COVID-19 prompts government-ordered closures5 min read

Graph by Jon Hecht/Larson Newspapers

The increase in new COVID-19 cases has led to some local govern­ments ordering partial shutdowns, though they have so far been far more minor than those ordered in the spring.

COVID-19 continued to spread in the Verde Valley, reaching new highs last week. In the week from Monday, Nov. 23 through Monday, Nov. 30, the valley had 358 new cases, more than the total cases in the area from the beginning of the pandemic through mid-July, including the valley’s previous spike in June.

Cottonwood and Camp Verde have had the most new cases, with 154 and 82 respectively in the seven days leading up to Monday, while Sedona and the Village of Oak Creek had 39 and two. Clarkdale, Rimrock and Cornville had 30, 12 and 17, while Jerome had two.

This wave of the virus, which had not initially led to high hospital­izations or mortality, is beginning to, with 24 COVID-positive patients at Verde Valley Medical Center, a record high that represents nearly half of the hospital’s total patients. Seven individ­uals in the Verde Valley have died of the disease in the past week.

Mingus Union High School District’s Governing Board voted at a sudden special meeting on Nov. 19 to postpone the return of students for in-person learning after Thanksgiving by a week, in the hopes of slowing the spread of the virus among students and staff after holiday gatherings.

Yavapai County has moved into the “Substantial Transmission” category — the “red” zone — for the state benchmarks for COVID-19 cases per 100,000 people and test positivity rates, while remaining in “Moderate Transmission” — yellow — for hospitalizations for COVID-like illnesses.

Advertisement

The night before, the Camp Verde Unified School District Governing Board held a similar emergency meeting, but decided to stay open and refocus on COVID-19 safety protocols.

“I have talked with staff. I’ve talked with teachers. I’ve talked with custo­dians, I’ve talked with counselors. I’ve talked with parents. I’ve talked with the administration,” CVUSD Administrator-in-Charge Danny Howe told the board. “At this point, my recom­mendation would be to the board that we continue in the model that we’re in and move forward, trudge through this. I know there are risks, and I don’t want to downplay any of those …. The risks of students not being in school far outweighs the risk of COVID-19.”

Cottonwood-Oak Creek School District did not make any changes, but did send a joint letter along with the city of Cottonwood urging people to adhere to COVID-19 precautions in order to stop them from possibility of school closures.

“As of today, we have seen no transmis­sion within the schools, but sadly, we have seen students exposed at home who are knowingly sent to school,” the Nov. 24 joint letter from COCSD Superintendent Steve King and Cottonwood Mayor Tim Elinski reads.

However, King and Elinski’s letter provided no evidence that parents are sending COVID- 19-infected students to school.

“When this happens, we are forced to quaran­tine groups of students, staff, and even entire classrooms in keeping with Yavapai County health department proto­cols. This, along with a nationwide shortage of substitutes, which we are seeing in our district, is placing great strains on our systems to keep our schools open. We urge you to help our schools and our community by limiting the exposure and spread of COVID-19.”

“You can do this by keeping students who are ill, have been exposed, or have had a suspected exposure at home,” the letter continues.

A May 12 Executive Order by Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey blocked local governments from implementing the kinds of stay-at-home sugges­tions that he used to shut down businesses in March and April. However, local municipalities have begun to implement some increased limits on government office activi­ties, even if they cannot restrict private entities.

Starting on Monday, the Town of Camp Verde transitioned back to its Phase 1 reopening restrictions, meaning that town offices are closed to non-employees unless they have made an appointment.

“Everything is the same that we’re already doing, except the doors will be locked,” Town Manager Russ Martin said . “Hopefully people will call before they come, make an appointment. That way we won’t have people hang out in the halls, in the front rooms, especially community development …. If all the street guys are out or all the police guys are out, those are the concerns that I have, that our services will be impacted because we have a pretty limited staff to begin with.”

Camp Verde leaders decided to cancel the town’s Christmas Craft Bazaar and Parade of Lights as well as postponing the Grasshopper basketball league.

“We’re looking at the numbers continuing to climb locally and regionally throughout the state; it just didn’t seem like we could run these activities in a way that’s safe for the public,” Parks and Recreation Director Michael Marshall said. “We’re hoping we can do something that’s Christmas- and drive-by related.”

Likewise, the Cottonwood Chamber of Commerce announced its intention to cancel the annual Christmas parade.

“It’s been 66 years pretty strong and consistent, so it definitely wasn’t an easy decision but it was the right decision,” Chamber President Christian Oliva del Rio said. Oliva del Rio said that in communica­tions with local businesses, many were unsure whether they were planning on participating this year, and that concerns about onlookers, and the usual tradition of handing out candy to children, made it difficult to guarantee safety.

“I just couldn’t justify doing it and one person getting sick because of it,” he said.

Jon Hecht

Jon is born and bred in the northeast but moved from New York City to Cottonwood in search of beautiful scenery and the small town life. He hikes a lot, and can usually be found sitting in the corner of school board and city council meetings, taking notes. He used to cover national politics for Bustle but likes covering small town politics more. Tell him whatever is going on in your neighborhood because he’ll probably be interested.

- Advertisement -
Jon is born and bred in the northeast but moved from New York City to Cottonwood in search of beautiful scenery and the small town life. He hikes a lot, and can usually be found sitting in the corner of school board and city council meetings, taking notes. He used to cover national politics for Bustle but likes covering small town politics more. Tell him whatever is going on in your neighborhood because he’ll probably be interested.