Michigan Department of He…

The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services(MDHHS) extended by 12 days the epidemic order that restricts indoor social gatherings and other group activities. The additional 12 days will allow the department to determine the full impact of the Thanksgiving holiday on the spread of COVID-19 across Michigan.

Under the Dec. 7 order, MDHHS continues to urge families to avoid indoor gatherings, and only two households may gather inside, with strict protocols recommended. Individuals should wear masks consistently whenever they are inside with individuals not in their household, and are recommended to pick only a small group to see regularly.

  • Bars and restaurants must remain closed for dine-in service, but can remain open for outdoor dining, carry-out and delivery.
  • Gyms are open for individual exercise with mandatory masking and additional strict safety measures.
  • Casinos, movie theaters and group exercise classes remain closed.
  • Professional and college sports meeting extraordinary standards for risk mitigation may continue without spectators.
  • Colleges, universities and high schools will continue with remote learning, with no in-person classes.

The order will keep existing measures in place through December 20th and does not include a blanket stay-home requirement.

  • Employees who work in jobs that cannot be performed from home can continue to go to work, including those in manufacturing, construction and health occupations.
  • Outdoor gatherings, outdoor dining and parks remain open.
  • Individualized activities with distancing and face masks are still allowed: retail shopping; public transit; restaurant takeout; personal-care services such as haircuts, by appointment; and individualized exercise at a gym, with extra spacing between machines.

MDHHS identified three key metrics that will be utilized in determining whether to slowly reopen at the end of the 12 days. Specifically, the department will be looking closely at the percentage of hospital beds with COVID patients, the number of COVID-19 cases and the positivity rate.

With improvements in those numbers in context, MDHHS will carefully reopen, with in-person learning at high schools first. Next in line will be entertainment venues where people can maintain consistent masking, such as casinos, theaters and bowling, with concessions closed.

Help is available

The business attorneys at O’Reilly Rancilio are available to answer your questions regarding business law in the COVID-19 era. For information, call 586-726-1000 or visit our website.

Categories: Business, Covid 19