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Military版 - This is where all 50 states stand on reopening
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CNN)More than 90% of the US population is currently under a stay-at-home or
shelter-in-place order as the coronavirus pandemic continues to upend life
as we know it. But worries for the economy -- and people's mental health --
are raising the question: When will things go back to normal?
President Donald Trump has indicated many states can reopen by May 1, and on
Thursday shared federal guidelines for restarting the economy with
governors.
Across the country, governors have been forming pacts. Those leaders are
highlighting the importance of using science and advice from health
officials rather than politics to choose when to reopen the economy.
Expanded testing, tracking contacts of people who had the virus, improved
treatment options and vaccine development are important, they say.
Here's the latest on where states stand in their plan to reopen:
Alabama
Gov. Kay Ivey issued a stay-at-home order set to expire on April 30.
Lt. Gov. Will Ainsworth announced the formation of a task force to reopen
the state's economy. A plan will be presented to Ivey by April 17, he said.
"We have an emergency small business task force and we have a subcommittee
that's going to have recommendations ... that's going to look at all of the
nonessential businesses plus any business that's been impacted, talking
about how we can get them back open for business May 1st," Ainsworth said.
The state will find the best way to ease restrictions on restaurants and
stores while continuing to incorporate social distancing needs.
When the economy starts to reopen, Ivey said during a press briefing it will
be a slow process over time, "segment by segment or region by region."
Alaska
Gov. Mike Dunleavy ordered its residents to stay at home unless absolutely
necessary, starting March 28, and will remain in effect until rescinded.
Dunleavy plans on reopening the state as early as next week.
"We're constantly checking the pulse of this whole pandemic to see when we
can open things up," Dunleavy said during the latest Covid-19 Alaska press
conference on Friday.
Since testing availability has increased, the governor is confident that if
Alaska can "get the right tools in the right time," the state will be a "
model of success."
Arizona
Gov. Doug Ducey issued a stay-at-home order which will expire on April 30
unless extended.
"I want to get the economy moving and people back to work as soon as
possible -- when it is safe and healthy for people to do so," Ducey said on
Twitter on Monday.
The governor emphasized the importance of maintaining social distancing and
continuing to make "responsible choices."
"It's critical that we keep those efforts up as we plan for the future and a
time when we can begin to return some normalcy to people's lives," Ducey
said.
Arkansas
Gov. Asa Hutchinson has yet to issue a stay-at-home order to his citizens as
a way to limit the spread of coronavirus nationwide.
Schools will be closed for the rest of the academic term. Fitness centers,
bars, restaurants and other public spaces are closed until further notice.
Hutchinson told reporters on April 16 that he wants to bring back elective
surgeries. "We want to get (hospitals) back to doing the important health-
care delivery that is important in our communities," he said.
California
Gov. Gavin Newsom issued a stay-at-home order on March 19 that has no set
end date.
Newsom announced a joint Western States Pact with Oregon Governor Kate Brown
and Washington Governor Jay Inslee on April 13.
"Health outcomes and science -- not politics -- will guide these decisions"
to reopen the states, according to a joint statement from the governors.
Newsom outlined a framework for reopening the economy in the Golden State on
Tuesday that he said was predicated on the state's ability to do six things
protect seniors and high risk individuals, be able to meet future surges in
hospitals with a "myriad of protective gear," continue to collaborate with
academia on therapies and treatments, redraw regulations to ensure continued
physical distancing at businesses and schools and develop new enforcement
mechanisms to allow the state to pull back and reinstate stay-at-home orders.
"I know you want the timeline, but we can't get ahead of ourselves and dream
of regretting. Let's not make the mistake of pulling the plug too early, as
much as we want to," Newsom said.
Colorado
Gov. Jared Polis extended the state's stay-at-home order, which now remains
in effect until April 26.
"I can't stress enough the importance of staying home during these next few
weeks," Polis said in a news release. "We have to keep this up for a little
while longer in order to return to a level of normalcy in our economy and
our society."
The governor said he hoped the state would be able to open up on April 26
when the stay-at home order expires as long as residents are staying home
and wearing masks when they go out. However, he stressed that opening in
early May did not mean "things are going to go back to how they were in
terms of 60,000 people in a stadium (or) a busy nightclub."
