - With the U.S.
coronavirus death toll topping 51,000 and nearly one in six workers out
of a job, Georgia, Oklahoma and several other states took tentative
steps at reopening businesses on Friday, despite disapproval from
President Donald Trump and medical experts.
Fitness clubs, hair salons, tattoo parlors and some other workplaces
were allowed to open their doors by Georgia Governor Brian Kemp,
disregarding warnings from public health officials that easing
restrictions too soon could lead to more infections and deaths.
Georgia, one of several states in the Deep South that waited until early
April to mandate restrictions imposed weeks before across much of the
rest of the country to curb the outbreak, has become a flashpoint in the
debate over how and when the nation should return to work.
While the COVID-19 illness is killing thousands of Americans daily,
stay-at-home orders and business closures have thrown more than 26
million people out of work, a level of unemployment not seen since the
Great Depression of the 1930s.
"We've been hurting real bad," said Lester Crowell, co-owner and manager
of the Three-13 hair salon in suburban Atlanta, which reopened after 33
days. "I had to dip into my own bank account to keep the lights on
here."
A dozen customers lined up outside the salon, each standing 6 feet
apart. Before they could enter, staff members took their temperatures
and asked if anyone had a cough, a recent fever or a housemate who had
been sick or quarantined.
Despite the lost revenue, not all eligible merchants in Georgia jumped
at the chance to resume business. Shay Cannon, owner of Liberty Tattoo
in Atlanta, said he would reopen in May by appointment only and did not
foresee a return to normal until June or later.
"We're just watching the numbers and doing what seems right to us,"
Cannon told Reuters.
The U.S. death toll from COVID-19, the highest in the world, surpassed
51,000 on Friday, having doubled in 10 days, according to a Reuters
tally, and the number of Americans known to be infected surpassed
900,000.
OTHER STATES REOPENING
Georgia was not alone in reopening.
Oklahoma was permitting some retailers to resume business on Friday,
Florida began reopening its beaches a week ago, South Carolina started
easing restrictions on Monday, and other states will follow suit next
week.
Trump, who had staked his November re-election on the nation's booming
economy before the pandemic, has given mixed signals about when and how
the country should begin to get back to work.
Last Friday, a day after the White House issued federal guidelines
urging a gradual, cautious approach advocated by health experts, he
called for several Democratic governors to "liberate" their states from
economic restrictions. But in a reversal this week, he publicly
criticized fellow Republican Kemp's moves to reopen Georgia.
Late on Thursday, Trump sparked fresh confusion over prospects for
COVID-19 treatments, suggesting scientists should investigate whether
patients might be cured by ingesting disinfectants or being bathed in
ultraviolet light.
The comments prompted doctors, health experts and manufacturers of
bleach to warn the public not to drink or inject disinfectant. On
Friday, Trump said his remarks were meant as sarcasm.
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Protesters against the state's extended stay-at-home order to help
slow the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) demonstrate at the
Capitol building in Madison, Wisconsin, U.S. April 24, 2020.
REUTERS/Daniel Acker
U.S. Representative Doug Collins, a Georgia Republican, said
restarting commerce on Friday was sending mixed messages.
"Everyone's supposed to be staying home, but yet we're opening up
these businesses," Collins told Fox News. He cited the guidelines
calling for states to register a two-week decline in coronavirus
cases before easing restrictions, and said parts of Georgia were
still struggling to treat patients.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, whose state has been the worst hit
by the virus, said reopening the economy prematurely in any U.S.
state was a danger to others.
PEAK HOSPITALIZATIONS
According to a University of Washington research model often cited
by the White House, coronavirus hospitalizations in Georgia should
peak next week.
Oklahoma, with far fewer cases and deaths than Georgia, began
opening hair and nail salons and other personal care businesses on
Friday. The University of Washington model predicts Oklahoma already
hit its hospitalizations peak on Tuesday and could safely loosen
restrictions in June.
Tennessee reopened most of its 56 state parks on Friday.
Texas on Friday began a "retail-to-go" phase of its reopening,
allowing retail shops to either deliver products to homes or letting
customers wait in cars in parking lots for purchases to be handed
them by store workers.
In practice, many Texas merchants have been doing this for weeks or
stayed open outright, as Republican Governor Greg Abbott had
classified much of the state's retail economy, including big-box
stores, bike shops, dry cleaners and farmers markets, as essential
businesses.
In the latest protest against the shutdowns, hundreds of people
gathered on Friday outside the Wisconsin state Capitol building in
Madison calling for Democratic Governor Tony Evers to reopen the
state, even as it reported its largest single-day jump of new
coronavirus cases.
"Stand strong, be united and stand tall and proud for America," said
one of the protesters through a bullhorn. Many in the crowd wore
Trump hats, waved American flags and carried "Go Back To Work"
signs.
There was also a quiet counter-protest - a woman standing by a tree
wearing a face mask, a bottle of hand sanitizer on her hip, holding
a sign that said, "Please Go Home."
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta, Nathan Layne in Wilton,
Connecticut, Susan Heavey and Jeff Mason in Washington, Brad Brookes
in Austin, Shannon Stapleton in Madison and Jessica Resnick-Ault in
New York; Writing by Nathan Layne and Alistair Bell; Editing by
Frank McGurty, Howard Goller and Daniel Wallis)
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