Mayor Turner says city received 180 occupancy-related complaints amid reopening

Tuesday, May 26, 2020
HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) -- As Texas reopens, complaints have been coming in. People are reporting occupancy violations at bars, clubs and restaurants in the city of Houston.

In fact, Houston's mayor says on Sunday night, there were 180 complaints. As part of the governor's second phase in reopening, bars and clubs could open at 25 percent capacity and restaurants at 50 percent, but the mayor says not everyone was following the order.
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"People are coming together in close proximity, in large crowds, and that's a formula for community-spread [COVID-19] and for it to spread exponentially," said Mayor Sylvester Turner.

The mayor says overnight from Sunday to Monday there were a flood of occupancy-related complaints. The fire marshals went to some of those locations, where the mayor says people voluntarily complied.

"The good news is that when the fire marshals went out and reminded people about the occupancy requirements, the limits, that the people did voluntarily comply," said Turner.

RELATED: Fire marshal to start enforcing 25 percent capacity limit

Turner says the idea is to educate people so there's not an uptick in COVID-19 cases.
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"Nobody is going to jail. We're simply enforcing the occupancy requirements because we want to balance business opening but we also want to manage our health care," said Turner.



The firefighters union expressed concern in a letter to the mayor saying the order came without guidance or directive on how firefighters should address an upset business owner.

RELATED: Houston firefighters union calls Mayor Turner's 25% occupancy enforcement plan 'impossible situation'

"If our firefighters and investigators and inspectors are going out there, that's a direct result of the mayor's order to our firefighters. This is not the Houston firefighters or investigators going out looking for something. This is something the mayor needs to stand behind and talk to the business community and express to them how important to is," said Marty Lancton, President of the Houston Firefighters Association.



"This is a public health crisis. When the numbers were increasing, the people who were on the frontlines are the people who stand first to be infected. Those are your firefighters and your police officers. It's in everyone's best interest for us to manage and control the spread of this virus," said Turner.
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The mayor says the idea is to act now to ensure we can reopen further down the road.

"There's some modeling that's been done that's said if we continue to come together as we open, we could go from, let's say, from 200 cases a day, to 2,000 in June. That's what we're concerned about," said Turner.

SEE ALSO: What doctors believe will happen if large crowds at bars continue
What doctors believe will happen if large crowds at bars continue


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