Polis also said he would welcome a regional or national approach to a time
on when to reopen.
Connecticut
Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont extended the mandatory shutdown in the state
until May 20.
Connecticut has joined a coalition with the Northeastern states of New
Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Rhode Island and Massachusetts to
coordinate the reopening of the economy, according to a news release from
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo's office.
Lamont said he believed it would take at least another month before the
state could decide on how and when to open things back up and emphasized "
this is no time to relax."
Looking to revive the state's economy, Lamont announced Thursday the
formation of the "Reopen Connecticut Advisory Board."
Delaware
Gov. John Carney issued a statewide stay-at-home order that will remain
until May 15 or until the "public health threat is eliminated."
Delaware has joined a coalition with the Northeastern states of New York,
New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island to
coordinate the reopening of the economy, according to a press release from
NY Governor Andrew Cuomo's office.
District of Columbia
Washington, DC Mayor Muriel E. Bowser extended a stay-at-home order
effective until May 15.
"I don't know if that means we will be open on May 16, but it will be a
point for us to check in. And if we need to extend it beyond that, we
certainly will," Bowser said during Wednesday's press briefing.
Florida
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis issued a stay-at-home order for Floridians until
April 30.
DeSantis plans to announce his reopening plan for the state of Florida next
week, he said Thursday.
During a news conference Thursday, he suggested it could start with allowing
elective surgeries.
DeSantis said he will meet Friday with a task force that includes experts
across various industries throughout the state.
Southeast Florida, which is the epicenter of the outbreak in the state,
could be treated differently than other parts, the governor said.
Georgia
Gov. Brian Kemp issued a statewide shelter-in-place order that runs until
April 30. The governor also extended the public health emergency through May
13. All K-12 public schools will remain closed through the end of the
school year.
Kemp emphasized the importance of expanding testing before reopening the
state.
"We're a little behind the curve from when our peak is going to be to other
states around the country," Kemp said during Monday's press briefing. "That
is certainly a day I am ready for, but I think today specifically we have
been focused on the surge capacity, ramping up testing to do more than we're
doing."
Hawaii
Gov. David Ige issued a stay-at-home order for Hawaii residents which will
last through at least April 30.
He said Thursday the state doesn't satisfy the federal criteria for phased
reopening, one of which is a 14-day downward trend in the number of cases. "
We're making progress, but we're not there yet, so please continue your hard
work and perseverance, we will get through this together," he said.
Idaho
Gov. Brad Little issued a stay at home order on March 25 and an extreme
emergency declaration, which has been extended until April 30.
Little amended the order on April 15 to allow for some businesses and
facilities to reopen for curbside pickup, drive-in and drive-thru service,
and for mailed or delivery services.
The order was originally to remain in effect until April 15.
Little said that the measures were working and Idaho is "truly seeing a
flattening of the curve."
"Our goal is for most businesses to open after the end of the month, but
with the understanding that it may not be possible if there's an upward
trend in severe Covid-19 cases in Idaho between now and then," Little said.
Illinois
Gov. J.B. Pritzker issued a stay-at-home order for the entire state which
extends through at least April 30.
Pritzker said during a media briefing Monday that he believes the current
state in Illinois has been enough to slowly start lifting shelter-in-place
orders so that some industry workers can go back to work.
Although there is no clear time line, he hopes that restarting production
will go "industry by industry, and maybe company by company."
Indiana
Gov. Eric Holcomb issued a stay-at-home order for the state through April 20
, but it may be extended.
While Holcomb hopes loosen up restrictions, he emphasized that he is still
encouraging people to continue staying home and practicing social distancing.
"We have managed our resources well and we find ourselves in a position to
where we can care for those in need," Holcomb said during the press briefing
on Monday. "What we don't want to do is prematurely loosen up."
Holcomb mentioned the "new normal" after restrictions are loosened may
include new measures such as taking employees temperature at work, wearing
masks, and physical distancing.
Iowa
Gov. Kim Reynolds has not declared a stay-at-home order. Reynolds issued a
State of Public Health Disaster Emergency on March 17, ordering all
nonessential businesses to close until April 30.
The governor formed an Iowa economic recovery task force consisting of state
leaders and private business leaders and announced plans to discuss with
education leaders about the possibility of reopening schools.
