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Saturday, November 14, 2020

North Dakota -- COVID-19 spread and official response

 from INFORUM dot-com

North Dakota will join 34 other states, including Minnesota, that have already mandated mask-wearing.

The statewide order comes after most of North Dakota’s largest cities, including Fargo, Grand Forks and Bismarck, implemented mandates of their own in recent weeks. A handful of counties and at least four of the five American Indian reservations in the state also passed mask requirements, though most of the local mandates had no penalties.

Burgum also signed an order requiring that North Dakota's restaurants and bars limit on-site service to 50% of their normal occupancy, while capping the number of patrons served at 150. Event venues and ballrooms will be limited to 25% of normal maximum occupancy.

Restaurants and bars will have a curfew from 10 p.m. to 4 a.m., during which in-person service is prohibited. Burgum said carryout and delivery will still be permitted during the night hours.

The occupancy restrictions will go into effect Monday, Nov. 16. Burgum urged businesses not covered by the changes to take mitigation precautions outlined in his administration's "Smart Restart" plan.

Fargo and Grand Forks leaders established similar occupancy limits and curfews for restaurants and bars in the last two days.

Burgum noted that the state will soon make $54 million in grants available to restaurants, bars and other hospitality businesses to help the industry through the rough patch.

Earlier this week, Burgum moved every county in the state to the "high risk" level on the official COVID-19 gauge in a reflection of the intense stress on hospitals. The orange-coded level came with recommendations to limit occupancy to a quarter of normal capacity, but many businesses across the state ignored the guidelines.

The recommendations for restaurants and bars at the orange risk level are more stringent than what Burgum's order dictates, but the governor said the higher threshold in the new requirements will allow those already following the guidelines to "safely welcome more customers into their establishments with masking and distancing requirements."

Burgum has not put any counties at the red-coded “critical risk” designation, which would come with a stay-at-home order and mandatory business closures.

The shifts in North Dakota's pandemic response come on the same day the state surpassed the grim milestone of 700 COVID-19 deaths. The state leads the nation in deaths and new cases per capita over the last week — an unwanted title it has held for most of the last two months.

North Dakota hospitals are at capacity as nursing shortages continue to plague the virus-ridden state. Burgum announced several extraordinary measures earlier this week to address the shortage of health care workers, including allowing health care workers with asymptomatic cases of the virus to work in COVID-19 units at hospitals and nursing homes. The move was widely condemned by nurses, who say the state should have exhausted all other virus mitigation tools, including mandating masks, before allowing infected health care workers back into the workplace.

Nursing homes have been rocked by the outbreak in recent months, and nearly 600 North Dakota long-term care residents are currently infected with the virus. About 60% of the state's COVID-19 deaths have come in nursing homes since the beginning of the pandemic.

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