W.Va. governor widens reopenings before Memorial Day weekend

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice on Wednesday widened the most aggressive phase of his coronavirus reopening strategy to allow tanning salons to open just before Memorial Day weekend.

The
Republican governor said he has been overwhelmed with requests from
tanning businesses to be included among the restaurants, big-box stores
and recreational services reopening next week.

“I never dreamed in all my life that we’ve gotten all these calls in regard to the tanning businesses or tanning beds. We continue to get all kinds of calls,” he said, adding that health officials now think it’s safe for people to tan.

Justice
has picked May 21, the Thursday before Memorial Day weekend, to stage
the biggest step in his reopening plan, while warning that a second wave
of the virus could cause catastrophic damage to the state.

He
is allowing restaurants, which have been allowed to have outdoor
seating, to operate at half-capacity if they follow social distancing
guidelines. The Hatfield-McCoy Trails are also opening the same day,
along with businesses that rent all-terrain vehicles, bicycles and other
outdoor recreational items. Campgrounds will reopen for in-state
residents.

The governor has said lifting the state’s virus restrictions is a balance between safety and the state’s ailing economy.

His
strategy depends on the state’s positive test rate staying below 3% for
three consecutive days, reversing a previous goal of having the number
of new cases decline for two weeks.

Both
the White House and Clay Marsh, a West Virginia University official
leading the state’s virus response, have endorsed the two-week
benchmark. The governor’s office has never explained why it eased the
reopening criteria, though Marsh now says the state has enough downward
trend lines to begin lifting restrictions.

The
governor’s office has not given clear details on testing capacity
standards and safety equipment inventory it wants to meet as part of the
plan to lift restrictions.

Justice
has already let hospitals resume elective procedures and allowed the
reopening of drive-in theaters, physical therapy centers, small
businesses and barbershops.

At
least 59 people in the state have died from the virus and around 1,400
people have tested positive, according to state health data.