Community Corner

Gatherings Capped At 10, Mask Mandate Expanded In Latest Round Of COVID-19 Restrictions

Starting Monday, gatherings in Virginia will be capped at 10 people and the state's mask mandate will be expanded.

By Kate Masters

December 10, 2020

Starting Monday, gatherings in Virginia will be capped at 10 people and the state’s mask mandate will be expanded to include outdoor settings where social distancing isn’t possible.

Find out what's happening in Across Virginiafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The latest round of restrictions, announced by Gov. Ralph Northam at a news briefing on Thursday, comes a day after Virginia recorded 4,398 new COVID-19 cases — the largest single-day increase since the state confirmed its first infection in early March.

As of Thursday, the statewide positivity rate (or portion of COVID-19 tests that return positive) had grown to 11 percent — an increase of more than three percentage points since late November. Hospitalizations are rising across the state. And in Southwest Virginia, where one of the region’s largest health systems has been nearly overwhelmed by a growing surge in patients, the National Guard is planning mass testing events in an effort to bring down a percent positivity rate that’s spiked to more than 20 percent in some health districts, according to the Bristol Herald Courier.

Find out what's happening in Across Virginiafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

“These numbers are very high, they continue to grow, and I’m afraid we haven’t seen the full surge of hospitalizations yet,” Eric Deaton, the chief operating officer of Southwest Virginia’s Ballad Health system, said in a briefing on Wednesday. “We’re just now starting to see the hospitalizations that were affected due to Thanksgiving gatherings.”

Amid troubling statewide trends, Northam is again decreasing the number of people allowed at all public and private gatherings — both indoors and outdoors — from 25 to 10. Spokeswoman Alena Yarmosky said the governor is also implementing a modified stay-at-home order from 12 a.m. to 5 a.m., when she said people are less likely to follow public health guidelines for mask-wearing and social distancing.

“It’s aimed at emphasizing the importance of being home unless it’s essential,” she said. Like some of the governor’s other executive mandates, Yarmosky said the goal of the new stay-at-home order is “education, not enforcement,” and the restriction will not be enforceable by police. There are also exceptions in certain circumstances, including traveling for work or seeking medical care.

But combined with the state’s ongoing ban on alcohol sales at restaurants, breweries, and other dining establishments past 10 p.m. — and a midnight curfew for the same businesses — officials are hoping to significantly curtail late-night gatherings. Yarmosky emphasized that the order will instruct Virginians to remain in their own homes between the hours of 12 a.m. to 5 a.m., discouraging social events even if a friend or family member is hosting them.

“’Stay at home’ means in your personal residence,” Yarmosky said. “The goal is really to get Virginians back into the mindset of ‘safer at home’ in a way that’s a little bit more clear.”

The state’s mask mandate, which is enforceable through the Virginia Department of Health, will also be expanded. Currently, the order applies to all Virginians aged five and older in most indoor public settings, including personal grooming businesses such as barbershops, brick-and-mortar retail stores, entertainment venues, bus stations, and restaurants (unless a customer is eating or drinking). But under the new restrictions, Yarmosky said the order will also apply to private indoor settings including office buildings and social gatherings at private homes.

“Now it’s going to include all indoor settings that are shared with others,” she said. Notably, the mandate will also apply to outdoor settings and events where social distancing isn’t possible, including whenever someone is within six feet of another person.

Capacity in educational settings, which can fully reopen for in-person instruction under the state’s current guidelines, won’t be impacted by the new orders. And while nonessential businesses such as restaurants, gyms and movie theaters are required to physically distance customers and follow enhanced cleaning procedures under Virginia’s Phase Three reopening plan, the occupancy currently allowed under the state’s business guidelines will remain largely unaffected by the latest restrictions, which don’t prohibit indoor dining or recreation.

The environment is notably less restrictive than the early days of the pandemic in late March, when Northam became one of the first governors in the country to close K-12 schools for the remainder of the academic year. He also warned Virginians to prepare for a “period of sacrifice,” shutting down almost all nonessential businesses and banning in-person dining.

The current surge in cases greatly surpasses Virginia’s COVID-19 numbers earlier in the pandemic. Public health experts say that dining indoors and participating in other public activities, like fitness classes, can pose a significant risk of catching or transmitting the disease — especially with growing levels of community spread.

But limitations in contact tracing data make it difficult to quantify how many cases spread in restaurants and other nonessential businesses. As a result, many experts say public officials have turned their focus to family gatherings and other personal behaviors that are known to increase the risk of transmission — and don’t have the same financial ramifications of fully closing businesses.

“There’s a delicate balance between public health concerns and economic concerns,” said Madhav Marathe, director of the UVA Biocomplexity Institute’s Network Systems Science and Advanced Computing Division, in an interview last week. “And one might argue, ‘Why shut down certain types of businesses but not others?’”

The latest round of restrictions will go into effect at 12:01 on Monday and remain through Jan. 31 unless amended or rescinded, Yarmosky said. Community spread in Virginia still varies by region, with some areas — like Northern Virginia — with caseloads that are relatively more contained than many other areas of the country.

But some counties — especially in rural areas with smaller populations — are seeing case rates that rival some of the worst-hit states in the nation. Bland County, in the southwestern corner of Virginia currently has a rate of 257 cases per 100,000 residents, according to The New York Times. Nottoway County, roughly an hour from Richmond, has a rate of 259 per 100,000.


This story was originally published by the Virginia Mercury. For more stories from the Virginia Mercury, visit VirginiaMercury.com.

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