Most of state will be in Phase 2 of reopening plan next week

Published 3:32 pm Thursday, February 11, 2021

By Rachel La Corte / Associated Press

OLYMPIA— All but six of Washington’s 39 counties will be in Phase 2 of the state’s economic reopening plan as of Monday, with five new regions meeting the requirements necessary to join two other regions that have already seen a loosening of COVID-19 restrictions, including limited indoor dining.

Gov. Jay Inslee announced Thursday the East, North, North Central, Northwest and Southwest regions, which comprise 26 counties, will join the Puget Sound and West regions in the second phase of the plan. The South Central region of the state — Kittitas, Yakima, Benton, Franklin, Walla Walla and Columbia counties — will remain in Phase 1 for at least another two weeks.

Last month, Inslee announced that regions had to meet three of four metrics to advance: a 10% decreasing trend in case rates over a two-week period; a 10% decrease in coronavirus hospital admission rates in that same time frame; an ICU occupancy rate that’s less than 90%; and a test positivity rate of less than 10%.

Snohomish County, in the Puget Sound region, met the standard two weeks ago and is in Phase 2.

The South Central region had only met two of the metrics as of this week, with increases in both the trend of new COVID-19 hospital admissions and the test positivity rate.

The state Department of Health evaluates the time frame every two weeks to determine whether a region can progress, or potentially be rolled back.

In the second phase, restaurants can offer indoor dining at 25% capacity, and indoor fitness centers can open with the same limit. Sports competitions can resume with limited spectators, and wedding and funeral ceremonies can increase the number of guests.

Inslee also announced additional $87 million for business and rental assistance, to be distributed by the Department of Commerce. The agency has previously distributed $100 million to more than 30,000 households in rental assistance, the governor’s office said. And $200 million has been put toward assistance for businesses and nonprofit organizations.

Inslee is also expected to sign a bill next week that allocates $2.2 billion in federal COVID relief money, including $325 million for rental assistance and $240 million for business assistance.