Reynolds on April 16 announced that residents of the region of the state
with the most cases, where there was an outbreak at a food processing plant,
cannot get together until April 30.
"You may gather only with members or your immediate household," Reynolds
said, adding there were a few exceptions like religious services with 10
worshippers or fewer.
Kansas
Gov. Laura Kelly issued a stay-at-home order, which has been extended until
May 3.
The initial order was set to expire April 19.
Kelly said Kansas expects to see its peak of coronavirus cases between April
19-29, based on projections.
Kentucky
Gov. Andy Beshear issued a "Healthy at Home" order on March 25 that will be
in effect indefinitely.
Kentucky is working with six other states to coordinate reopening measures.
The governor said Thursday it will be a phased-in approach "where we can
have that that symbiotic bump ... to make sure that the steps that we take
ultimately have a bigger reward or bigger output, because they are being
replicated in other areas that we already do so much business with."
Louisiana
Gov. John Bel Edwards extended the state's stay-at-home order through April
30.
The governor announced on April 16 the formation of an economic recovery
task force.
"They're going to look at our economy, make recommendations to make our
businesses more resilient so that we can open them up, get businesses open,
get workers back to work, but do so in a way that adequately affects public
health," he said.
Maine
Gov. Janet Mills issued a "Stay Healthy at Home" executive order through at
least April 30. Mills extended the state's civil state of emergency until
May 15.
"We are in the midst of one of the greatest public health crises this world
has seen in more than a century," Mills said in a news release. "This virus
will continue to sicken people across our state; our cases will only grow,
and more people will die. I say this to be direct, to be as honest with you
as I can. Because saving lives will depend on us."
Mills said she wished she didn't have to extend the state of emergency, but
"the continued spread of the virus demands a sustained response by the State
."
Maryland
Gov. Larry Hogan issued a statewide stay-at-home order on March 30. There is
no current potential end date.
The governor said during his appearance on CNN Newsroom on Monday that the
state is discussing ways to safely reopen the state with health officials,
and that his priority is to save lives, not the economy.
"We've got to listen to the doctors and scientists," Hogan said. "We've also
got to be concerned about people getting the help they need and getting on
track, but doing so in a gradual and safe manner when it's really the right
time to do it."
Hogan said a cooperation amongst other governors on when to reopen the
states would be a "good idea."
Massachusetts
Gov. Charlie Baker issued an emergency order requiring all nonessential
businesses to close facilities until May 4.
Massachusetts has joined a coalition with the Northeastern states of New
York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Rhode Island to
coordinate the reopening of the economy, according to a press release from
NY Governor Andrew Cuomo's office.
Baker told residents of his state that officials have begun conversations
around reopening the state but there's still a lot of work that needs to be
done before a plan is set into motion.
The state will need to have testing, tracing, isolation and quarantine
procedures in place to reopen, the governor said.
"I think it's going to be really important that we all pay attention to what
the others are up to, and to make sure that nobody does anything that puts
somebody in a really bad spot, because they just weren't thinking about what
that impact was going to be on some other part of the Northeastern part of
the US," he said.
Michigan
Gov. Gretchen Whitmer extended the state's stay-at-home order through April
30.
Whitmer said during Monday's press briefing that reopening the state's
economy will be based on a "data-driven approach based on facts, based on
science, based on recommendations from experts."
The four factors the governor will take into consideration before reopening
Michigan include a sustained reduction in cases, expanded testing and
tracing capabilities, sufficient healthcare capacity, and the best practices
for the workplace.
Minnesota
Gov. Tim Walz extended the state's stay-at-home order through May 3.
He also signed an executive order extending the peacetime emergency for an
additional 30 days until May 13.
Walz emphasized the importance of expanding testing and tracing the spread
of the virus before opening the state.
The governor's plan to open up the economy is to "test, we have to do
contact tracing, and we have to isolate the people who need to be isolated,
and this has to be on a massive scale," Walz said.
Mississippi
Gov. Tate Reeves issued a shelter-in-place order which expires on April 20.
The governor announced on Tuesday that schools will remain closed for the
rest of the semester.
Reeves said the state needed to open things back up as quickly and as
responsibly as possible.
"We know that we will not be able to return to our typical lives right away,
" Reeves said during Monday's press briefing.
