KLMNO
METRO
friday, march 13 , 2020. washingtonpost.com/regional eZ sU B
MARYLAND
the Maryland house gave
final approval to a bill
prohibiting single-use
plastic bags. B8
THE REGION
a software fix is coming for
Metro’s 70 00-series train
car doors that shut before
the warning message. B6
OBITUARIES
lawyer agnes neill
williams, 89, was in the
first class at georgetown
59 ° 70 ° 72 ° 62 ° that admitted women. B6
8 a.m. Noon 4 p.m. 8 p.m.
High today at
approx. 3 p.m.
74
°
Precip: 55%
Wind: W
10-20 mph
BY DONNA ST. GEORGE,
HANNAH NATANSON
AND JOE HEIM
Hundreds of schools in Maryland
and suburban Virginia are closing in
coming days in response t o the corona-
virus pandemic as officials try to
protect students and contain the
spread of covid-19.
In northern Virginia’s Loudoun
County, all classes and other school
activities are canceled through March
20, in a sudden measure taken by one
of Virginia’s largest school systems.
In Maryland, state superintendent
of schools Karen salmon announced
that campuses would be closed from
March 16 to 27 — a two-week period
that will cancel classes for more than
900,000 students in public schools
across the state.
“It is crucial t hat we take immediate
measures to slow the spread of covid-
19 in school communities around the
state,” salmon said, appearing beside
Gov. Larry Hogan (R) on Thursday as
see schools on b3
Maryland,
Loudoun
County close
their schools
BY GREGORY S. SCHNEIDER
AND LAURA VOZZELLA
RICHMOND — Jubilant Demo-
crats finished a historic legisla-
tive session Thursday under a
cloud of uncertainty, with action
on the state’s $135 billion two-
year spending plan vying for time
with updates on the rapid spread
of the coronavirus pandemic.
Gov. Ralph northam declared
a state of emergency over the
virus before the General Assem-
bly adjourned, saying the num-
ber of confirmed infections
across the state had grown to 15,
plus two Virginians in Te xas.
The legislature’s end was five
days late but seemed an eon from
its opening in January. Flush
with the power o f new majorities,
Democrats used the 65-day ses-
sion to move the state decisively
to the left, leading the south in
areas such as renewable energy
mandates, protections for wom-
en, minorities and workers, and
broader access to voting.
But some lawmakers worried
that the state budget approved
and sent to the governor on
Thursday was a relic from a
stronger, more optimistic econo-
my. This week’s huge stock mar-
ket losses and concern about a
slowdown in retail, tourism and
manufacturing led the senate to
see budget on b5
Va. Assembly ends eventful session
BY TOM JACKMAN
At his capital murder trial nine
years ago, Mark e. Lawlor did not
deny that he raped and murdered
Genevieve P. o range. A twice-con-
victed felon, he admitted that as a
leasing agent for orange’s apart-
ment building in the Falls Church
area, he used his keys to enter her
apartment and then repeatedly
bludgeoned her with a hammer
and a frying pan. For the jury,
there was only one issue: should
Lawlor be put to death?
“Gini” orange was 29, an event
planner for the Futures Industry
Association in the District and an
active member of McLean Bible
Church. some of her friends from
the church and orange’s mother
sat through every day of the eight-
week trial, including the grue-
some details of her slaying. They
heard testimony about Lawlor’s
horrific childhood and his law-
yers’ claim that he was too intoxi-
cated on crack cocaine and beer
to form the intent needed for
premeditated murder. A Fairfax
County jury heard it, too, and
sentenced Lawlor to die.
But a federal appeals court
ruled in 2018 that the judge in the
case had wrongly prevented Law-
lor’s lawyers from presenting evi-
dence about Lawlor’s future dan-
gerousness, a factor jurors must
see lawlor on b5
Man in 2011 Va. murder resentenced
The Centers for Disease
Control and
Prevention: “Do not go
to work, school, or
public areas” if you are
feeling sick.
About 32 million
American wage
workers: That’s a no-go.
Calling in sick is not an option for
millions of American workers, not just
during the covid-19 pandemic, but
every day.
“We can’t,” said a manicurist at a
silver spring nail salon, pulling his
mask down to talk to me. “We just
have to try to stay healthy.”
