Gov. Ron DeSantis outlines plan to reopen Florida: ‘Safe. Smart. Step-by-Step.’

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The Governor outlined the first of three phases with more to come.

Gov. Ron DeSantis plotted the course for Florida’s economic recovery amid the COVID-19 pandemic, outlining Wednesday the first phase of his plan to reopen the state beginning Monday.

Retail stores and dine-in restaurants can operate at 25% capacity, under his order.

The plan, dubbed “Safe. Smart. Step-by-Step.,” will allow the entire state, minus Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties, to start the first steps toward reopening society.

Despite criticizing the distinction between essential and nonessential services as “illusory” last week, DeSantis’ plan extends that language from his initial stay-at-home order.

Schools will remain in distance learning in phase one, visitation at long-term care facilities is still banned, and bars, gyms and personal services such as hairdressers will remain closed. If he sees guidance from the federal officials or successful state plans on how gyms could reopen, DeSantis said he would consider reversing the gym closure.

The Governor’s plan deviates from the federal framework by allowing elective surgeries to resume and keeping movie theaters closed.

“Prudence dictates we go slow on that,” he said.

Restaurants could open but with outdoor seating and only 25% indoor capacity rather than the 50% capacity recommended by the White House.

DeSantis’ plan involves five principles: protecting vulnerable populations, increasing testing, promoting social distancing, protecting hospitals and health care workers, and preventing the introduction of COVID-19 from outside the state.

“This was something where we really wanted to get it right,” he said.

Physicians consulted on the plan, which also received input from health care executives, small business owners, elected officials unemployed Floridians, law enforcement and his task force, which met all last week.

The Governor still recommends vulnerable individuals avoid close contact with people in public and that everyone maintains social distancing. And he still recommends avoiding groups of 10 or more in social settings and wearing face masks in face-to-face interactions.

He continued to push back against old predictions that the state could see hundreds of thousands of hospitalizations during the pandemic.

“Saying Florida was going to be like New York was wrong, and people need to know it was wrong,” he said.

And when asked about allowing people to get haircuts, he took aim at the talking heads on TV, in particular those who he said “don’t want anyone to go back to work.

“How come they always look so clean-shaven? They always look so nice and kempt,” he said. “How does that possibly happen if they’re not allowed to get a haircut? Gee, I wonder what they’re doing.”

Florida’s enemy, he added, is fear, and the facts should comfort fears that have kept people home.

“The only thing we have to fear is letting fear overwhelm our sense of purpose and determination,” he said.

Hospital space, declining cough-related cases and cases with influenza-like symptoms, and fewer new COVID-19 cases, particularly as a percent of new people tested, show the state is prepared to begin phase one, he said. The White House outlined those criteria in its Opening Up America Again template, and federal officials agree that Florida is ready.

The Governor noted the lives lost during the pandemic and became emotional when mentioning that his newborn daughter has been unable to meet her grandparents or anyone in their extended family because of the precautions people have taken to keep vulnerable populations safe.

He has contrasted his “measured” approach against the “draconian orders” issued by other Governors.

“People have rights. The government needs to protect health,” he said, but it shouldn’t take steps that violate those rights.

He has vowed to continue testing in nursing homes, a process currently handled by National Guard strike teams. The Division of Emergency Management has sent 7 million masks and other supplies to those facilities.

The state is maintaining existing drive-thru and walk-in testing facilities, mostly in the state’s major population centers, but more are planned for the future. Escambia, Lee and other counties will be getting drive-thru sites while Collier County and others will get walk-in sites, which he said the state pioneered.

Expanding testing access to underserved communities and people who were previously ineligible will also help track the virus and facilitate more contact tracing. People without symptoms and of any age will be able to get tested going forward.

Starting next week, the state will be able to test 30,000 to 40,000 people per day, not that the demand will exist. And while the number of positive cases may go up, coinciding with the expanded testing apparatus, he urged that media outlets not report that as a spike.

With assistance from the White House, the state has secured a mobile testing van with 45-minute testing capacity that can be deployed to long-term care facilities and hospitals.

