County, cities support stricter Kemp order

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Franklin County’s local governments jointly announced support for Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp’s order Monday placing greater restrictions on some businesses and gatherings in response to to the coronavirus outbreak.

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  • Franklin County’s local governments jointly announced support for Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp’s order Monday placing greater restrictions on some businesses and gatherings in response to to the coronavirus outbreak.
    Franklin County’s local governments jointly announced support for Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp’s order Monday placing greater restrictions on some businesses and gatherings in response to to the coronavirus outbreak.
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By Shane Scoggins

Publisher

and Dave Williams

Capitol Beat News Service

Franklin County’s local governments jointly announced support for Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp’s order Monday placing greater restrictions on some businesses and gatherings in response to to the coronavirus outbreak.

Kemp issued an executive order Monday requiring Georgians at high risk of contracting coronavirus to stay at home.

The order, which took effect at noon Tuesday and runs until noon April 6, also will close all bars and nightclubs in Georgia and prohibit gatherings of 10 or more unless the participants remain at least six feet apart.

The state Department of Public Health will be authorized to close any businesses that aren’t complying with the order.

“These measures are intended to ensure the health and safety of Georgians from across our state,” Kemp said during a late-afternoon briefing Monday streamed from his office at the state Capitol. “I ask for everyone’s cooperation over the next two weeks.”

“Franklin County leaders support this executive action and will be working to ensure compliance with our own operations and the operations of our businesses,” a joint press release from Franklin County’s local governments issued Tuesday said.

The press release was issued by the Franklin County Board of Commissioners and the cities of Royston, Lavonia, Canon, Franklin Springs and Carnesville.

“The executive order will change the way that we do business over the next 14 days,” the joint press release says. “Restaurants will adjust to close dine-in services or significantly reduce the volume of customers served to ensure a six-foot distance. Service-related business will adjust to transfer walk-in traffic to telephone or internet interaction. In person meetings should be canceled or shifted to web/phone-based meetings.

“We understand that these times are hard. We are proud of the voluntary actions taken by our local businesses to minimize the spread of this disease over the past two weeks. We are in this fight together, and we must all do our part.”

Kemp’s order was issued as the number of confirmed coronavirus cases continued to rise with more testing.

As of Tuesday at noon, there are 1,026 confirmed cases of the COVID-19 virus in the state, with 32 deaths reported.

No confirmed cases have been reported in Franklin County, though there have been reports of local people being tested who await results.

There have been confirmed cases in neighboring Madison and Stephens counties. The Madison County case was reported Monday, with Stephens County's case being reported Tuesday.

Kemp specified that the groups of Georgians considered at risk of contracting coronavirus include residents of long-term care facilities, patients with chronic lung disease or undergoing cancer treatment, those who have tested positive for the virus, have symptoms of COVID-19 or have been exposed to someone with coronavirus.

Kemp also announced he has joined 21 other governors in a letter to congressional leaders asking that block grant funding to the states be included in a massive $2 trillion economic stimulus package before Congress. 

One of the sticking points that has been holding up an agreement between Republicans and Democrats in the U.S. Senate over the aid package is whether direct funding to state and local governments should be included.

“Governors are on the front line of this fight, and many of us are spending heavily at the end of the budget year,” Kemp said. “We desperately need these resources.”

Kemp said part of the financial impact is in the form of soaring applications for Medicaid, PeachCare for Kids and food stamps. He said the state is working on a plan to provide extra food stamp benefits in March and April.

Kemp provided an update on the medical equipment and supplies the state is bringing on line in the fight against coronavirus. 

He said 30 ventilators were sent on Monday to hospitals in Dougherty and Floyd counties, areas particularly hard hit by the virus relative to their populations.

With capacity running short at Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital in Albany, he announced plans to reopen an adjacent north wing with at least 26 rooms. Another facility in Albany with a capacity of about 60 beds also has been identified, he said.

Kemp said the state is asking federal officials to allow the temporary facility opened at Dobbins Air Reserve Base in Marietta earlier this month to house passengers from a cruise ship to remain open after all of the passengers leave for their homes. It has about 200 beds that can be used if needed, he said.

Also, construction has been completed on an isolation zone at the Georgia Public Safety Training Center in Forsyth with a capacity for 20 emergency housing units. The campus at the center also has room for about 200 patient beds if needed.

The state also has opened up the pipeline to get hundreds of thousands of masks, gloves and other personal protective equipment to all 142 hospitals in Georgia for doctors, nurses and others on the front line of caring for coronavirus patients.

Kemp said 23 COVID-19 test sites have opened across the state. Testing will be limited to elderly Georgians, members of law enforcement agencies, first responders, long-term care facility residents and staff and health-care workers.

Kemp thanked Georgians who have heeded the warnings of state and federal health officials to stay at home if at all possible and make only essential trips. He urged Georgia citizens to remain vigilant.

“We cannot let this virus defeat us,” he said. “We are stronger than this crisis, and we will weather the storm.”

 

Dave Williams is bureau chief for the Capitol Beat News Service. Capitol Beat is a resource provided by the Georgia Press Educational Foundation.