He didn’t say why. He didn’t have to.
our national workforce equation
means that the more likely a worker (a
pizzamaker, a driver, a day-care
teacher, a manicurist) is to come into
close contact with scores of people
every day, the less likely i t is that they
will be able to afford to take a day off
without catastrophic, personal
impact.
see dvorak on b3
Most-exposed
people often lack
paid sick leave
Petula
Dvorak
salwan georges/the washington Post
above: a student wears a face mask thursday during a tour of the capitol hill rotunda, where tours have now been halted. below: a traveler wears a
mask in union station; cases of covid-19 have risen in the area, driving some residents to confront a new normal by stocking up and staying inside.
BY PAUL SCHWARTZMAN
Becky Reina, a mother of two chil-
dren who lives in northwest Washing-
ton, was not about to wait for any
more anxiety-inducing announce-
ments about the novel coronavirus.
When they came into her bedroom
early Thursday, as they do every
morning, Reina told Abigail, 6, and
Thomas, 8, they would not be going to
Cleveland elementary school that day
— or any day in the near future.
Instead, her kids spent the morning
eating chocolate chip pancakes, gar-
dening, working on homework pack-
ets and “trying to hang out without
killing each other,” said Reina, who
lives in the LeDroit Park neighbor-
hood.
Yes, she understands that some
people might accuse her of overreact-
ing and that, because her kids are
young, “it would not be a big deal” i f
they caught the virus.
“But they could infect others,” she
said. “A nd that would be big deal.”
As anxiety over the coronavirus
ballooned into a full-blown interna-
tional crisis, choices that once seemed
simple only hours ago were now
fraught with existential danger, as the
Washington region grappled with a
new normal of jarring warnings and
ominous announcements.
From deciding whether to shake
hands, go to the office or play in a
pickup basketball game, Washingto-
nians and their neighbors in Virginia
and Maryland found themselves ask-
ing whether engaging in the most
mundane of activities was worth the
risk of exposing themselves to the
virus that causes covid-19.
While some were in full retreat,
see local virus on b4
In D.C., anxiety and acceptance coexist
Matt Mcclain/the washington Post
BY DARRAN SIMON,
ERIN COX
AND LAURA VOZZELLA
Maryland will close public schools
for two weeks starting Monday, and
Gov. Larry Hogan imposed broad re-
strictions including a ban on g ather-
ings of 250 people or more, the most
aggressive steps yet in a region that has
started to shut down to stop the spread
of the novel coronavirus.
Hours after the announcement, the
Washington Archdiocese said it would
close 93 Catholic schools in the District
and its Maryland suburbs, and sus-
pend public celebrations of Mass in
church indefinitely.
Virginia Gov. Ralph northam d e-
clared a state of emergency and can-
celed conferences and out-of-state
travel for public employees. Arlington
national Cemetery will be closed to
visitors starting Friday, with strict
rules in place for funerals, and the
smithsonian Institution said the na-
tional Zoo and its museums would shut
down starting saturday.
such changes are critical to limit
how quickly the virus spreads, physi-
cians on Hogan’s Coronavirus Re-
sponse Te am said at a news conference
with the governor, and to ensure hospi-
tals are not overwhelmed.
“We can all fight back against this
virus, and in fact, we need to,” said
David Marcozzi, an associate chair at
the University of Maryland school of
Medicine. “The earlier that we do this,
the more layers we put in place, the less
this virus can be transmitted.”
since the first cases of the virus were
diagnosed a week ago, the number of
people ill from covid-19 in the District,
Maryland and Virginia has climbed
above 40.
Using his emergency powers, Hogan
(R) curtailed hospital visits, closed
senior centers, suspended prison visits
and ordered state employees who can
work from home to do so.
state officials said they were work-
ing on plans to provide child care for
essential workers, including health-
care workers. Day-care centers will
remain open for now, but the state is
considering whether they must be
shuttered, too, officials said.
The governor also activated the na-
tional Guard, closed the cruise ship
terminal at the Port of Baltimore and
sealed off public access to state build-
see region on b2
Region ramps up response, hunkers down
HoGAN oRDERS SCHooLS CLoSED FoR two wEEKS
93 local Catholic schools to shutter; state of emergency in Va.
THE CORONAVIRUS OUTBREAk
Area residents are either altering their routines or staying the course amid the coronavirus outbreak
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