Dine-in restaurants in Minnesota are being temporarily shut down along with bars, theaters, museums and other gathering places under an order by Gov. Tim Walz designed to slow the spread of the coronavirus that has now been confirmed in 54 state residents.
Walz issued the emergency measure Monday, one day after ordering the closing of K-12 schools statewide. The restaurants must close by 5 p.m. Tuesday. Schools will officially close Wednesday, though many districts already suspended classes.
The governor's order, made under "peacetime emergency" powers, also covers health clubs, theaters, museums, food courts, coffeehouses and other places of "public accommodation and amusement."
"We're not going to stop this from spreading," Walz said, "but we can stop how fast it spreads and we can make sure that we protect those most vulnerable."
Walz said Minnesota is at a "critical point" in its reaction to the pandemic and can follow the example of some nations in Southeast Asia that acted aggressively and are now recovering, or take the path of Italy and other countries that were slow to act and still face growing case numbers that have overwhelmed hospitals. He lamented that people were still gathering in large groups in bars and pleaded with Minnesotans not go to out for one final time.
With testing having now identified 54 cases of COVID-19 in Minnesota, some with no known source of transmission, state health officials warned that people should assume that the virus that causes this illness is in their communities.
Investigations couldn't trace the sources of infection for three patients in Hennepin, Ramsey and Dakota counties, meaning that the virus is spreading locally in what is termed community transmission and that more people are infected than are known.
"Those cases represent additional cases that didn't come to detection, because obviously they were exposed somewhere," said Kris Ehresmann, infectious disease director for the Minnesota Department of Health.