Gov. Tim Walz is postponing his State of the State address and submitting to quarantine through March 25 following a positive COVID-19 test of a staff member.
The quarantine is a conservative precaution after Walz, Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan and Health Commissioner Jan Malcolm were in the same location as the infected individual during a news conference on Monday.
All agreed to quarantine, even though none had been within 6 feet of the infected person for 15 minutes — which is the threshold for a moderate viral exposure risk. The staffer was tested Tuesday and received results Wednesday.
"We do this to make sure we not only protect ourselves and our families but to protect everyone else," Walz said in a social media message on Wednesday afternoon. "This is how you beat COVID."
Walz had been scheduled to appear Wednesday morning at the state's new COVID-19 vaccination site in St. Cloud, but his attendance was abruptly postponed.
The governor has been mindful of social distancing and mask-wearing — often donning a familiar plaid mask — throughout the pandemic, but his burgeoning public schedule increased the chances for even low-risk exposure.
Monday's event was at the Mall of America to laud passage of federal COVID-19 economic relief. He was at Armstrong High School in Plymouth last Thursday to stump for summer education funding, the Courage Kenny Rehabilitation Institute March 10 to see Malcolm receive a shot of the COVID-19 vaccine, and the Garlough Environmental Magnet School March 8 to highlight a return to more K-12 in-person learning.
The quarantine decision is made "out of an abundance of caution" and with the recognition that all three Minnesota leaders can work remotely, Malcolm said. "We certainly will be able to be fully engaged in work."