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Gov. Reynolds signs new proclamation continuing State Public Health Emergency Declaration

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March 26th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Governor Kim Reynolds is ordering more businesses to close and adding another week to previous restrictions designed to limit the spread of COVID-19. In addition to bars, restaurants and hair salons that have already been closed, Reynolds has ordered more retail stores that sell things like books, clothes, flowers and furniture to close. All those business closures will now be in place through April 7th.

“We will continue to take additional steps, as necessary, to further protect the health of Iowans and our economy,” Reynolds says. The governor issued a public health emergency proclamation and ordered bars and restaurants closed at noon on March 17th. She added hair and nail salons and swimming pools to the closure list this week — with the closings to last through March 31st. The closures, by the governor’s decree, now extend through Tuesday, April 7th.

“I wanted to make sure that we were giving businesses enough notice and so that’s one of the reasons that we thought we would go ahead and just extend for another week beyond what I originally did,” Reynolds says. “But, everyday, I need Iowans and businesses to know that we’re reevaluating those metrics and seeing what they look like and talking about what we need to do next and that went into the decisions that we made.” The governor has also used her emergency authority to order the suspension of all elective surgeries and dental visits, unless it’s an emergency situation.

“These actions will help us preserve the personal protection equipment as well as our health care workforce,” Reynolds said. State officials reported 34 more cases of COVID-19 had been confirmed in Iowa — for a total of 179 positive cases. “We haven’t actually made it through the first incubation period,” Reynolds says, “and so we haven’t even really been able to gather the data about the decisions that we made early on to see if we have started to bend the curve.” Reynolds says because of that, she cannot speculate on when the business closures she’s ordered will be lifted.

“We have said all along that basically we have put a lot of policies in place to protect our most vulnerable and make sure that we don’t see a surge on our health care system,” Reynolds says, “and that’s really what’s driven the decisions we’ve made.”