By GARY A. WARNER/Oregon Capital Bureau
In an effort to stem rising COVID-19 infection rates, Oregon will restrict or close many businesses, curtail activities and put a six-person limit on gatherings — including Thanksgiving — under a statewide “Two-Week Freeze” starting Wednesday.
In announcing the restrictions Friday, Gov. Kate Brown said “These risk reduction measures are critical.”
Brown’s executive order comes as Oregon reported 1,076 new cases, a day after a record-smashing 1,122 case. The number of people currently hospitalized with COVID-19 is 303, the first time the state has breached the 300-patient mark since the pandemic hit Oregon in February.
Without a drop in infection rates, medical facilities will be strained beyond capacity.
“The last thing you want to hear is the ambulance has no place to go,” Brown said. “The dreaded winter surge is here.
Despite enduring two previous spikes in the spring and late summer, the current rise may be more challenging.
“Like it or not, we might be facing the roughest days of the pandemic,” Brown said.
Brown said she was telling individual Oregonians to limit social events to six people and that she had ordered the Oregon State Police to begin working with local law enforcement to limit social gatherings and use their discretion to enforce as citation, fine or arrest of a Class C Misdemeanor.
Brown had said earlier this summer that she would not be “the party police” and send officers to private gatherings to enforce limit. That’s no longer the policy, she said.
“Unfortunately we have no other option,” Brown said.
Currently, one infected person is spreading the disease to 1.5 people. COVID-19 tests are coming back at a level of 11.9 percent positive. A rate above 5 percent indicates a rise in the number of people who will get ill.
Wednesday, Nov. 18 to Dec. 2
New limits and restrictions:
- Take-out only from restaurants and bars.
- Closes all gyms and fitness organizations.
- Closes indoor recreational and entertainment facilities, including theaters, museums, pools, sports courts and hosting venues.
- Closes outdoor recreational facilities, zoos, gardens, aquariums, entertainment activities, including pools and hosting venues.
- Faith-based gatherings are limited to 25 people indoors or 50 people outdoors.
- Prohibits indoor visits to long-term care facilities.
- Limits grocery stores and pharmacies to 75% capacity and encourages curbside pick-up.
- Limits retail stores and retail malls — both indoor and outdoor — to a 75% capacity and encourages curbside pick-up.
- Requires all businesses mandate work-from-home to the greatest extent possible and close offices to the public.
Unaffected by new rules:
The restrictions came with several exemptions. It does not affect continued state guidance for operations by the Oregon Health Authority that includes:
- Higher education
- Programs for sports, youth, childcare, K-12 schools, and K-12 sports
- Division 1 and professional sports operations.
- Current rules for personal services such as barber shops, hair salons, and non-medical massage therapy.
- Congregate homeless sheltering
- Program for outdoor recreation and sports, youth, childcare, K-12 schools, K-12 sports, Division 1 and professional athletics.
For businesses, activities and groups that do not fall under the new restrictions, The Oregon Health Authority will be issue additional guidance within the next week. Sectors without specific prohibitions or guidance must operate under previous directives.
During her news conference, Brown said that some counties, including Multnomah County, will remain in the freeze longer. The freeze for Multnomah County is expected to be at least four weeks, she said.
The sweeping restrictions come at the end of a brutal week, where Oregon set its single day record for positive COVID-19 cases, broke new records for hospitalizations and saw the state’s overall share of cases tilt toward the Portland metro area for the first time since July.
Acknowledges that restrictions hurt
Dr. Dean Sidelinger, the state’s top infectious disease expert, said decisions on public action “are not perfect” and that state officials know that ordering shutdowns or stay-at-home orders have their own negative impacts.
“That economic impact has a real impact on our health,” Sidelinger said. “People can’t tolerate that level of isolation for that long.”
Brown said Oregon and all states need new federal help to cushion the economic fallout and overstretched public resources used in the pandemic.
“It’s time for congress to just do it and stop talking about it,” Brown said.
Oregon is still experiencing less overall impact from the virus than other states. It had experienced 1,289 cases per 100,000 people — 45th among states, according to analysis on Friday by the New York Times. North Dakota tops the list with 7,953 cases per 100,000 people.
But in the past 7 days, the Times said Oregon had 20.5 cases per 100,000, moving it up to a rank of 42nd — higher than California and New York.
Oregon’s current rapid rise is already stretching hospital availability in the Portland area and showing strain elsewhere in the state.
Brown had already placed a two-week pause on social activities in nine counties, beginning Nov. 11 and had said adding more counties is an option.
Delaying elective surgeries in some areas where hospital beds are becoming more scarce has already been instituted at three major hospital providers based in the Portland area: Legacy Health, Oregon Health & Science University and Kaiser Permanente Northwest. Check with your doctor or medical center for their status.
Three states urge travel restrictions
Brown and the governors of California and Washington earlier Friday issued identical travel advisories – urging travelers going out of state to quarantine for 14 days upon their return home.
Under the three-state plan “non-essential travel” should be cancelled or delayed.
The advisory defines essential travel as travel for work and study, critical infrastructure support, economic services and supply chains, health, immediate medical care, and safety and security.
Visitors entering or returning from the three states should minimize their exposure to others for 14 days after arriving from another state. In the case of the three states, the advisory would mean an Oregonian traveling to California or Washington should quarantine for 14 days on their arrival and then another 14 days upon return.
The governors of the three states reiterated early requests that residents not risk out-of-state travel for the Thanksgiving holiday.
“COVID-19 does not stop at state lines,” Brown said in a statement. “As hospitals across the West are stretched to capacity, we must take steps to ensure travelers are not bringing this disease home with them.”
The three-state advisory also recommends individuals limit their interactions to their immediate household.
The United States registered 150,000 cases on Thursday, a new record. California on Thursday became the second state to surpass one million cases. Texas is the other.
As of Thursday’s report, an estimated 53,779 people have been infected in Oregon, with 746 deaths.