COVID-19 pandemic in Georgia (U.S. state)


The COVID-19 pandemic was first detected in the U.S. state of Georgia on March 2, 2020. The state's first death came ten days later on March 12., there were 190,012 confirmed cases, 18,995 hospitalizations, and 3,825 deaths. All of Georgia's 159 counties now report COVID-19 cases, with four counties now reporting over 11,000 cases. Three low-population counties have higher per capita case rates and death rates than New York City.
The city of Albany became a major hot spot within the state with one of the highest densities of COVID-19 infections in the world based on the size of its population. With approximately 75,000 residents, there have been 973 confirmed cases and 56 deaths at Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital in Albany, with many more still awaiting test results, quarantined inside their homes as of 2020. The hospital also received media attention after CEO Scott Steiner said they had exhausted their entire six-month stockpile of medical supplies intended for COVID-19 response in just six days due to the extent of the outbreak. As the hospital rushed to meet supply demands for PPE, they experienced price gouging and received defective equipment from black market medical suppliers in Mexico, which resulted in a plan for staff workers to manually sew respiratory masks. In response, Albany and surrounding Dougherty County declared a shelter-in-place order lasting two weeks on March 20.
Governor Brian Kemp declared an "unprecedented" public health emergency on March 14 and ordered on March 16 that all public schools, colleges, and universities in the state close from March 18 through the start of April. COVID-19 was first detected in a prison inmate on March 20. On March 23, gatherings of over 10 people were banned, bars and nightclubs were ordered to close, and a shelter-in-place order for the "medically fragile" was issued. On April 2, a statewide shelter in place order was announced.
On March 23, Atlanta mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms signed a 14-day stay-at-home order to direct all city residents to stay at home except for performing essential tasks through April 7. This followed a city-wide state of emergency on March 15 prohibiting "large public gatherings of more than 250 people" and a March 20 order for businesses to close. The city of South Fulton instituted a curfew on March 17, requiring residents to stay at home from 6:00 PM to 7:00 AM and barring gatherings of more than ten people. On March 23, DeKalb County enacted a "voluntary curfew". Savannah issued a shelter-in-place order on March 24.
As of July 2020, Georgia has the 5th highest number of confirmed cases in the United States.

Timeline

On March 2, state officials announced the first two known cases in Georgia: a Fulton County man in his 50s and his teenage son who had returned on February 22 from a trip to Milan, Italy.
On March 6, public health officials reported a presumptive positive case involving a 46-year-old woman in Floyd County that appeared unrelated to international travel.
About 20 people contracted the virus at funerals held in the same funeral home on February 29 and March 7 in Albany. The state health department notified the funeral home on March 13 about potential exposure to the virus during the funerals. The city went on to lead the state in COVID-19 deaths and to have one of the highest infection rates in the country, with the outbreak linked to the funerals.
From June 17-27, the YMCA’s Camp High Harbor on Lake Burton in Rabun County held an orientation and a camp session for 597 Georgia residents. On June 24, a teenage counselor tested positive and the camp started sending campers home, shutting down the camp on June 27. Of the 344 people tested, 260 were positive for COVID-19.
By July 20, there were COVID-19 outbreaks at several nursing homes and senior care facilities in northwest Georgia. Across eleven facilities, there were 248 infected residents, 130 infected staff members, and 32 deaths.

''Grand Princess'' and rising cases

On March 8, Governor Brian Kemp announced that a number of Americans on the cruise ship Grand Princess — including 34 Georgians — would be "securely transferred" to Dobbins Air Reserve Base for testing and quarantine on March 9 or 10. That night, Kemp said four currently hospitalized Georgians had been tested for COVID-19, with the Georgia Department of Public Health waiting for confirmation from the CDC; one person was a resident of Cherokee County, two were residents of Cobb County, and one a resident of Fulton County.
On March 10, the Department of Public Health reported five additional cases, bringing the state total to 22. The majority of cases were in Cobb County and Fulton County. On March 11, the state announced nine more cases, making the total 31 presumed, with twelve confirmed.
On March 12, the Governor's office reported the first death in the state of Georgia related to the pandemic — the 67-year-old man who had underlying health conditions. He had attended the funeral held in Albany on February 29. A dining facility worker at Moody Air Force Base, near Valdosta, tested positive for the virus, prompting the temporary closure of the facility for cleaning.

