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Fleeing virus for resort homes, some find welcome mat yanked

Wayne Parry | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 years, 8 months AGO
by Wayne Parry
| March 20, 2020 5:12 AM

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While Justin Bracken packs the family car, Cailin Sandvig, left, lifts their 10-month old son Milo from his stroller to join his twin inside the car, as they prepare to leave home in the Crown Heights neighborhood of the Brooklyn borough of New York to avoid the spread COVID-19, Monday March 16, 2020. "We are fleeing the city," said Sandvig who works remotely for her job. "We are going to end up in Wheaton, Illinois, where we have a big old house to be in with my mom that's otherwise empty." Bracken added that from following the news "its been clear for a while that things are getting pretty serious—especially from Italy, it seems pretty eminent that things are about to get bad here." (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

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Cailin Sandvig, left, and Justin Bracken prepare to drive away from their home in the Crown Heights area of the Brooklyn borough of New York with their newborn twins, because of the new coronavirus, Monday, March 16, 2020. "We are fleeing the city," said Sandvig, who works remotely for her job. "We are going to end up in Wheaton, Illinois, where we have a big old house to be in with my mom that's otherwise empty." (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

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A cyclist rides a bicyle in Cape May, N.J., Wednesday, March 18, 2020.Some people who live in cities or their suburbs have been fleeing to their second homes at the shore to ride out the coronavirus near the beach. But neighbors in many of those towns are yanking the welcome mat, fearing infection and an overwhelming of already-stretched resources. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

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A water tower stands beyond residences in Cape May, N.J., Wednesday, March 18, 2020. Some people who live in cities or their suburbs have been fleeing to their second homes at the shore to ride out the coronavirus near the beach. But neighbors in many of those towns are yanking the welcome mat, fearing infection and an overwhelming of already-stretched resources. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

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Cailin Sandvig checks on her 10-month-old twins, Milo, left, and Aurelia, as the family, including husband Justin Bracken, prepares to leave home in the Crown Heights neighborhood of the Brooklyn borough of New York to avoid the spread of COVID-19, Monday, March 16, 2020. "We are fleeing the city," said Sandvig, who works remotely for her job. "We are going to end up in Wheaton, Illinois, where we have a big old house to be in with my mom that's otherwise empty." Bracken added that from following the news "its been clear for a while that things are getting pretty serious—especially from Italy, it seems pretty eminent that things are about to get bad here." (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

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Homes overlook the beach in Cape May, N.J., Wednesday, March 18, 2020. Some people who live in cities or their suburbs have been fleeing to their second homes at the shore to ride out the coronavirus near the beach. But neighbors in many of those towns are yanking the welcome mat, fearing infection and an overwhelming of already-stretched resources. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

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Pedestrians walk along the shore in Cape May, N.J., Wednesday, March 18, 2020. Some people who live in cities or their suburbs have been fleeing to their second homes at the shore to ride out the coronavirus near the beach. But neighbors in many of those towns are yanking the welcome mat, fearing infection and an overwhelming of already-stretched resources. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

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A person walks toward the ocean in Cape May, N.J., Wednesday, March 18, 2020. Some people who live in cities or their suburbs have been fleeing to their second homes at the shore to ride out the coronavirus near the beach. But neighbors in many of those towns are yanking the welcome mat, fearing infection and an overwhelming of already-stretched resources. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

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People visit the Washington Street Mall in Cape May, N.J., Wednesday, March 18, 2020. Some people who live in cities or their suburbs have been fleeing to their second homes at the shore to ride out the coronavirus near the beach. But neighbors in many of those towns are yanking the welcome mat, fearing infection and an overwhelming of already-stretched resources. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

OCEAN CITY, N.J. (AP) — Some city folk have been fleeing to their second homes in resort areas to ride out the coronavirus outbreak near the beach or the ski slopes. But neighbors in many of those places are yanking the welcome mat — fearing infection and the overwhelming of already stretched resources in sleepy shore and mountain communities.

In southern New Jersey, Cape May County Freeholder Director Gerald Thornton asked summer home owners, who make up nearly half the property owners, to stay away for at least two weeks.

