Lt. Gov Karyn Polito addresses reporters at an April 22 press conference. State House News Service Photo / File

After spending the last few days hearing from groups representing more than a million workers, Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito on Monday cautioned against viewing May 18 as a “magical date” on which the state’s businesses will fully bounce back into operation following weeks of mandated closures.

Instead, she said, that’s the day the advisory board she co-chairs with Housing and Economic Development Secretary Mike Kennealy is set to issue plans for a “phased-in reopening” designed to safely build up to full capacity.

“It doesn’t mean that the economy across our commonwealth will just reopen,” she said. “It’s just not possible. As everybody knows, safety’s first, employers are engaged, and it’s of paramount importance that we make sure that that the workforce is safer, that people who do business with these employers are safe in their transactions, and that we continue to move forward and not have a reverse effect as we reopen in that safe manner throughout our commonwealth.”

The Baker administration’s original stay-at-home advisory and business closure order were set to expire on Monday, but last week Baker pushed back the end date another two weeks until May 18, at the same time announcing the formation of the advisory board and giving it a May 18 deadline to put forward recommendations.

Some states, including New Hampshire and Maine, have released or embarked on their own plans for gradual economic reopenings. Baker said Massachusetts is in “a very different place than most other states.”

With 68,087 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 4,004 deaths linked to the respiratory disease as of Sunday, Baker said Massachusetts falls third behind the hard-hit states of New York and New Jersey in both cases and deaths.

States that haven’t had “a significant penetration with respect to COVID” are operating on different timetables than Massachusetts, he said.

“I don’t want to bring this thing back,” he said. “You know, whatever we do here, I want to make sure it doesn’t happen again.”

Baker said ramping up testing remains “one of our highest priorities” and is an issue officials will likely be talking about “for months to come.” He said testing and tracing the contacts of people who test positive “will have a lot to do with the new normal once we get there.”

The threat of future transmission “will continue to be with us for a very long time,” Baker said, and until a vaccine is developed, conversations about reopening the economy will be about what can be done most safely.

Since its formation last week, the reopening advisory board has received more than 475 submissions of written testimony and spoken with representatives from 23 different industry groups and community coalitions, which together represent more than 100,000 businesses and more than 1.4 million workers.

Fields represented in the conversation so far include retail, the high-technology sector, life sciences, restaurants, travel, tourism and lodging, banking, construction and recreation, Baker said. The panel plans discussions in the coming days with representatives from labor, gaming, museums, cultural organizations and sports organizations.

The advisory board has also met virtually with the Black Economic Council, the NAACP and the Latino Chamber of Commerce, Baker said.

The governor said child care and transportation will be “key enablers” of a safe and successful reopening, and the board is developing next steps for those sectors as well. The state’s public transit system has been operating during the pandemic, but not at its full scope, and non-emergency child care programs in Massachusetts are closed until June 29 under a Baker order.

Polito: May 18 Not a ‘Magical Date’

by State House News Service time to read: 2 min
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