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South Michigan News

Friday, November 8, 2024

MICHIGAN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE: State Announces Additional COVID-19 Restrictions on Businesses, Individuals

Business

Michigan Chamber of Commerce issued the following announcement on Nov. 16.

In a rare Sunday night press conference, Governor Whitmer and the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) announced new COVID-19 restrictions that will take effect on Wednesday at 12:01 a.m.

The new MDHHS Emergency Order (“Order”) shutters restaurants and bars for indoor dining and drinking (i.e., limits their operations to take-out and outdoor dining), theaters, movie theatres, stadiums, arenas, bowling centers, ice skating ranks, indoor water parks, bingo halls, casinos, arcades and group exercise classes. The Order is effective through December 8.

Under the Order, child care centers, hair salons, retail shops and preschool through eighth-grade schools will be open (i.e., subject to local control). Outdoor recreation will continue to be allowed, and gatherings of up to 25 people can take place at funerals. Gyms and pools can be open for individual exercise.

Indoor gatherings are prohibited at residential venues, except where no more than 10 persons from no more than 2 households are gathered. Indoor gatherings are prohibited at non-residential venues under the Order.

Outdoor gatherings are permitted at residential venues insofar as they are limited to 25 or fewer persons comprised of no more than three households. At non-residential venues, 25 or fewer persons can gather at a venue without fixed seating, but attendance must be limited to 20 persons per 1,000 square feet, including within any distinct area within the event space. For venues with fixed seating, 25 or fewer may gather but attendance must be limited to 20 percent of the venue’s seating capacity.

Regarding remote work, the new Order does not include any new changes. However, previously issued MIOSHA’s Emergency Rules (effective 10/14) specify, as it relates to onsite work, the “employer shall create a policy prohibiting in-person work for employees to the extent that their work activities can feasibly be completed remotely.” The MIOSHA Rules specify that businesses conducting in-person work must, among other things, have a written COVID-19 preparedness and response plan and provide thorough training to their employees that covers, at a minimum, workplace infection-control practices, the proper use of personal protection equipment (PPE), steps workers must take to notify the business or operation of any symptoms of COVID-19 or a suspected or confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19 and how to report unsafe working conditions.

Original source can be found here.

Source: Michigan Chamber of Commerce

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