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March 17, 2021
March 17, 2021
By AARON ROGERS
Daily Press Correspondent
A year without the usual Grant County events and celebrations has been hard on residents. From sporting events like the Tour of the Gila bicycle race and the Wild Wild West Pro Rodeo to festivals like the Blues Festival and Fiesta Latina to holiday parades, residents have had to either adjust to virtual versions or live with the disappointment of events being canceled altogether.
And that’s even without considering the economic impact of those cancellations for restaurants and other small businesses.
The ongoing efforts to vaccinate everyone, combined with the loosening restrictions that come from lower case numbers of COVID-19, are starting to raise hopes that some of these events might be making a return even as soon as the Independence Day parade this summer.
(Press Staff Photo by Geoffrey Plant)
Three-year-old Mila Sprowl shouts “Ya! Ya!” while playing on the black stallion spring rider in Penny Park on Saturday as her dad, Mike Sprowl, looks on.
After being closed since last March due to the coronavirus pandemic, as of today, Silver City’s beloved playground, Penny Park, is finally open to the public again, according to Town Manager Alex Brown.
“We waited until the schools got the green light for [limited] in-person learning,” Brown said, adding that when town officials made the decision last May to reopen municipal parks and outdoor recreation sites like Fox Field and Scott Park Golf Links in accordance with Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham’s easing of coronavirus restrictions, they opted to keep playgrounds off-limits.
Pandemic restrictions ease as county turns ‘yellow’ Written by Geoffrey Plant on January 29, 2021
As of Wednesday, Grant County has shed its red ※very high risk” status under New Mexico’s “Red to Green” framework for determining coronavirus restrictions, and has achieved yellow, or ※high risk,” status.
The transition means Grant County restaurants can expand outdoor dining to 75 percent of capacity and may offer indoor dining up to 25 percent of normal capacity, and those establishments that serve alcohol may now do so up until 10 p.m. instead of 9. Essential retail spaces and houses of worship may operate at 33 percent of normal capacity, instead of 25 percent capacity; the limit on mass gatherings is raised to 10 people maximum, instead of five or fewer; and places of lodging that are certified under the state’s NM Safe training program may now host guests at 60 percent of normal c
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