“Because the children are out of school, people are taking that as an opportunity to go to the shore,” he said Wednesday. “Instead of a national emergency, they're taking it like an additional vacation.”

Thornton said a quarter of the county is aged 60 or older — and thus particularly vulnerable to the virus. The county is particularly popular with Canadian tourists.

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

“We don't know where these people are coming from or who they've been exposed to,” he said. “We got reports today that someone from New York who was exposed to the virus came down here, and now we're investigating whether he's positive.”

An hour later, county officials announced that the man, a 30-year-old New Yorker, had indeed tested positive, and was the first confirmed case of the virus in Cape May County. That led the county's director of nursing to issue another request for visitors to stay away.

Similar debates are raging in many shore and mountain towns.

One Maine island that is reachable only by boat or plane barred part-time residents from the island — before backtracking and simply “strongly” encouraging them to stay away, for their health and the health of North Haven's full-time residents.

In Ocean City, New Jersey, which has a large percentage of summer residents, and draws vacationers from Philadelphia and New York, Melissa Wahl, a resident, said there was not a single piece of meat available at a local supermarket Wednesday morning.

“The cashier who checked me out said she had been seeing a lot of out of towners," she said. "People are afraid of them bringing in this virus and our hospital not having the ability to handle all of the influx.”

During the outbreak, business has more than doubled at the Winhall Market near Stratton Mountain Ski Resort in southern Vermont, as residents of New York and Boston pour in. Locals aren’t thrilled as they watch items selling out at the small market and fear that out-of-staters could be bringing the virus with them.

“They’re really hoarding everything,” market owner Lorraine Neuhaus said of the out-of-towners. “We’ve put restrictions on everything.”

The phenomenon is not unique to America; in the weeks before China instituted a travel ban, 2% of the residents of Wuhan, the epicenter of the virus, fled to Guangdong province, the coastal manufacturing powerhouse across from Hong Kong.

Valencia, Spain, has closed its beaches to prevent people fleeing the virus from coming there, and leading to a reverse migration away from the shore.

In the U.S., Point Pleasant Beach, which has one of New Jersey's most popular boardwalks, is trying a similar tactic, urging people not to walk on it for the foreseeable future.

"While fresh air and spending time outside is positive, the narrow boardwalk will force people to be in close proximity to each other, thus negating all attempts to adhere to social distancing," police chief Joseph Michigan said in a Facebook posting.

Some were fleeing not to a second home but to someone else's home.

Josh Rodriguez, from Tempe, Arizona, had planed for months to attend a jiu jitsu tournament in Big Bear Lake, California. When it got canceled due to concerns about the virus, he and his wife went to California anyway.

“We decided to get out of the craziness of the city and lock ourselves in a cabin,” Rodriguez said. “It’s just us and a fire watching the snowfall.”

Cailin Sandvig and her husband Justin Bracken left their apartment in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn on Monday, packing their 10-month-old twins, Milo and Aurelia, into the family car along with baby supplies and a week’s worth of clothing for themselves. They were heading to Wheaton, Illinois, where Sandvig’s mother lives by herself in a four-bedroom house.

Practicing social distancing in Brooklyn would mean keeping the twins inside their small apartment, and that would be untenable since they're crawling and almost walking.

“To keep them in a room where they have at most 10 feet of distance is a nightmare,” she said.

Candice Cobb owns a home on Ocracoke Island, a strip of land on North Carolina’s Outer Banks. But she won’t be making the trip from her residence in Hillsborough, North Carolina.

“I would have the potential of contaminating the island as would anybody else who is not a full-time resident,” said Cobb, who retired from a public television station a few years ago. “I want to protect my friends and family on the island just as much as I want to protect the people in Hillsborough. I’m not going now. I think that defeats the purpose of having the emergency declaration in the first place.”

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Associated Press writers Ben Finley in Norfolk, Virginia, Lisa Rathke in Marshfield, Vermont, and Deepti Hajela in New York contributed to this story. Follow Wayne Parry at http://twitter.com/WayneParryAC

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The Associated Press receives support for health and science coverage from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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