


Holcomb adds month to mandate; cases in
Lake County near 8,800
Holcomb
The Republican governor he was also extending the
Holcomb said he was pleased the state’s rate of new coronavirus cases has been holding steady in recent weeks and “we don’t want that to trend up. We’d like to see it start to trend down.”
Holcomb acknowledged many residents aren’t following the order to wear face masks and said he would continue emphasizing education over penalties.
“There are some folks who don’t believe it helps,” Holcomb said. “I would disagree and offer science as the counterargument to that.”
“Ensuring ‘law and order’ is a critical component of public health management,” said Myers, a physician and former state health commissioner.
Holcomb’s announcement means Indiana restaurants will continue to be allowed 75% capacity in their dining rooms, while bars, nightclubs, bowling alleys, museums and movie theaters can be open at half capacity. The state will also continue its current 250-person limit on social gatherings unless health officials have approved safety plans for those events.
State health officials on Wednesday recorded 18 more coronavirus-related deaths. That raised the state’s pandemic death toll to 3,259, including confirmed and presumed coronavirus cases, in the five months since Indiana’s first fatality was reported in mid-March, according to the
The state is reporting 971 new cases Tuesday, bringing the statewide total to 89,359, Lake County’s positive test rate continues to be the state’s second-highest with 8,799 and 293 deaths. Marion County is reporting 17,833 cases and 745 deaths.
The Porter County Department of Health on Tuesday reported 1,621 COVID-19 cases and 43 deaths.
Indiana’s COVID-19 death rate has remained steady since the mask order took effect July 27. Both coronavirus hospitalizations and the seven-day average of 920 newly confirmed infections as of Tuesday have remained slightly higher than a month ago.
Dr. Kristina Box, the state health commissioner, said while Indiana hospital’s had maintained stable intensive care unit and ventilator capacity for additional coronavirus patients, the statewide hospitalization of 987 COVID-19 patients as of Monday was up nearly two-thirds from June’s low of 595 patients.
Holcomb said he wasn’t setting a certain level of coronavirus cases at which the state restrictions would be lifted but that he believed the mask order and other steps were keeping the COVID-19 spread in check.
“I shudder to think about where we’d be had we just said ‘Come what may,’ we’re just going to continue to act like this isn’t an infectious virus that’s spreading through airborne droplets,” Holcomb said.