Englewood Herald 0408

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April 8, 2021

ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO

A publication of

EnglewoodHerald.net

VOLUME 101 | ISSUE 7

Metro area may see patchwork of restrictions State to let local agencies decide COVID restrictions; plans unclear in many areas COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA STAFF

Katlin Wolff, a nursing supervisor with Tri-County Health. The clinic was possible in part thanks to a $20 billion provision in the American Rescue Plan, a $1.9 trillion COVID relief bill passed by Congress in March, Hickenlooper said. “This is really encouraging to see,” he said. “The faster we can get to whatever form of herd immunity we end up in, the faster we can fully open our economy, which is better for everyone and especially working people.”

As state public health officials prepare to step back and let local health agencies decide what coronavirus restrictions to enact going forward, it’s unclear what the resulting landscape of policies will look like in the Denver metro area — and how broad the differences among them may be. The latest changes to Colorado’s system of restrictions — dubbed “dial 3.0” — took effect on March 24, making it easier for counties to move into level green, the least restrictive of the dial’s six levels. Dial 3.0 also removed most restrictions in level green altogether and relaxed limits for certain businesses in other counties. The state’s color-coded dial is the set of restrictions counties must follow based on the local spread of the virus. The system affects capacity at restaurants, other businesses, indoor and outdoor events, and other settings. Colorado originally implemented the dial on Sept. 15. After several months that saw changes to the dial system, that chapter of Colorado’s pandemic policy is coming to a close.

SEE VACCINE, P15

SEE RESTRICTIONS, P6

U.S. Sen. John Hickenlooper speaks outside the Malley Senior Recreation Center in Englewood on April 1. Hickenlooper praised the impact federal funds have had on clinics like the one held inside Malley, which is focusing on people who have difficulty acPHOTO BY DAVID GILBERT cessing larger or more distant vaccination sites.

Hickenlooper touts federal help at vaccine clinic American Rescue Plan, vaccines will help pull Colorado out of crisis mode, senator says BY DAVID GILBERT DGILBERT@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Sen. John Hickenlooper paid a visit to an Englewood vaccination site on April 1, touting the impact of federal dollars as the race to vaccinate Coloradans against CO-

VID-19 picks up steam. “It’s exciting to see people from all walks of life here,” Hickenlooper said after touring the site at the Malley Senior Recreation Center. “If we’re going to get past this pandemic and kickstart the economy, we’ve got to get everybody vaccinated.” The vaccination site, held at Englewood’s Malley Senior Recreation Center, is an “equity clinic,” focused on getting shots to people with more difficulty accessing care — people who are elderly, disabled, lack access to computers or face transportation challenges, said

INSIDE: VOICES: PAGE 12 | LIFE: PAGE 14 | CALENDAR: PAGE 11 | SPORTS: PAGE 17

A PROFILE OF PREP SPORTS ATHLETE

Volleyball player brings passion to the game P17


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