“We’re not only bringing the swabs, we’re bringing the lab to them,” he said.

As the state looks to enter phase two, it will continue to monitor the criteria outlined by the White House. There will not be a set date to reopen, DeSantis said, though he considered implementing the reopening that way.

“My hope would be, each phase, we’re thinking about weeks, we’re not thinking about months,” he said. “We’re making progress. We need to continue to put people back to work in a safe, smart and a step-by-step way, but it’s going to be data-driven.”

According to a report Wednesday from the Department of Health (DOH), 33,193 people have tested positive in Florida, including 875 non-residents, and 1,218 residents have died.

“We have lost Floridians, which is never an easy thing, but it’s been made all the more difficult by the fact that due to visitor restrictions at hospitals, they were not even able to say goodbye to their loved ones,” DeSantis said.

Earlier Wednesday, the Governor released three TV news clips from his media tour that began this weekend, culminating in a visit to the Oval Office Tuesday.

In Washington, DeSantis fielded questions from the national press alongside President Donald Trump before teasing the reopening plan.

The “next step is going to be done thoughtfully, in a measured way … I do think there’s a path to do that,” DeSantis said.

“It isn’t going to happen overnight,” he added, but it will happen.

The Trump administration has trumpeted Florida as a success story of how to flatten the curve while following White House guidelines. Dr. Deborah Birx, head of the federal coronavirus task force, has praised the DOH’s COVID-19 interactive dashboard for providing details down to the ZIP code.

But Democrats will almost certainly denounce the Governor’s plan. Ahead of the first meeting of his task force last week, Democrats were already bashing the lack of doctors and front-line workers on the executive committee. John Couris, President and CEO of Tampa General Hospital, is the only professional from the health care industry on that panel, which DeSantis said would emphasize public health and data.

During those meetings, small businesses made their case for a swift reopening with clear guidelines. And hospitals asked the Governor to end the ban on elective surgeries, which he has indicated he will let lapse next week.

The Governor will have later updates on the details of phase two, including services like state parks.

Renzo Downey

Renzo Downey covers state government for Florida Politics. After graduating from Northwestern University in 2019, Renzo began his reporting career in the Lone Star State, covering state government for the Austin American-Statesman. Shoot Renzo an email at [email protected] and follow him on Twitter @RenzoDowney.


6 comments

  • BlueHeron

    April 29, 2020 at 8:19 pm

    “The only thing we have to fear is letting fear overwhelm our sense of purpose and determination.”

    A truly FDR moment for him.

    • Patrick

      April 30, 2020 at 8:04 am

      Except it is not really true. We all should have an understanding fear of Covid19 and take the minimal precautions of masks in public, washing hands constantly and truly following the 6′ rule.

      • Nate Greene

        May 2, 2020 at 9:00 am

        Wrong, wrong wrong.
        The science that we’ve all been lectured on these past few months in now clear. The isolation of a healthy was unnecessary, unwarranted and unwise for the long-term heath of said population. You isolate the sick not the healthy. Now that testing has been ramped up, surprise surprise! Millions have already contracted, recovered and are now immunity Covid. It’s been in America since early January as has been speculated by many in the medical profession. No worse in 90%+ of those infected than a common cold or a mild flu.

  • Bernard Fensterwald

    April 29, 2020 at 9:51 pm

    Renzo is right that Democrats are sure to complain. Governor D. would have been better off including more Democrats in his re-opening team under Lyndon Johnson’s theory, that it is better to have your adversaries inside the tent pissing out than inside the tent pissing in. But, Johnson being a Democrat, what would he know.

    • How soon we forget

      April 30, 2020 at 8:39 am

      LBJ? The guy that loved the n-word and got us into Vietnam? That’s really the guy you want to hold out as an exemplar of executive leadership?

  • alyr

    May 7, 2020 at 4:44 pm

    So HOW does this jack-azzz have the nerve to say starting May 9th all the unemployed people need to start submitting proof of 5 job searches every week including US, the SELF EMPLOYED BUSINESS OPERATORS!!! MORON.

Comments are closed.


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