HB 4.1.2021 DONE

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VOLUME 167, No. 13 Thursday, April 1, 2021 PRICE $1.

1

THE


HASTINGS


Devoted to the Interests of Barry County Since 1856


The living voice


of Easter


See Editorial on Page 4


Saxon runners get


back on the track


See Story on Page 13


Hastings schools back


to remote learning


See Story on Page 3


Health department still charging


restaurant licensing fees


Taylor Owens
Staff Writer
The Barry-Eaton District Board of Health
unanimously voted against waiving restaurant
licensing fees during a virtual meeting last
Thursday.
The board had considered waiving or
reducing the fees after several restaurant own-
ers asked county commissioners to do more to
help local businesses.
“One of the things we really would like to
see this department do, and we demand they
do immediately, is provide as much regulatory
relief as possible, as far as the cost of permits,
fees, inspections, so forth,” Rutland Township
resident Joel Ibbotsen said during public com-
ment at the start of the meeting. “Whatever
this board can do to extend any sort of mone-
tary relief to the restaurants will be very, very
well received on our end.”
Health Officer Colette Scrimger said the
health department brings in a total of $312,
each year from restaurant fees from both
Barry and Eaton counties.
Eaton County board member Blake Mulder
said he did not think waiving the fees would
be a significant aid to the restaurants. Mulder
owns two restaurants in the district and said
he pays $500 in fees for each.
“Bottom line is, I’m not sure $500 is going
to make much difference whether your busi-
ness is going down the tubes or now,” Mulder
said.
He believed waiving the fees would be a
political statement, but not a “game changer”
for the restaurants.
Barry County board member Dave Jackson
said that while many restaurants have strug-
gled during the pandemic, some have benefit-
ed from it, therefore he suggested the board
create a process by which restaurants could
request to have the fees waived.
“I don’t know that we need to waive all fees
across the board,” Jackson said.
He speculated that since the fees represent-
ed such a small amount of money for the
restaurants, most would not bother to request
the fee be waived. He suggested the board cap
the total amount forgiven at $50,000.
Barry County board member Ben Geiger
said he believed giving restaurants an option
to request the fees be waived was a good idea.
However, Scrimger said the health depart-
ment would not be able to determine who
would and would not get the money based on
finances.

“We’d have to say yes to everyone,” she
said.
Scrimger advocated the board reduce the
fees, instead of waiving them entirely.
Eaton County board member Joe Brehler
said selectively forgiving the fees would be “a
losing proposition for the health department,”
since there would inevitably be people who
would find it unfair.
“My problem is you’re talking about pick-
ing winners and losers,” he said.
Brehler pointed to other industries that also
have health inspection fees, such as tattoo
parlors, which the department would be
choosing not to aid.
“What started as an idea to be helpful is
going to turn into a real problem,” Brehler
said.
He believed the board would either need to
waive the fees for all businesses or none of
them.
Geiger said the most appropriate way to
cover the cost of waiving the fees for licenses
would be to use the money from the Biden
administration’s stimulus package. Barry
County is estimated to receive nearly $
million from the package, while Eaton County
is projected to receive more than $21 million.
Eaton County board member Jeremy
Whittum said the federal government has not
yet outlined what the money could be used
for, and he cautioned that the board may have
to pay the money back to the federal govern-
ment if it is used for the wrong purposes.
However, Whittum did suggest the board
waive late fees for license applications, since
the department had not yet sent out the appli-
cation notices. The state’s deadline for restau-
rants to apply for licenses is April 30.
Mulder disagreed.
“People that are late and don’t pay on time
are the problem children,” he said.

“What started as an idea
to be helpful is going to
turn into a real problem.”

