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N.M. tightens public health restrictions amid ‘reset’ (New 11/18 p.m., [more lockdown beatings will continue until no more businesses operate])
NM Health Department Press Room ^
| November 18, 2020
| NM Health Department
Posted on 11/18/2020 4:15:13 PM PST by CedarDave
New Mexicans instructed to shelter in place through Nov. 30
SANTA FE – Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and state health officials on Wednesday announced several tightenings intended to clarify the intent of the emergency public health order effective through Monday, Nov. 30, and to further underscore the imperative that New Mexicans must absolutely remain at home except for only those trips that are most essential for health, safety and welfare.
The changes restrict “big box” stores and other large retailers from operating in-person services. Complete definitions are outlined below.
The changes are effective beginning Thursday, Nov. 19, through Nov. 30.
The amendments as outlined in the public health order itself include:
- The definition of a “retail space” has been tightened and clarified to ensure only the most essential businesses are permitting in-person services during this extreme public health emergency.
- Essential retailers are defined as follows: Grocery stores, supermarkets, food banks, farmers’ markets and vendors who sell food, convenience stores, and other businesses that generate more than one-third of their revenue from the sale of canned food, dry goods, fresh fruits and vegetables, pet food, animal feed or supplies, fresh meats, fish, and poultry, and any other consumable food and drink products; automobile repair facilities, bike repair facilities, and retailers who generate the majority of their revenue from the sale of automobile or bike repair products; hardware stores; laundromats and dry cleaner services.
- These entities may operate but must reduce operations and staff to the greatest extent possible; may have no more than 75 customers inside or exceed 25 percent of maximum occupancy at any time, whichever is smaller; and must close by 10 p.m. each night. These requirements have not changed.
- Under this amended definition, “big box” stores and other large retailers that do not generate more than one-third of their revenue from the above identified food and drink products may not operate in-person services. A “big box” or large retail space such as Hobby Lobby and Ross Dress for Less, then, is not permitted to operate in-person services under the above identified stipulations.
- Businesses that are not identified as “essential” may operate to the minimum extent necessary to provide curbside pickup and/or delivery of goods to customers.
- Animal grooming services may not operate.
The state also issued the following guidance related to frequently asked questions about the public health order:
- Plant nurseries and Christmas tree lots may only operate to the extent to the extent allowed for any business not identified as an essential business, meaning they “may operate to the minimum extent necessary to provide curbside pickup and/or delivery services to customers.”
For frequently asked questions and an explainer of essential businesses, and to read the emergency public health order, please visit the cv.nmhealth.org website.
The state of New Mexico on Tuesday, Nov. 17, set records for daily new cases, COVID-19 hospitalizations and COVID-19 deaths. The state also recorded its first pediatric COVID-19 fatality – a pre-teen boy in Bernalillo County.
The risk of transmission has never been higher than right now. And the risk of serious illness – and death – is exacerbated by the unsustainable strain on the state’s hospital system and health care providers.
“New Mexicans must stay at home to stop the spread and prevent needless mass casualties all throughout our state,” said Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham. “This is real. This is not up for debate. We cannot stop the infections that have already happened and are still circulating throughout our state. We cannot reverse the thousands of significant illnesses and hundreds of deaths that have occurred. But we can still prevent worse. And we must. What we do now will determine who lives and dies this winter. Act right. And take COVID-19 seriously.”
REMINDERS:
Essential businesses are any business or non-profit falling within one or more of the following categories. These businesses may operate but must reduce in-person workforce and operations to the greatest extent possible for the duration of the current public health order, through Nov. 30.
- Health care operations including hospitals, walk-in-care health facilities, pharmacies, medical wholesale and distribution, home health care workers or aides for the elderly, emergency dental facilities, nursing homes, residential health care facilities, research facilities, congregate care facilities, intermediate care facilities for those with intellectual or developmental disabilities, supportive living homes, home health care providers, drug and alcohol recovery support services, and medical supplies and equipment manufacturers and providers;
- Homeless shelters, food banks, and other services providing care to indigent or needy populations;
- Childcare facilities;
- Grocery stores, supermarkets, food banks, farmers’ markets and vendors who sell food, convenience stores, and other businesses that generate more than one third of their revenue from the sale of canned food, dry goods, fresh fruits and vegetables, pet food, animal feed or supplies, fresh meats, fish, and poultry, and any other consumable food and drink products;
- Farms, ranches, and other food cultivation, processing, or packaging operations;
- Infrastructure operations including, but not limited to, public works construction, commercial and residential construction and maintenance, self-storage facilities, airport operations, public transportation, airlines, taxis, private transportation providers, transportation network companies, water, gas, electrical, oil drilling, oil refining, natural resources extraction or mining operations, nuclear material research and enrichment, those attendant to the repair and construction of roads and highways, gas stations, solid waste collection and removal, trash and recycling collection, processing and disposal, sewer, data and internet providers, data centers, technology support operations, and telecommunications systems;
- Manufacturing operations involved in food processing, manufacturing agents, chemicals, fertilizer, pharmaceuticals, sanitary products, household paper products, microelectronics/semiconductor, primary metals manufacturers, electrical equipment, appliance, and component manufacturers, and transportation equipment manufacturers;
- Services necessary to maintain the safety and sanitation of residences or essential businesses including security services, towing services, custodial services, plumbers, electricians, and other skilled trades;
- Veterinary and livestock services, animal shelters and facilities providing pet adoption, daycare, or boarding services;
- Media services;
- Automobile repair facilities, bike repair facilities, and retailers who generate the majority of their revenue from the sale of automobile or bike repair products;
- Utilities, including their contractors, suppliers, and supportive operations, engaged in power generation, fuel supply and transmission, water and wastewater supply;
- Hardware stores;
- Laundromats and dry cleaner services;
- Crematoriums, funeral homes, and cemeteries;
- Banks, credit unions, insurance providers, payroll services, brokerage services, and investment management firms;
- Businesses providing mailing and shipping services;
- Laboratories and defense and national security-related operations supporting the United States government, a contractor to the United States government, or any federal entity;
- Professional services, such as legal or accounting services, but only where necessary to assist in compliance with legally mandated activities; and
- Logistics and other businesses that store, transport, or deliver groceries, food, materials, goods or services directly to residences, retailers, government institutions, or essential businesses.
