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Reynolds says shelter-in-place issue divisive at a time when Iowa should unite

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April 3rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Governor Kim Reynolds says some people are misinterpreting the lack of a statewide shelter-in-place order as a sign there are no restrictions in place in Iowa.
Dr. Anthomy Fauci, one of President Trump’s medical advisors, last night said he doesn’t understand why every state hasn’t issued one.

“Maybe he doesn’t have all of the information, again,” Reynolds said. “You can’t just look at a map and assume that no action has been taken. That is completely false.” Iowa is one of five states where there’s no statewide or regional stay-at-home or shelter-in-place order.

Reynolds says she has taken significant and incremental steps to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 by closing schools and businesses and ordering people not to gather in groups of 10 or more. “Iowans of all walks of life are either strongly in favor or strongly opposed to shelter-in-place,” Reynolds says, “and this has become a divisive issue at a time when we must be united in this response to this crisis.”

On March 15th, Reynolds recommended that Iowa schools close for four weeks. Yesterday (Thursday) she ordered schools to remain closed for the entire month of April. On the 17th of March, she ordered bars and restaurants to close. Over the following weeks the governor added a variety of retail businesses — from hair salons and barbershops to gyms and flower shops to the closure list.

“So if you did a side-by-side comparison of what we are doing in Iowa and what other states are doing, they are much the same,” Reynolds says. “Even those states that have implemented shelter-in-place orders have kept the majority of businesses open, similar to our orders.”

Reynolds told reporters this (Friday) afternoon she’s determined between 80 and 81 percent of Iowa businesses would be considered “essential” and allowed to continue operating under a shelter-in-place order. State officials announced earlier today (Friday) testing has confirmed 699 cases of COVID-19 in Iowa. Eleven Iowans have died of the virus and 80 are hospitalized for treatment.