Several outlying counties are seeing larger
percentage increases than Dallas and Tarrant counties.
Author: William Joy (WFAA) Published: 10:47
PM CDT June 30, 2020Updated: 10:47 PM
CDT June 30, 2020
CLEBURNE, Texas — Texas has seen a surge in
COVID-19 cases, and not only are rural counties not immune, several have been
hit even harder than major cities.
The state health department says Johnson
County added 182 cases in the past 8 days, a 72 percent increase.
“Just like everywhere else, we’re seeing a spike,”
said Jaime Moore, Johnson County’s emergency management director.
Moore said in small towns there are fewer
places to shop or eat, so they’re more concentrated and families have begun
gathering together again.
“We’re seeing an increase because there’s less
social distancing and there’s less wearing a mask,” he said.
The county added a mask order Friday to fight
the spread.
In the past eight days, several counties have
seen jumps. Cases have increased by 68 percent over that timespan in Wise
County, by 63 percent in Kaufman County, by 61 percent in Ellis County — and by
131 percent in Parker County, which went from 124 cases to 284.
For perspective, Dallas and Tarrant counties
have seen 23 percent and 21 percent rises in that same time frame.
“Obviously when you open it up, we knew we
were going to have increased numbers,” Parker County Judge Pat Deen said.
Deen is allowing restaurants to continue
operating at 75 percent capacity and isn’t requiring masks. Weatherford will
require masks for its Fourth of July fireworks show.
“I don’t think it’s the role of the government
to go in and make these decisions for them,” Deen said.
He says the problem may be more than half of
residents go east for work.
“You have that spill over, going and having
that impact in those higher penetration, higher density areas,” he said. “We’re
going to have to reevaluate what our containment strategy has been and what it
needs to be.”
Recently a contractor, MTX Group, has taken
over the state’s contact tracing, so now while cases rise, smaller counties are
getting less information. They now just see a number and not specifics on where
the cases are coming from for ages, genders and more.
“How then do we tell the public what’s
occurring in our community and where in our community specifically?” Moore
said.
From downtowns to town squares, the virus is
spreading across Texas.
“it’s really the person responsibility of all
of us to make good decisions individually,” Deen said.
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