Active coronavirus cases pop up in prison towns, suburbs

Image
  • Meeting
    Meeting
Body

By Paul Monies, Oklahoma Watch

Active coronavirus cases continued their rapid growth in November, with the latest infections popping up in small prison towns and populated suburbs of Tulsa and Oklahoma City.

The number of active cases reached a new high on Friday at 30,724, more than double the number of active cases three weeks ago. There were just over 15,000 active cases on Oct. 30, according to the Oklahoma State Department of Health.

New cases so far in November have already surpassed those recorded for all of October, which was the previous high month of the pandemic. To date, 1,603 Oklahomans have died from COVID-19.

With cases and hospitalizations both rising, Gov. Kevin Stitt on Monday issued the first statewide restrictions since the state fully reopened in June. Bars must close by 11 p.m., and restaurants can stay open after that only for drivethru or to-go orders. Restaurants also must have tables at least 6 feet apart or install plexiglass dividers. Stitt said employees and visitors must wear masks in state office buildings.

Meanwhile, mayors in Oklahoma City and Tulsa asked their residents to take a 10-day “pause” over Thanksgiving week to help stem the spread of the virus and lessen the strain on the healthcare system. That included avoiding large gatherings, ordering take-out and working from home if possible, along with the now-standard advice of wearing a mask, social distancing and washing hands.Taft, home to Jess Dunn Correctional Center, had the state’s highest weekly increase in active cases, according to an Oklahoma Watch analysis of ZIP code data from the health department. By Friday, there were 505 active coronavirus cases, an increase of 311 from Nov. 13. The Oklahoma Department of Corrections said 347 inmates at the prison had tested positive.

Inmate cases at James Crabtree Correctional Center also tipped Helena in Alfalfa County into hotspot status. The 73741 ZIP code had 95 active cases on Friday, up from just five a week earlier.

Other big weekly increases in active cases came in ZIP codes for Broken Arrow and Moore. Neither of those cities have mask mandates, and Stitt has consistently declined to issue a statewide mask mandate.