Florida moves to ease coronavirus lockdown as promising treatment
emerges
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[April 30, 2020]
By Zachary Fagenson and Jessica Resnick-Ault
MIAMI (Reuters) - The governor of Florida,
among the last to lock down his state against the U.S. coronavirus
outbreak, announced on Wednesday he would permit a limited economic
reopening next week while leaving restraints intact for the dense
greater-Miami area.
Florida became the latest, and one of the two largest, of about a dozen
states forging ahead to ease crippling restrictions on business activity
without vastly expanded virus testing and other safeguards that medical
experts recommend should be in place first.
"There is a light at the end of the tunnel," Governor Ron DeSantis said
as he unveiled his "phase-one" plan for relaxing mandatory workplace
closures and stay-at-home orders imposed four weeks ago.
Earlier in the week his counterpart in Texas, Greg Abbott, another
governor closely aligned with fellow Republican President Donald Trump,
announced a similar economic reopening strategy due to go into effect on
Friday.
As questions lingered over when and how to loosen social-distancing
rules employed as the chief weapon against a highly contagious virus
with no vaccine, word emerged from Washington on Wednesday of a
promising new treatment for the disease.
The U.S. government's top infectious-disease official, Dr. Anthony Fauci,
said the experimental antiviral drug remdesivir, from pharmaceutical
maker Gilead Sciences Inc <GILD.O>, had proven effective in a key
clinical trial.
With preliminary results showing patients recovering 31% faster with the
drug than with a placebo, remdesivir will become the standard of care
for treating COVID-19, the potentially deadly lung disease caused by the
novel coronavirus, Fauci told reporters at the White House.
He called the development "highly significant." The U.S. Food and Drug
Administration said it was in talks with Gilead about making the drug
available to patients as quickly as possible.
MIXED NEWS
At the same time, a senior Trump administration official confirmed
reports of an escalated campaign by federal agencies to speed
development of a coronavirus vaccine, with the goal of securing 100
million doses by the end of this year. [L1N2CH2WI]
The encouraging news on the medical front contrasted with ominous new
Commerce Department data showing the nation's gross domestic product
contracted at an annualized rate of nearly 5% in the first quarter - its
sharpest such drop since the 2007-2009 collapse - to end the longest
expansion in U.S. history.
With millions of Americans out of jobs since the lockdowns went into
effect and no overall federal plan beyond general guidelines issued by
the White House on April 16, states and cities have come under mounting
pressure to ease restrictions on as the outbreak appeared to be waning.
Public health experts have urged caution, saying that a curtailment of
social distancing without large-scale virus testing or the means to
trace close contacts of infected individuals could trigger a second wave
of infections.
U.S. deaths from the novel coronavirus topped 60,000 on Wednesday -
eclipsing the number of American lives lost during the Vietnam war - and
the outbreak will soon be deadlier than any influenza season since 1967,
according to a Reuters tally.
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President Donald Trump listens to Florida Governor Ron DeSantis
speak about the coronavirus response during a meeting in the Oval
Office at the White House in Washington, U.S., April 28, 2020.
REUTERS/Carlos Barria
The toll has given many business owners pause about reopening, but
others are ready.
"I want my business to open, but I want a healthy balance," said
Holly Smith, 48, whose Designer Dawgs restaurant in Hunterdon
County, New Jersey, currently offers only takeout. But she added: "I
feel like we've gone about this the wrong way. We've sheltered in
place too long."
New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy said he would reopen state parks and
golf courses to recreation starting Saturday. In Michigan, Governor
Gretchen Whitmer said she would allow construction work to resume on
May 7.
FLORIDA'S LIMITED REOPENING
Under the reopening plan in Florida, where COVID-19 has killed over
1,200 people, DeSantis said retail merchants and restaurants could
open on Monday, with indoor patronage limited to 25% of capacity.
Eateries may also reopen outdoor seating with appropriate social
distancing, and medical practices can resume elective surgeries and
procedures. But movie theaters, bars and fitness clubs will remain
shuttered for the time being, he said.
The governor left existing restrictions in place across Miami-Dade,
Broward and Palm Beach counties - the three most highly populated in
the state.
DeSantis had drawn criticism for waiting until April 2 to clamp down
on commerce - after most other states had already done so - in part
because of Florida's high proportion of elderly residents - more
than a fifth are age 65 and over - who are especially vulnerable to
the virus.
But Florida, a key swing electoral swing state, has avoided the
worst of the health crisis seen in other states such as New York and
New Jersey, and DeSantis said he would take a measured approach to
further reopening.
"Part of our strategy in phase one is to expand testing," DeSantis
said.
But Florida Democratic Party Chair Terrie Rizzo criticized the
governor's plan as lacking details on how he would quickly increase
the state's virus screening, which Rizzo said ranked 22nd in
COVID-19 tests per capita among all 50 U.S. states.
Other Florida Democrats questioned why the governor made no mention
of the state's beleaguered unemployment system that collapsed as
hundreds of thousands of residents sought benefits in the early days
of the pandemic lockdown.
(Reporting by Zach Fagenson in Miami; Additional reporting by Maria
Caspani, Barbara Goldberg and Jessica Resnick-Ault in New York and
Susan Heavey and Doina Chiacu in Washington; Writing by Sonya
Hepinstall and Steve Gorman; Editing by Bill Tarrant and Cynthia
Osterman)
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