The businesses falling into one or more of the bolded categories are identified as essential retail spaces.
Those entities may operate in-person services in a more limited fashion: They may not exceed either 25 percent of its maximum occupancy, as determined by the relevant fire marshal or fire department, or 75 customers in the business space at any given time, whichever is smaller. They must close at 10 p.m.
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Health/Medicine; Local News; Science
KEYWORDS: covid19; lockdown; newmexico; tyranny
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To: LegendHasIt
I was going to pick up something from Walmart and the line was HUGE at both doors, I decided I didn’t need anything that bad.
21
posted on
11/18/2020 5:49:49 PM PST
by
tiki
(Electiongate)
To: tiki
At least in NM currently, the weather is very mild and standing outside may actually be pleasant. But when it turns cold, windy and with fog or drizzle, it’s going to be a different story.
To: HartleyMBaldwin
My friends tell me that the NM State Patrol has been limiting entry at the Colorado border, requiring visitors to stay at Colorado motels overnight once the entry quota has been reached.
They just made the trip. In theory they are supposed to self-quarantine in NM for 14 days. There apparently is no follow-up enforcement of that part of the order - yet.
But everything to see or do has been closed.
23
posted on
11/18/2020 6:07:40 PM PST
by
flamberge
(The wheels keep turning)
To: CedarDave
Gosh, much empathy for the New Mexico residents. This is just awful.
To: tiki
The Walmart closest to me was pretty busy on Friday, checkout lines as long as they were during the peak of the last covidiocy buying panic, but no lines to get in. Toilet paper, eggs and cottage cheese were the only things I saw were sold outall sold out, but no limits.... yet. Probably are now.
Today at the little town grocery store I went to (as well as the Dollar Store and the gas station / convenience store); Limits of 1 per customer of TP, kleenex, paper towels and napkins, but no other limits, and plenty of stock. of everything... except sliced pepperoni (Which was the main thing on my list. (go figure))... But no lines or panic anywhere.
To: HartleyMBaldwin
The governor intends the lockdown to crush the spirit of a formerly free people, to institute a culture of abject obedience to arbitrary decrees, to eliminate the concept of constitutional rights, to cease the worship of God, to crush impolitic sectors of the economy, to increase widespread destitution, to deprive the poor of their faith and of their social support networks, to increase the incidence of suicide and drug abuse, to experiment with a prototype of government under global-warming regulation, and to facilitate a Communist takeover.
If you live in New Mexico, flee. Liberal Democrats should go to Colorado, and conservative Republicans are needed in Arizona. Texas, Georgia, Florida, Wisconsin, and some other states are open to receiving New Mexico refugees. Please obtain an exit visa from the governor, transit permission from every county, municipality, and reservation through which you will travel, and entry visas for any states from their respective travel offices. States may close at any time.
26
posted on
11/18/2020 7:07:57 PM PST
by
dufekin
To: CedarDave
Is anyone else getting Gov L-G’s stupid text alerts on their phone? “Shelter in place except for emergency needs. EXTREME virus risk.” And I’m getting them literally every 5mins of the day! Once is enough, thanks. We’re leaving our East Mountains abode this weekend & heading about 1300 miles east until the lockdown is over. And I’ll be sure to keep my phone off so L-G can’t track me...
27
posted on
11/18/2020 8:24:20 PM PST
by
splash73
To: splash73
I turned off all those stupid nag alerts. Guv. Grisham is treating this as if it were some kind of toxic gas leak.
28
posted on
11/18/2020 8:55:11 PM PST
by
pigsmith
(Liberals can't make the connection between their politics and the decline of everything around them.)
To: DesertRhino
Except for big nation wide chains stores like Big 5 sporting goods, they sell animal feed and guns so they can still sell firearms.
Just the small Mom and Pop locally owned gunsmiths and shooting sports retailers being hit hard again while some animals are more equal than others don’t ya’ know?
I was able to make an appointment today to retrieve a firearm I ordered and that was in transit to my local FFL when this latest shut down was suddenly called. The owners are PO’d at the blatant discrimination. Me too!
So when is the march on Santa Fe?
SS1
SS1
29
posted on
11/19/2020 5:07:08 AM PST
by
Spitzensparkin1
(Donate often, it is our FReeping ammo. Keep the supply train rollin', become a monthly donor. )
To: Spitzensparkin1
Right index finger is gettin’ twitchy. Double tap.
SS1
30
posted on
11/19/2020 5:08:45 AM PST
by
Spitzensparkin1
(Donate often, it is our FReeping ammo. Keep the supply train rollin', become a monthly donor. )
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