"There are still more sacrifices to be made. We do want to look ahead to
opening things up, I know that there are many Mississippians whose lives and
livelihoods rely on our ability to get them back to work in a responsible
way."
Missouri
Gov. Mike Parson issued a statewide "Stay Home Missouri" order through April
24.
He extended the order Thursday through May 3.
The governor's office said they will work with hospitals, healthcare
providers, health officials, and business leaders to develop a reopening
plan.
Montana
Gov. Steve Bullock extended the state's stay-at-home order through April 24.
Bullock held a governor's coronavirus task force tele-town hall for
Montanans on Monday in which he said following the state's guidelines will
allow the state to reopen sooner rather than later.
Bullock said he does not know when the stay at home order will be lifted and
that while he doesn't "want to have it in place any longer than what's
necessary," he is more concerned about completely reopening the state and
jeopardizing the work that has been done.
Nebraska
Gov. Pete Ricketts issued the "21 Days to Stay Home and Stay Healthy"
campaign on April 10. Ricketts ordered that all hair salons, tattoo parlors
and strip clubs be closed through April 30 and all organized group sports
canceled until May 31.
Nebraska is one of the states that has not issued a stay-at-home order to
limit the spread of coronavirus nationwide. Ricketts has not made any plans
to reopen the state.
The state's campaign is based on six rules: staying home, socially
distancing at work, shopping alone and only once a week, helping kids social
distance, helping seniors stay at home and exercising at home.
Nevada
Gov. Steve Sisolak formally issued a stay-at-home order which will last
until April 30.
When asked about how he'd make his decision to reopen the economy, Sisolak
said "positive testing is important but it's not my number one parameter."
"The things that I look at on a daily basis are hospitalizations, intensive
care unit hospitalizations, ventilator usage, and people who pass," Sisolak
added.
New Hampshire
Gov. Chris Sununu issued a stay-at-home order until May 4.
Sununu told reporters on April 16 that he'll make a decision on whether to
extend the order before May 4.
"We want to give people some flexibility and be able to plan," Sununu said.
He said that applies to restrictions on nonessential businesses and public
gatherings.
All public and private schools will remain closed for the rest of the school
year, and students will continue remote learning, he said.
New Jersey
Gov. Phil Murphy issued a stay-at-home order on March 21 which has no
specific end date.
New Jersey has joined a coalition with the Northeastern states of New York,
Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Rhode Island and Massachusetts to
coordinate the reopening of the economy, according to a press release from
NY Governor Andrew Cuomo's office.
"No one has given more thought or is more eager to restart our economy than
I am, but if we don't get the sequencing right, we put more lives at risk.
The only path to a sustainable economic recovery is through a strong
healthcare recovery," Murphy said in a news release.
"A coordinated, regional approach, informed by a multi-state council of
experts, will help us avoid a major setback with potentially disastrous
consequences."
New Mexico
Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham extended the state's emergency order to April 30.
She said Thursday her state is evaluating the federal guidelines but
authorities cannot put the "cart before the horse."
"Please know that my administration is working doggedly to develop robust
economic recovery plans alongside a plan for a thoughtful, staged and
flexible reopening of our state -- and the moment we can safely implement
those plans, they will be implemented with the same dedication and focus
that we are using to contain this pandemic," the governor said.
New York
Gov. Andrew Cuomo issued a "New York State on PAUSE" executive order which
took effect on March 22. Schools and nonessential businesses are ordered to
stay closed until April 29.
New York has joined a coalition with the Northeastern states of New Jersey,
Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Rhode Island and Massachusetts to
coordinate the reopening of the economy, according to a press release from
NY Governor Andrew Cuomo's office.
The governor has not come to any decision on when businesses will reopen and
said he rejected "any elected official or any expert who says I can tell
you what's going to happen four weeks from today."
North Carolina
Gov. Roy Cooper issued a stay-at-home order for the state effective until
April 29.
The governor said that the more people adhere to social distancing
requirements in April, the sooner the state will loosen restrictions.
"We have a team examining how North Carolina can emerge with the right
practices in place to keep us healthy and strong and ready to jump start our
economy," Cooper said in Monday's press briefing.
"We're considering the most effective ways to modify executive orders to
help boost the economy while continuing to prevent our hospitals from being
overwhelmed with Covid-19 patients."
