DC mayor hopes city can begin first phase of reopening next week barring any peaks
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Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser said Thursday she plans to allow her district to begin phase one of reopening on May 29 -- if positive trends continue.
After nearing the benchmark of 14 consecutive days of declining cases, Bowser said D.C. would begin to reopen next Friday “barring any peaks.”
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Just one week ago, Bowser extended the state’s public health emergency in D.C. requiring residents to stay home until June 8.
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D.C. is the last holdout in the region to begin the reopening process, as Virginia and Maryland have started already. But Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam excluded Northern Virginia, which shares a border with D.C., from beginning to reopen until at least May 29. The Democratic governor said Wednesday he has not yet come to a decision whether the lockdown for northern Virginia will be extended beyond then.
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Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan lifted the stay-at-home order on May 15 and replaced it with a safer-at-home public health advisory, allowing many businesses to open at a limited capacity.
Under phase one of reopening for the district, restaurants could open outdoor seating and non-essential retailers could open for curbside pickup. Barbershops and salons can reopen at a limited capacity, as well as child care. Work from home is still strongly encouraged.
D.C. has faced around 7,500 cases of coronavirus and 400 deaths.
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Meanwhile, the Senate has been back in Washington for two weeks and the House will be in session next week, though lawmakers have the option to vote by proxy.