States of emergency and stay-at-home orders

On March 15, Atlanta mayor, Keisha Lance Bottoms, declared a state of emergency in the city, and banned public gatherings of more than 250 people.
On March 24, the governor of Georgia, Brian Kemp, ordered all bars and clubs to close.
MunicipalityEmergencyStay-at-homeCurfewDateLength
Athens–Clarke CountyYesMarch 19, 2020
AtlantaYesYesMarch 23, 2020
Cobb CountyYesMarch 24, 2020April 15, 2020
DeKalb CountyYesYesMarch 28, 2020indefinite
Dougherty CountyYesMarch 20, 2020
Effingham CountyYesMarch 26, 2020
Gwinnett CountyYesMarch 28, 2020April 13, 2020
SavannahYesYesMarch 24, 2020April 8, 2020
South FultonYesMarch 17, 2020

State and local government responses

State government

All state lawmakers and their staff members were urged to self-quarantine on March 18 after state Senator Brandon Beach tested positive. Beach had displayed symptoms for nearly a week, and despite knowing his coronavirus test was pending, he went to work at the state capitol on March 16 when emergency legislation was passed. Beach explained in an interview that he "was cleared to go back to normal duties" and added that "n no way, shape or form would ever intentionally expose anyone". Governor Kemp, who was also potentially exposed, said he would not self-quarantine or be tested because his time around others was "severely limited" and he "never interacted with any legislators".
Kemp has faced criticism that his efforts to stop the virus' spread are not forceful enough. In a primetime television "town hall" on March 26 simulcast on all of Atlanta's major network stations as well as by statewide PBS member Georgia Public Broadcasting and over 140 radio stations across the state — Kemp appeared with members of the state coronavirus task force, including Atlanta mayor Bottoms, DPH commissioner Kathleen Toomey, Georgia Emergency Management Agency director Homer Bryson, and Georgia Insurance and Safety Fire commissioner John King.
On March 28, Governor Kemp's top aide Tim Fleming said on social media that "he media and some in the medical profession are peddling these doomsday models and projections... This has in turn resulted in people panicking and local governments across our state overreacting. As a result of their overreach, many small businesses will struggle and some will not reopen." Around the same time, Atlanta mayor Bottoms warned that city hospitals were projected to be "filled beyond capacity" by May 3, and Toomey said the situation would "get much worse".
On April 2, Governor Kemp issued a statewide shelter in place order, saying he had just learned "within the last 24 hours" that people infected with COVID-19 could transmit the disease even if they were not exhibiting symptoms. However, documents show that state officials were warned about so-called community transmission as early as March 2.
Governor Kemp issued an order effective April 3 suspending local shelter-in-place mandates, reopening beaches so long as people stay six feet apart.
On April 8, Governor Kemp extended the statewide shelter in place order through the end of April.

State announces reopening

As of April 21, the state had over 20,000 confirmed cases and the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation predicted on that day that June 19 would be the earliest safe date for Georgia to relax its social distancing measures.
Nonetheless, on April 20 Governor Kemp announced that many businesses could reopen on April 24, including "gyms, hair salons, bowling alleys and tattoo parlors", with restaurants and movie theaters allowed to reopen on April 27.

Reactions to the reopening

The governor's reopening decision brought widespread condemnation from inside and outside of Georgia, with Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms saying she would "continue to ask Atlantans to please stay at home"; Stacey Abrams, the 2018 Democratic Party candidate for governor, calling reopening "dangerously incompetent"; and even President Trump saying at the April 22 press briefing that Georgia "can wait a little longer... safety has to predominate."

May surge in cases

As a result of the state's reopening, COVID-19 cases and deaths were predicted to rise in Georgia. In the first two weeks following the April 24th reopening, the gradual downward trend in new daily cases and deaths continued. On May 9 the decline trend of new cases dissolved, and May 13 began a "second wave" of increasing daily rates of new cases.

Coronavirus task force

Governor Kemp first announced the creation of an 18-member coronavirus task force on February 28.
Initial task force members
On March 12, Kemp announced that he was expanding the task force to include four new committees: the Emergency Preparedness Committee, chaired by John King; the Economic Impact Committee, chaired by Jeffrey Dorfman; the Primary Care Physicians Committee, chaired by Ben Watson ; and the Committee for the Homeless and Displaced, chaired by Keisha Lance Bottoms, mayor of Atlanta. This increased the task force's size to 66 members. On March 20, Kemp revealed the complete list of committee members.
Economic Impact Committee
Emergency Preparedness Committee
Committee for the Homeless and Displaced
Primary Care Provider Committee
Kemp added a fifth committee on April 5, the Community Outreach Committee, co-chaired by Bernice A. King and Leo Smith.
Community Outreach Committee

Quarantine sites

On March 9, Governor Kemp announced the preparation of Hard Labor Creek State Park, located in Morgan County, as a quarantine destination for diagnosed individuals "without other options". On March 10, a coronavirus patient from Cherokee County, who did not need hospitalization but lacked adequate quarantine conditions at home, became the first to be relocated to the park; he was released on March 15. A second person arrived on March 17. Georgia stopped using this location on March 24.
A second quarantine site was constructed at the Georgia Department of Public Safety in Forsyth, Monroe County. The area houses twenty trailers with room for up to 40 patients. This site opened on March 24, replacing the old site.