North Dakota
Gov. Doug Burgum has only shut down schools, restaurants, fitness centers,
movie theaters and salons. Burgum declared a state of emergency on March 13.
North Dakota is one of the states that has yet to issue a stay-at-home order
to limit the spread of coronavirus nationwide.
Burgum has not discussed fully reopening closed business and schools.
Ohio
Gov. Mike DeWine issued a statewide stay-at-home order that will remain in
place until May 1.
He said Thursday that on that date the state will begin the first phase of
reopening.
"We are working on (specifics) and will be talking about this in the days
ahead. We will be dealing with the schools shortly, probably early next week
," he said.
As for events with big crowds, he said, "We need to take this a few weeks at
a time to see where we are."
Oklahoma
Gov. Kevin Stitt said on April 15 that he is working on a plan to reopen the
state's economy, possibly as early as April 30.
At the same time, Stitt extended Oklahoma's "Safer at Home" order for adults
over the age of 65 and other vulnerable residents until May 6. Elective
surgeries will be allowed to resume on April 24.
Stitt has said the state would have to ease into reopening its economy.
"We're doing this with the guidance of the experts, being data driven...
based on what's happening in Oklahoma, not what's going on in a different
state or different city," Stitt said.
Oregon
Gov. Kate Brown issued an executive order directing Oregonians to stay at
home on March 23 that "remains in effect until ended by the Governor."
Brown announced a joint Western States Pact with California Governor Gavin
Newsom and Washington Governor Jay Inslee on April 13.
In terms of the timeline for reopening the states, the statement says the
state will "need to see a decline in the rate of spread of the virus before
large-scale reopening, and we will be working in coordination to identify
the best metrics to guide this."
Brown said she would not ease restrictions before seeing five components in
place: declining growth rate of active vases, sufficient personal protective
equipment, surge capacity in hospitals, increased test capacity, contact
tracing and isolating positive cases, and strategies to protect vulnerable
communities.
Pennsylvania
Gov. Tom Wolf issued stay-at-home orders across the state until April 30.
Pennsylvania has joined a coalition with the Northeastern states of New
Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Delaware, Rhode Island and Massachusetts to
coordinate the reopening of the economy, according to a press release from
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo's office.
"Every time we talk about opening something up, we're going to be prolonging
this phase," Wolf told reporters on Friday.
"If it's not in the best interests of keeping people safe, I'm not going to
go along with it."
Rhode Island
Gov. Gina Raimondo issued an emergency declaration extending the state's
stay-at-home order to last until May 8.
Rhode Island has joined a coalition with the Northeastern states of New
Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Delaware, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts to
coordinate the reopening of the economy, according to a press release from
NY Governor Andrew Cuomo's office.
To reopen the state, Raimondo said there would need to be advanced testing
and contact tracing put in place.
"It is clear that what you're doing is working," Raimondo said, referring to
residents staying at home. "It's keeping you safer. It's keeping Rhode
Islanders safer. And quite frankly it's making it so I can really start
thinking about reopening this economy sooner rather than later."
South Carolina
Gov. Henry McMaster extended his previous "State of Emergency" executive
order through at least April 27.
"We want to get all these businesses going back as soon as we can," McMaster
said during Monday's press briefing.
"And to that end, we will be announcing before long, a plan, a rejuvenation
plan, a revitalization plan in order to get our economy started again."
South Dakota
Gov. Kristi L. Noem has refused to issue a stay-at-home order to limit the
spread of coronavirus nationwide although the state's Covid-19 cases are
spiking.
Tennessee
Gov. Bill Lee extended the state's stay-at-home order until April 30.
Lee said the state would begin reopening the economy in May.
"It'll be smart, it'll be safe, it'll be measured but we do not have a
definitive decision on what those steps will be yet," Lee said during Monday
's press briefing.
Texas
Gov. Greg Abbott ordered all Texans to stay home through April 30.
The governor said during Monday's media briefing that only businesses "that
will have minimal or zero impact" on the spread of the coronavirus will be
the first to open up.
"This is not going to be a rush the gates everybody is able to suddenly
reopen all at once," Abbott said. "We have to understand that we must reopen
in a way in which we are able to stimulate the economy while at the very
same time ensuring that we contain the spread of COVID-19."