Joe Brehler, Eaton
County board member

Local boards, councils preparing


for return to in-person meeting


J-Ad News Services
Thornapple Township Supervisor Eric
Schaefer has been thinking ahead to when his
board can meet in person again.
Last Thursday, Schaefer worked on setting
up the room at the township hall where the
board will meet Monday, April 12.
“I spent a fair amount of time trying to sit-
uate the board room so that each board mem-
ber has 6 feet between them, and trying to set
up an audience of 15 chairs so they’re all 6
feet apart,” Schaefer said in a telephone inter-
view Monday.
“I wish we had a little bit bigger board
room, but I think we’re all going to fit.”
Schaefer and other elected officials around
Barry County are resuming in-person board
and council meetings this month after the
most recent order from the Michigan
Department of Health and Human Services,
issued March 22, will allow in-person meet-
ings if no more than 25 people are present and
the local municipality can meet spacing and
social distancing requirements. Under the
Open Meetings Act, if more than 25 people
attend, the meeting must be ended or moved
outdoors, according to a memo from the

Michigan Townships Association.
Masks are required for all members of the
public body and those attending the meeting,
according to the DHHS order.
Most governmental entities in the county
are planning to have a hybrid option – meet-
ing in person while offering the opportunity
for constituents to participate virtually through
a Zoom call or similar application.
“I understand some people don’t feel com-

fortable [with attending in person], even
board members,” Schaefer said. “If they don’t
feel comfortable, they’re welcome to partici-
pate through the Zoom component.”
The Village of Middleville also will be
using a hybrid format for its council meetings,
starting Tuesday, April 13.
“The public is welcome to attend via Zoom,
and some of our council members who are
still a little concerned about their health are
welcome to join us via Zoom too,” Village
Manager Patricia Rayl said Monday in a
phone interview.
“Our [council chamber] space can accom-
modate eight to 10 people,” she said.
“Anything more than that, we would want to
do it virtually.”
Rayl said the village has the option of mov-
ing its meeting to the training room of the
Thornapple Township Emergency Services
station if a larger audience is expected.
“That was what I was arranging before the
Barry County Board of Commissioners was
kind enough to make their declaration [of a

Despite vaccines, variant drives new COVID surge


Taylor Owens
Staff Writer
Spectrum Health announced Tuesday that
the hospital network is facing a new surge of
COVID-19, and cases are spreading faster
than the outbreak last fall.
In just 2 1/2 weeks, the number of patients
hospitalized with COVID-19 at Spectrum
hospitals has risen from around 50 to 139 as
of Tuesday. The number of COVID-
patients in the intensive care unit had doubled
over the past four days.
Those numbers mirror an increase in cases
in Barry County, nearly tripling the number of
active cases in the past month. The Barry-
Eaton District Health Department reported
144 active cases as of Tuesday. Two more
deaths have been counted since last week, for
a total of 51 since the start of the pandemic in
March 2020.
The percentage of positive COVID-
tests in the county has also continued to rise,
with a peak of 20.29 percent Sunday, the
highest since the previous surge in November.
“We are seeing similar situations here at
Pennock, and we are actively partnering with
[the health department] in the effort to get
people vaccinated as quickly as possible,”
Angela Ditmar, president and regional market
leader at Spectrum Health Pennock, said. “We
are encouraging anyone who can get a vaccine
to get one. It is important to continue to mask
and follow all COVID protocols.”
As of Wednesday, Michigan had the
highest number of new COVID-19 cases per
capita of any state in the nation, according to
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.
“This is strangely, and sadly, reminiscent
of what we saw in the fall,” President of
Spectrum Health West Michigan Darryl
Elmouchi said during a virtual press
conference Tuesday. “We definitely hope we

don’t see a surge like we did before, but it’s
seeming that way.”
Though many people over age 65 have
been vaccinated, Elmouchi said this new
surge is being driven by the more contagious,
and more lethal, B.1.1.7 variant of COVID-
that originated in the United Kingdom.
Studies have shown the variant may be 50
percent more contagious than the previous
strain, and about 35 percent more deadly.
The majority of new COVID-19 cases in
Michigan are believed to be the variant,
though testing for the variant is not widespread
enough to confirm that.
Elmouchi said the variant also appears to

be affecting younger people at a higher rate.
The average age of hospitalizations in the
fall was 73, but that dropped to 60 this week.
While hospitals have seen a decrease in
patients over age 60, they also have seen a
significant increase in patients under age 40.
Elmouchi said that is partly due to older
people receiving a larger share of the vaccines,
but also to the aggressiveness of the variant
strain.
The hospital network, he said, also is
seeing more pediatric cases than it was during
the previous surge.
“There’s definitely a younger demographic
in the hospital,” Elmouchi said.
The health network continues to vaccinate
as many people as it can, and was scheduled
to give out 52,000 doses this week.
“There is hope, and that hope almost
entirely lies in the vaccine,” Elmouchi said.
Spectrum Health United and Kelsey
Hospitals Chief Operating Officer Jon
Ashford said one clinic early this week
vaccinated 12,500 people in 12 hours, which
he believed may be a record in the state.
Spectrum also has expanded vaccine