Prisons

The Georgia Department of Corrections suspended visitations and announced additional sanitation measures, but the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that inmates had seen no extra soap. A prison worker was confirmed to have the coronavirus on March 18 — the DOC, citing "security and HIPAA restrictions", declined to name the affected prison. The first detected case on COVID-19 in a prison inmate was at Lee State Prison two days later, on March 20.

Department of Public Health

The Department of Public Health releases daily coronavirus statistics, including the number of confirmed cases, deaths, positive tests, and total tests, as well as breakdowns by age, sex, and county. DPH recently began releasing numbers twice a day at 12:00 pm and 7:00 pm, and starting on March 24 included the number of hospitalizations. On March 27, the DPH updated the state map on its website. The DPH does not release figures regarding its backlog of tests, a measure that other states have taken.
On May 13, the DPH pulled a bar graph showing trends in new cases among Georgia's counties, that had been published with its bars not properly placed in chronological order.
LaboratoryPositive testsTotal tests
Georgia Public Health Laboratory6383,520
Other 11,90950,933
Total12,54754,453

County and city governments

In addition to Atlanta, the cities of Brookhaven, Clarkston, Sandy Springs and Dunwoody have approved plans to ban dine-in service at restaurants. Clarkston also banned gatherings of more than ten people. South Fulton on March 17 instituted a curfew from 9:00 PM to 7:00 AM, with work and medical exceptions.
Athens–Clarke County declared on March 19 that "all individuals... shall shelter at their place of residence", though with exceptions.
DeKalb County CEO Michael Thurmond declared a state of emergency on March 23 and later issued a stay-at-home order effective from March 28 and to last indefinitely. The order does not affect cities within DeKalb County, but the order "invites all of the cities to adopt this Order so that the ules within all of DeKalb County are uniform".
The city of Savannah declared a state of emergency on March 19, and mayor Van Johnson issued a stay-at-home order on March 24, effective through April 8. Johnson said that the order was "necessary and prudent to enhance and escalate our action plan to minimize the exposure of Savannahians to this virus".
On March 26, Effingham County declared a state of emergency and "urged" residents to shelter in place. Springfield declared an emergency the same day.
Tybee Island mayor Shirley Sessions ordered all non-essential businesses on the island to close and banned large groups from March 28 through April 9.
Gwinnett County issued a stay-at-home order effective March 28 through April 13. The order covers the county as well as its 16 cities.

Mask mandate conflict

Amidst a rise in cases in July, a number of areas enacted mandates requiring the wearing of face coverings in public spaces when social distancing is not possible, including Atlanta. However, Governor Kemp declared such orders to be unenforceable as they are a stricter mitigation than those specified by the state. On July 15, Kemp signed an executive order overruling all mask mandates not issued by the state, and prohibiting any future mandate.
Furthermore, Kemp filed a lawsuit against the city council of Atlanta and Mayor Bottoms, asserting that she "does not have the legal authority to modify, change or ignore Governor Kemp's executive orders". Bottoms criticized Kemp's action, saying that her order was enforceable and stands, and that "public health experts overwhelmingly agree that wearing a face covering helps slow the spread of this sometimes deadly virus".

School closures

became the first college in the state on March 11 to announce it was closing its campus and moving classes online for the remainder of the semester. The University System of Georgia announced that its 26 public institutions would remain open based on the current advice of the Georgia Department of Public Health. Three hours later the decision was reversed and the University System of Georgia has temporarily suspended instruction for two weeks starting on March 16. On March 14, Gwinnett Technical College decided to close both of its campuses from March 16 through March 22, after announcing on March 13 that from March 23, to resume all currently 100% online courses as usual, and to convert all other courses to online instruction where possible.
Also on March 12, 2020 many school districts in the state of Georgia decided to cancel classes for at least two weeks, such as Cobb County School District, who had an elementary school teacher test positive for the coronavirus.
On April 1, 2020, Governor Brian Kemp ordered that all K-12 schools close through the end of the 2019–20 academic year. School districts will continue to educate students remotely. State officials have delayed the high-stakes testing that guides much of the instruction and are expecting approval from the federal government to scrap the tests altogether.

