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Minnesota Native News: COVID-19 Daily Update
Trailer
Bonus
Episode 107
Season 1
State officials Encourage Safe Participation in Voting and Election Events During Pandemic
With the Election Day on Nov. 3, just around the corner.. State officials are encouraging Minnesotans to vote and participate in democracy safely during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Gov. Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison recently highlighted the state’s efforts to ensure that community events, including those related to political campaigns, are held safely.
Walz says he has asked both the Trump and Biden presidential campaigns to ensure their events abide by state requirements to stop the spread of COVID-19.
Meanwhile, the Attorney General’s Office and its partners in the state’s health and labor agencies have been contacting organizers of large indoor and outdoor community events of all kinds in the state, more than 70 of them. The goal is to make sure the organizers understand their responsibility to comply with COVID-19 safety requirements.
The reminders from Walz and Ellison comes as state health officials are noting an increase in COVID-19 cases in the state. Here’s Minnesota Health Commissioner Jan Malcolm at a press conference on Oct. 19.
5:19 MALCOLM: “This is a big change. For the first time we’re seeing faster growth in cases than in testing. Despite our impressively high test numbers, we’re still not able to catch the disease that’s out there. The case growth is faster than testing growth. You see that too in the testing positivity rate.”
Those who have yet to vote are encouraged to do so safely by voting early, or by mailing or dropping off their ballot.
Gov. Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison recently highlighted the state’s efforts to ensure that community events, including those related to political campaigns, are held safely.
Walz says he has asked both the Trump and Biden presidential campaigns to ensure their events abide by state requirements to stop the spread of COVID-19.
Meanwhile, the Attorney General’s Office and its partners in the state’s health and labor agencies have been contacting organizers of large indoor and outdoor community events of all kinds in the state, more than 70 of them. The goal is to make sure the organizers understand their responsibility to comply with COVID-19 safety requirements.
The reminders from Walz and Ellison comes as state health officials are noting an increase in COVID-19 cases in the state. Here’s Minnesota Health Commissioner Jan Malcolm at a press conference on Oct. 19.
5:19 MALCOLM: “This is a big change. For the first time we’re seeing faster growth in cases than in testing. Despite our impressively high test numbers, we’re still not able to catch the disease that’s out there. The case growth is faster than testing growth. You see that too in the testing positivity rate.”
Those who have yet to vote are encouraged to do so safely by voting early, or by mailing or dropping off their ballot.