eligibility to everyone age 16 and older, after
a new announcement from Gov. Gretchen
Whitmer’s administration. Whitmer’s press
secretary Monday encouraged health
providers to vaccinate people age 16 and up
when available, to ensure that doses do not go
to waste.
Vaccines will officially open to all
Michigan residents 16 and older April 5.
During a Barry-Eaton District Board of
Health meeting March 24, health department
official Anne Barna said a number of local
outbreaks have been connected to high
schools.
She encouraged parents to have their 16-
and 17-year-old children inoculated with the
Pfizer vaccine, and said some Meijer locations
are already vaccinating kids at those ages.
Pfizer announced Wednesday its vaccine
has been shown to be safe and effective in
children as young as 12. If the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration approves the vaccine for
children age 12 to 15, vaccinations could
begin before the next school year.
Barna added that some Barry County
residents 65 and older still have not been

vaccinated, and the health department is
giving them top priority. Often, people in that
age demographic are scheduled “almost
immediately” when they register online or
call the department, Barna said.
She also said the state has sent Barry
County more vaccines to catch up with Eaton
County, after Barry fell slightly behind due to
a number of factors, including a perception of
lower demand. Barry County had a smaller
number of people per capita signed up to
receive the vaccine than Eaton County. Barna
said that was due to a mix of demographic
differences and less internet availability in
Barry County.
As of Monday, 13,315 Barry County resi-
dents had received their first dose of the vac-
cine, which represents 26.8 percent of people
over age 16. The state also reported 6,
Barry County residents have been fully vacci-
nated.
Health officials expect the supply of vac-
cines to increase in the coming weeks, but say
shipments remain sporadic.

A chart shows the positive rate of COVID-19 tests in Barry County.

President of Spectrum Health West
Michigan Darryl Elmouchi speaks during
a virtual press conference Tuesday.

“Ultimately, it’s the township’s
responsibility to make sure
when people come onto
township property or to a
township meeting that they
are following the law.”

Michael Selden, Michigan
Townships Association
director of member
information services

See MEETING, page 11 See LICENSING, page 5


Judge rules Gibson may wrestle


despite contact tracing incident


Brett Bremer
Sports Editor
Lakewood junior wrestler Zac Gibson sat
in front of a computer screen to hear the
decision of the Honorable Judge Vicky
Alspaugh from Barry County’s 5th Judicial
Circuit Court early Wednesday afternoon.
Her ruling over Zoom couldn’t have been
more positive in favor of the two-time state
medalist who won a Division 3 Individual
Regional Championship at 125 pounds
Saturday at the regional tournament hosted
by Lansing Sexton.
“So, weighing four factors, I do find that
the motion for temporary restraining order is
granted at this time with the understanding
that Zac tests negative or does not test posi-

tive either as a result of the test we’re wait-
ing for results on or either of the results of
the tests prior to him weighing in or partici-
pating in the tournament,” Alspaugh said.
Gibson was deemed in close contact with
a classmate who received a positive COVID-
19 test at Lakewood High School. He enlist-
ed the services of lawyer James A. Thomas
and put forth an emergency motion for a
temporary restraining order to avoid a quar-
antine that would have kept him from partic-
ipating in the Division 3 Individual State
Finals at Wings Event Center in Kalamazoo
Friday.
The motion was brought against the
Barry-Eaton District Health Department and
its clinic supervisor Jackie Anderson as well

as Lakewood High School. Thomas said the
alleged close contact was supposed to have
happened March 25, two days prior to
Gibson’s regional tournament victory.
During her decision, Alspaugh weighed
what Gibson stood to lose by not granting
the temporary restraining order as well as the
possible risks to Gibson and the public.
She acknowledged a possible loss of
scholarship opportunities that could come
from Gibson not participating, but said,
“There is also an aspect that is not compen-
satable, and that is the experience and the
ability to say, ‘I am the state champ in my
weight class.’ The loss of that is not some-

See WRESTLE, page 2

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