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METRO
SATURDAy, MARCH 21 , 2020. WASHINGTONPOST.COM/REGIONAL eZ su B
RELIGION
As life shuts down, a
Louisiana pastor is among
the last holdouts vowing
to keep his doors open. B2
THE REGION
the cherry blossoms
reached peak bloom
Fr iday, tied for third
earliest on record. B3
OBITUARIES
Jack Mcdonnell Jr., 82,
was a major d.C.-area
tech entrepreneur at the
51 ° 50 ° 54 ° 50 ° start of the Internet age. B4
8 a.m. Noon 4 p.m. 8 p.m.
High today at
approx. 12 a.m.
55
°
Precip: 5%
Wind: NNE
7-14 mph
BY FENIT NIRAPPIL,
DARRAN SIMON
AND REBECCA TAN
Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan on
Friday said a second person in the
state had died of the n ovel corona-
virus and emphasized the n eed for
residents to take the illness seri-
ously.
His announcement came as
D.C. officials reported that nine
more people in the District had
tested positive for the coronavi-
rus.
“ This is a public health crisis
like nothing we have ever faced
before — w e are all in this together,
and we will get through this to-
gether,” Hogan said.
Hogan said the man, a Balti-
more County resident, was in his
60s and suffered from underlying
medical conditions. D.C. officials
said that three people who tested
positive are in their 20s and two
are in their 30s. They said a 22-
year-old man who tested positive
lives in Florida, and a 58-year-old
man and a 34-year-old woman
have unknown addresses.
Mayor Muriel e. Bowser on Fri-
day extended school and restau-
rant closures and a ban on large
gatherings through the end of
April, following the first known
covid-19 death in t he n ation’s capi-
see dmV on b4
More
covid-19
deaths
in region
D.C. RePoRtS ItS 1St,
MARyLAND ItS 2ND
Bowser extends closures;
officials warn: Stay home
BY DAN MORSE
Illegal searches, unfair interro-
gations, bad witnesses: Maryland
attorney Mike Lawlor has cited
them all on behalf of clients since
- Add coronavirus to the list.
“There’s a worldwide pandem-
ic related to covid-19,” Lawlor
argued this week, asking for a
mistrial inside the otherwise bar-
ren, nine-story Montgomery
County Circuit Courthouse in
Rockville. “The president said
that groups should not be formed
in excess of 10 people. There are
obviously 12 people on this jury.”
He said he feared that jurors
would rush to judgment against
his client, accused of fatally
shooting two people during an
alleged botched robbery.
“We are all consumed with
what is basically a worldwide
shutdown, certainly a shutdown
in this area,” Lawlor said.
That L awlor was even standing
in a courtroom was almost un-
heard of across Maryland this
week. The entire court system is
closed except for the most critical
functions.
In three of the state’s largest
jurisdictions — Baltimore City,
Baltimore County and Prince
George’s County — no criminal
trials were taking place, accord-
ing to prosecutors. At the state-
wide public defender’s office, top
see trIAl on b4
Montgomery’s only t rial w raps up
The defense had sought
a dismissal because of
coronavirus concerns
dAn Morse/tHe wAsHIngton post
the montgomery County Circuit Courthouse in rockville, md., was
host to just one trial this week. It ended with a deadlocked jury.
BY JULIE ZAUZMER
AND SARAH PULLIAM BAILEY
It was the last day of a 19-day
period of daytime fasting for
Baha’i believers all over the world.
The Washington area’s Baha’i
community would have ordinari-
ly been looking forward to joining
at n ight to feast in celebration and
welcome in the Baha’i new year.
Instead, alone in their kitchens
and bedrooms and living rooms
Thursday afternoon, they opened
a skype window.
The sounds of religious wor-
ship these days are intermingled
with the vocabulary of conference
calls: “Try to mute your micro-
phone.” “You’re frozen.” “I can’t
seem to turn my camera around.”
“I have to hop off.”
In a matter of days, religious
congregations across the country
have learned how to go virtual.
Churches that never had a camera
in the sanctuary before are live-
streaming services. elderly mem-
bers who never miss a Wednesday
night Bible study are becoming
adept instead at morning prayer
calls by Zoom. Close-knit commu-
nities are keeping people’s spirits
up by seeing one another’s f aces in
pixel form and singing together,
headphones on their ears.
Almost 11,000 churches signed
up in the past week for a tool
called Church online Platform,
according to oklahoma-based
Life.Church, which created the
platform. Life.Church said that
4.7 million people watched servic-
es from churches on the platform
this past sunday.
In t he associated Bible app You-
Version, searches for “fear” went
up by 167 percent last week, and
“fear not” b y 299 percent.
“This moment is inviting reli-
gious leaders and religious com-
munities to really think about
what is essential about our prac-
tices,” said Letitia Campbell, a
Presbyterian pastor and a profes-
sor at emory University’s Candler
school of Theology. “What is the
see VIrtuAl worsHIp on b2
Worship goes virtual in
age of social distancing
Bloom and doom
Crowds visiting Tidal Basin for the trees’ early peak are smaller, and cautious, amid coronavirus
pHotos BY JAHI CHIKwendIu/tHe wAsHIngton post
The economic
damage wreaked
by the novel
coronavirus will
force the
Washington
region’s state and
local governments to cut
spending at a time of increased
public need, making it harder to
relieve the distress of laid-off
workers and struggling
businesses, according to officials
and analysts.
Although there is much
uncertainty over how long the
pandemic will last, area
governments are bracing for a
wrenching change that will
abruptly end an era of flush
budgets. Many liken the
potential impact to that of the
9/11 attacks and the 2008
recession combined.
“This has the potential to be
worse than the Great Recession,
because you’re shutting down
entire industries,” such as hotels
and restaurants, said Jeffrey s.
DeWitt, the District’s chief
financial officer.
“It’s not unthinkable that we
would hit 15 percent to
20 percent unemployment
numbers in the District. I don’t
think we’ve ever seen those kinds
of numbers in the District
before,” he said. “How long that
lasts depends on how long the
event lasts.”
Area governments’ capacity to
absorb the blow will depend
greatly on how much help they
get from the federal government.
In hard times in the past, federal
Washington has provided critical
extra funds for rising demands,
such as for health care and food
stamps for the poor.
see budget on b6
Budgets
to shrink as
public need
soars
Regional
Memo
ROBERT
MCCARTNEY
BY MICHAEL E. RUANE
Jean Bley was 16 when she rode the bus with the other
seniors from Margaretville High school in Upstate new York
to see the cherry blossoms for the first time.
It was 1939. Before a husband and family. Before the war.
eighty years and a lifetime ago. on Thursday, at 96, she was
back with two friends on a “jail break” f rom their retirement
community in springfield, Va.
Virus or no virus, she and neighbors Beverly Fisher, 80,
and To m Coneeney, 7 7, h ad piled into Coneeney’s 13-year-old
green s aturn and drove to Washington to witness the annual
glory of peak bloom on the Tidal Basin.
Part of the group that is most vulnerable to the novel
coronavirus, they stepped out of the car for a minute to take
in the timeless beauty of a Washington tradition that goes
back more than a century.
They were among hundreds of people, drawn by the
promise of light traffic, easy parking and small crowds, who
wandered among the gnarled trees, awed by the delicate
blossoms, w hich were heavy from the overnight rain.
some wore surgical masks or bandannas over their faces,
see blossoms on b3
despite being urged to practice social distancing, hundreds of
people v isited the tidal basin on thursday. b everly Fisher, above
left, and Jean bley decided to leave their retirement community in
springfield, Va., to witness the cherry blossoms.