Woodfin cautions residents to be vigilant about COVID-19 during holiday

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Photo by Jesse Chambers

Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin — at the regular meeting of the Birmingham City Council for Tuesday, Nov. 24 — warned the residents of the city to be vigilant about the risk from COVID-19 if they get together with friends and family over the long Thanksgiving holiday weekend.

“I just want to continue to remind residents of the city that take every precaution that you can with regards to this upcoming Thanksgiving,” he said.

At this point in the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, Woodfin’s “fear and concern at this point is as high as it was in March,” he said. “At the center of that fear is worrying about people dying from Coronavirus.”

“We still have to protect our most vulnerable residents, and we know that holidays is a time when family and friends get together, but I would like to remind you all that this Thanksgiving should not look the same,” the mayor told the council.

The holiday weekend in 2020 should be a “remix” or “scaled-down version” of what people normally do.

For example, Woodfin said, people should wear face coverings, especially in a space where everyone does not live in the same household. If there is a spread of food put out, everyone should use different utensils. People should not hug and kiss people who are not from the same household, he said. 

The mayor said that this affects his own family.

“My mom...has some underlying respiratory conditions, and because of that we will not even set foot in her home,” he said. “We will probably do something outside.”

Woodfin suggested that people should not have guests with “underlying health conditions” attend their gatherings.

“I know that’s not what we want to hear, but we do not want a situation where we are worried about folk or can’t see our family members because a few weeks later heading into Christmas they are in the hospital or worse,” he said.

The following items are among those passed by the council:

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