In the aftermath of disturbing things happening in my state that I thought I would never see, like a business owner being handcuffed and marched out of his tattoo parlor for attempting to reopen, and another being forced by law enforcement to shut her doors after she reopened her hair salon, Gov. Roy Cooper (D-NC) announced yesterday that the first of the 3 phases of “reopening” the state would begin on Friday starting at 5pm:
North Carolina will begin a slow return to pre-pandemic conditions Friday evening as certain restrictions related to the novel coronavirus are lifted.
In a May 5 briefing, Gov. Roy Cooper signed an executive order to modify the state’s Stay at Home order and transition to Phase 1 of his three-phase reopening plan, according to a press release.
The order goes into effect at 5 p.m. May 8. Cooper previously said Phase 1 is expected to last two to three weeks, or until at least May 22. If data trends look promising, the state would move into Phase 2, which includes the lifting of the stay-at-home order and a limited reopening of other businesses and churches with reduced capacity.
The problem with considering this as the first “phase” of reopening is that not much has really changed:
— Jim Blaine (@JimBlaine) May 6, 2020
Retailers can increase their capacity to 50%. Child care centers can admit kids from more working parents.
That's about it.
Meanwhile, folks will continue to watch the complete destruction of their life savings & businesses.— Pete Kaliner (@PeteKaliner) May 6, 2020
So it looks like phase 1 is just like the shutdown except a few more stores will be open. But not salons, restaurants, bars, gyms, no concerts, church will be outside w social distancing, no gathering of groups of more than 10. This is not the fast road to economic recovery.
— Becki Gray (@beckigray) May 5, 2020
A reminder that any business that could implement social distancing was already allowed to be open in “Phase 0” as an “essential business.” Phase 1” is nothing but smoke and mirrors designed to pretend to be reopening without actually allowing any additional reopening. #NCPOL pic.twitter.com/dWFOOEZyY4
— Brent Woodcox (@BrentWoodcox) May 5, 2020
State Republican leaders aren’t too impressed, either:
Appears @SenatorBerger not impressed with Gov Cooper reopening announcement. #ncpol #ncga #coronavirus pic.twitter.com/NmL9NsgI7h
— Tim Boyum (@TimBoyumTV) May 5, 2020
INBOX: @LtGovDanForest roundly criticizes Gov. Cooper & "phase 1."
"The Governor's Phase 1 rollout makes it clear that he feels that only he can protect us from this virus…."https://t.co/P8Rg5PJGrM #ReopenNC #NCPol pic.twitter.com/JgjdOCmPah
— A.P. Dillon 🤨 (@APDillon_) May 6, 2020
Rep. Keith Kidwell, R-Beaufort, is in the process of organizing a lawsuit on behalf of churches around the state who are not impressed with Cooper’s orders on church gatherings, either:
Hundreds of North Carolina churches might sue Gov. Roy Cooper https://t.co/SpQALqzARs #ncpol #ncga #firstamendment
— still&barrel (@stillnbarrel) May 5, 2020
As I’ve written before, this “phased” plan for reopening is sloppy, unfair, and doesn’t take factors into account like the possibility of having counties relax restrictions at a quicker pace than the state. For example, there are some counties in North Carolina that have either very few or no diagnosed cases of the virus at all. Why can’t their approach to reopening be different than the state’s?
The Governor’s executive order that put the stay at home rules in place in late March stated that if a county’s order was stricter than the state’s, then the county’s order would be the one in effect. Why can’t a similar approach be allowed for the counties in terms of loosening the restrictions, too?
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