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Brown extends Oregon school closures to fight virus spread

Gillian Flaccus | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 years, 8 months AGO
by Gillian FlaccusAndrew Selsky
| March 17, 2020 5:17 PM

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A sign indicating that only carry-out or delivery options are available hangs in the window of a closed Chipotle restaurant in Portland, Ore., Monday, March 16, 2020. Gov. Kate Brown announced a four-week ban on eat-in dining at bars and restaurants throughout the state on Monday to slow the spread of the new coronavirus in Oregon. Restaurants can still offer take-out and delivery. (AP Photo/Gillian Flaccus)

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A Peet's Coffee and Tea store, with most of the furniture removed to prevent lingering, is nearly empty in Lake Oswego, Ore., Tuesday, March 17, 2020. Oregon Gov. Kate Brown on Monday banned on-site consumption at bars and restaurants around the state for at least four weeks in a bid to slow the spread of the new coronavirus and said gatherings will be limited to 25 people or fewer. (AP Photo/Gillian Flaccus)

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Gov. Kate Brown speaks at a news conference to announce a four-week ban on eat-in dining at bars and restaurants throughout the state Monday, March 16, 2020, in Portland, Ore. Restaurants can still offer take-out and delivery. The order is intended to slow the spread of the new coronavirus in Oregon and mirrors similar bans elsewhere, including Washington state. (AP Photo/Gillian Flaccus)

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Gov. Kate Brown late Tuesday announced an extension of her previous statewide school closure order to combat the spread of coronavirus, saying now schools will be shuttered until at least April 28.

Previously, Brown had told K-12 schools to close for two weeks.

“I do not take the decision to extend school closures lightly,” Brown said in a statement. “This will have real impacts on Oregon’s students, parents, and educators. But we must act now."

The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Oregon rose by 18 cases to at least 65, the Oregon Health Authority reported Tuesday as officials in the Portland area announced plans to house the vulnerable homeless.

And authorities in Multnomah County said they will be opening hundreds of new shelter beds in public buildings throughout Portland to try to stem the spread of the coronavirus in the homeless community.

Brown, meanwhile, said that only essential medical and emergency personnel can visit residents of long-term care facilities statewide, except for residents who are in the end stages of life.

“We all know that older adults and people with underlying health conditions are among the most vulnerable to this disease,” Brown told reporters in a conference call.

Of the 18 new cases, seven are in Washington county, five in Linn County, four in Clackamas County, and one each in Marion and Multnomah counties, the health authority announced. Of the Linn County cases at the Oregon Veterans’ Home in Lebanon, four were previously reported Monday evening by Oregon Department of Veterans’ Affairs.

The most vulnerable homeless residents have been given vouchers for hotel and motel rooms and those businesses will not be allowed to kick them out or turn people away, said Deborah Kafoury, chair of the Multnomah County Board of Supervisors.

Local government will also open spaces for homeless people with the coronavirus to recuperate indoors, she said.

Volunteers have made contact with 1,700 people living on the streets or in their cars in the past week throughout the county to provide information about the coronavirus and to offer services, Kafoury said.

“What if you don’t have a place where you can self-quarantine? What happens when the libraries close, the cafes aren’t open and public spaces are no longer available?” she said at a news conference announcing the initiatives.

“These are people who simply don’t have the option to close the front door and hope that the worst won’t come.”

The city and county are also jointly suspending evictions for those who can’t pay the rent due to COVID-19 for as long as the crisis lasts, said Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler.

Renters will have six months to repay their back rent after the city and county lift the state of emergency.

Those who will qualify for the eviction moratorium are renters who have lost jobs or had reduced hours due to business closures; who have been out of work to watch children who are out of school; or who have been sick with the coronavirus or have a family member who is ill.

The city and county are coordinating with the Oregon courts and local sheriff’s officials to make sure no one is evicted.

“Many people are in fear and we understand that,” Wheeler said. “Extraordinary times require extraordinary actions.”

Protestors who want more aggressive action to protect renters crashed the news conference and threatened to cough on Wheeler. The interruption drew a sharp rebuke from local officials.

“Three people have died in the Metro area in the last three days of this virus. No one is immune. And scaring people to make your point won’t save any lives,” Julie Sullivan-Springhetti, spokeswoman for Multnomah County, said in a statement after the event.

Brown on Monday banned on-site consumption at bars and restaurants around the state for at least four weeks in a bid to slow the spread of the new coronavirus and said gatherings will be limited to 25 people or fewer.

Restaurants can still offer takeout or delivery but the ban on in-restaurant dining is intended to give teeth to guidance on social distancing to slow transmission of COVID-19.

The orders will be a blow to Oregon's economy. On Tuesday morning, parking lots outside coffee shops normally bustling with customers were almost empty and restaurants were shuttered and dark.

Brown said Tuesday she is pulling together an economic advisory council to assess the impact on Oregon's economy and suggest ways to bolster it.

She also said 150 of the state's 197 school districts are providing students with free and reduced-price lunch despite school closures statewide.

For most people, the new coronavirus causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia. The vast majority of people recover from the new virus.

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Selsky reported from Salem.

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