Abbott will outline strategies to begin the process of reopening the economy
later in the week, he said.
Utah
Gov. Gary Herbert extended the state's "Stay Safe, Stay Home" directive
through May 1. Schools will be closed for the remainder of the year.
Utah is one of the states that has yet to issue a stay-at-home order to
limit the spread of coronavirus nationwide.
Herbert also issued an executive order Thursday requiring adults entering
the state to disclose their travel plans.
"We are seeing encouraging evidence that our efforts to stay home are making
a difference," Herbert said in a news release.
"We cannot let up on these measures. Working together, we can slow the
spread of coronavirus, alleviate the stress on our health systems, and get
Utahns back to work and to a level of normalcy more quickly."
Herbert said the state is making plans for how and when restrictions will be
lifted, but continued to urge citizens to stay home.
Vermont
Gov. Phil Scott issued a "Stay Home, Stay Safe" order that has been extended
until May 15.
"It didn't take federal action to spur us into action and it's not going to
be the federal government that's gong to determine when we take appropriate
steps here in Vermont," Scott said during Monday's news conference.
Scott said reopening the state would take time, but the priority was
listening to experts and continuing to save lives by asking people to stay
home.
"We are making big sacrifices to save lives, but we cannot let our foot off
the gas just yet," Scott said in a news release. "We will continue to watch
the trends, and as soon as the data shows a downward trend, we can open the
spigot, a quarter turn at a time, to get folks back to work in a way that's
responsible and safe."
Virginia
Gov. Ralph Northam issued a stay-at-home order effective until June 10.
"We are in a public health crisis, and we need everyone to take this
seriously and act responsibly," Northam said in a news release. "Our message
to Virginians is clear: stay home."
Northam has made it clear that the state must make decisions based on "
science, public health expertise, and data," Secretary of Health and Human
Resources Daniel Carey said.
Washington
Gov. Jay Inslee extended Washignton's stay-at-home order until May 4, saying
"We are yet to see the full toll of this virus in our state and the
modeling we've seen could be much worse if we don't continue what we're
doing to slow the spread."
Inslee announced a joint Western States Pact with California Governor Gavin
Newsom and Oregon Governor Kate Brown on April 13th.
Before deciding on when to reopen the state, Inslee said during an interview
with Katy Tur on MSNBC that there would need to be an "enormous expansions"
of coronavirus testing capabilities, a way to trace the spread in
communities, and "for the president to recognize that these decisions really
are going to be made by governors."
West Virginia
Gov. Jim Justice issued a stay-at-home order until further notice.
"That curve is the curve we're looking for to be able to look at the
possibility of backing things off and going forward. We're not there yet,"
Justice said during his briefing on Monday.
Despite numbers suggesting that the state is starting to do better, Justice
said it wasn't time to relax social distancing measures or asking people to
stop staying home.
"I'm proud of each and every one of you so keep following the guidelines,
stay at home, social distance, practice good hygiene and when the time comes
, and it will, we'll cross the finish line together as West Virginians,"
Justice said in a news release.
Wisconsin
Gov. Tony Evers issued a "Safer at Home" order that prohibits all
nonessential travel which will remain until April 24.
The governor said the state needs to find a way to expand testing and
contact tracing, especially in urban areas, before opening back up.
"In order for us to get to a place that's maybe less restrictive in the
state, our public health systems are going to have to look different. We are
going to need more testing," Evers said during Monday's press briefing.
Wyoming
Gov. Mark Gordon submitted a request asking for a federal disaster
declaration for Wyoming on April 9. Wyoming is one of the states without a
stay-at-home order.
"Though Wyoming has not reached the dire situations of some states, this
declaration will help us to prepare and mobilize resources when we need them
," Governor Gordon said in a news release. "I look forward to a swift
response to our request from the federal government."
Gordon extended statewide public health orders through April 30 and issued a
directive requiring travelers to quarantine for 14 days.
Correction: This story has been updated to correct details about what
businesses in Nebraska will be closed and the duration of those closings.
CNN's Janine Mack, Dylan Wells, Angie Trindade, Cat Gloria, Ganesh Setty,
Yahya Abou-Ghazala, Chris Boyette, Christina Maxouris and Theresa Waldrop
contributed to this report.
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