Feb 17, 2021

New Saline County health order raises limits, clarifies others

Posted Feb 17, 2021 11:05 PM

Saline County Health Officer Jason Tiller has issued a new public health order effective Monday and it brings with it some welcome news.

The new public health order is slated to go into effect Monday, as the current public health order is set to expire. 

The new order includes the following.

â—Źincreases the limit on mass gatherings from 15 to 50 people (Section 1)

â—Źincreases the capacity limit for certain establishments from 25 percent to 50 percent (Section 2)

â—Źclarifies limitations for indoor entertainment spaces like a bowling alley, arcade, trampoline park, and the like (Section 2).

During a January county commission meeting,  Tiller told commissioners that infection numbers were decreasing and vaccines were slated to come to Saline County with more certainty. However, local medical experts would need another two infection cycles (28 days) to get a more accurate picture of whether or not that decline was sustainable.

Now, nearly a month later, it appears the numbers are continuing to trend in the right direction, with new COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths on the decline, according to information from the health department.

Currently more than 5,500 people in Saline County have been vaccinated against COVID-19 and local officials are cautiously optimistic that vaccines will continue to make their way to Saline County.

Local health experts are confident that with the number of people being vaccinated against the deadly virus increasing, alongside the public’s use of proven methods like hand washing, wearing masks, and practicing social distancing, those numbers will keep falling. 

“We are hopeful that cases will continue to decline, and we understand everyone is eager to get back to business as usual, but we’re not all the way there yet,” said Tiller. “We are still keeping a close eye on the numbers and are monitoring COVID variants, which have begun showing up in Kansas. We will continue to look at how our policies effect both public health and the local economy as we move forward.”

Following is a copy of the new health order, as provided by the health department.