Senators and Representatives

Votes on response bills

Congress has so far debated and enacted three bills meant to help the nation respond to the pandemic: the Coronavirus Preparedness and Response Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2020, the Families First Coronavirus Response Act, and the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act.
Both of Georgia's Senators, David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, supported all three bills.
Representatives Jody Hice and Barry Loudermilk voted against the Families First Coronavirus Response Act. Hice told reporters that the House was "not given the opportunity to even read the legislation before Pelosi forced a vote, and no cost estimate had been prepared," and also falsely claimed that the law would repeal the Hyde Amendment, calling it "par for the course for the left, the activist left".
Representative John Lewis did not vote on the Coronavirus Preparedness and Response Act or on the Families First Coronavirus Response Act; Representative David Scott did not vote on the Coronavirus Preparedness and Response Act; and Representative Tom Graves did not vote on the Families First Coronavirus Response Act.

Loeffler stock sell-off controversy

Senator Loeffler, after a private briefing on the coronavirus from the United States Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions on January 24, 2020, began to offload various stocks — by February 14, she had sold between $1.2 million and $3.1 million worth of holdings. These actions attracted widespread condemnation — Democratic Senate contender Raphael Warnock called her actions "unconscionable", Republican Senate contender, US Representative Doug Collins said he was "sickened just thinking about it", and Georgia Speaker David Ralston said he was "absolutely worried about the down-ticket damage".

Public transportation

MARTA

In an effort to reduce exposure between bus drivers and riders, MARTA starting requiring passengers to use the rear door. Since the fare box is at the front near the driver, MARTA stopped collecting fares on buses.
By the end of March, ridership on trains had fallen 67% and bus ridership dropped by 55% compared with the previous month, reflecting national trends. A coalition of public transportation systems across the country — MARTA, along with Bay Area Rapid Transit, the Chicago Transit Authority, Dallas Area Rapid Transit, King County Metro, the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, NJ Transit, the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency, and the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority — requested at least $25 billion in relief from the federal government.
As of July 11, a policy has been put in place by the company to require masks for all transportation run by MARTA.

Other public transport

In Cobb County, CobbLinc blocked access to seats near the front of the bus to maintain distance between the drivers and passengers.
Gwinnett County Transit, similar to MARTA, stopped bus fare collection and only use the rear door.

Private sector responses

Commercial entities

announced that the theme park would close temporarily from March 13 to April 1. On March 30, it reported that it would not open until mid-May.
Emory Healthcare announced the postponement of "all inpatient and outpatient elective surgical and procedural cases" starting on March 16. Furry Weekend Atlanta, a furry convention held in Atlanta, announced that the 2020 iteration of the convention scheduled for May had been cancelled in response to the coronavirus pandemic.
Other attractions in Atlanta that have closed temporarily include the Children's Museum of Atlanta, the World of Coca-Cola, the College Football Hall of Fame, Fernbank Museum of Natural History, Georgia Aquarium, the National Center for Civil and Human Rights, and Zoo Atlanta.

Foundations and charities

The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation announced on March 20 that it would donate $5 million to an Atlanta coronavirus fund set up by United Way of Greater Atlanta, and Community Foundation for Northeast Georgia in Atlanta, in addition to $400,000 in other grants for non-profits in Georgia and Montana.
In an effort to support local artists, non-profit CREATE Dunwoody created "Everything Will Be OK" yard signs which became popular.

Impact

Economy

During the week of March 16–20, unemployment benefit filings in Georgia increased by 400%. Businesses and workers from all over have been affected.

Politics

Georgia's Democratic presidential primary elections were originally scheduled for March 24, 2020, but they were moved to May 19. On March 24, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger announced that all registered voters would receive absentee ballot request forms in the mail. Georgia House Speaker David Ralston wanted to further postpone the election to at least June 23, but Raffensperger insisted the May date would proceed, saying that his plan "keeps the integrity of the vote, while also prioritizing the health and safety of Georgia voters".
On March 10, state senator Brandon Beach started showing symptoms of COVID-19 and was tested on March 14. However, he attended a special session of the legislature on March 16 before his test results arrived on March 18 showing that he had tested positive. The entire Georgia state senate, their staffs, and Lieutenant Governor Geoff Duncan went into quarantine until March 30.

Sports

Most of the state's sports teams were affected. Several leagues began postponing or suspending their seasons starting March 12. Major League Baseball cancelled the remainder of spring training on that date, and on March 16, they announced that the season will be postponed indefinitely, after the recommendations from the CDC to restrict events of more than 50 people for the next eight weeks, affecting the Atlanta Braves. Also on March 12, the National Basketball Association announced the season would be suspended for 30 days, affecting the Atlanta Hawks.
The NCAA also cancelled all of its remaining tournaments for the academic year, including the 2020 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament — whose semi-finals and championship game were originally to be hosted by Atlanta.
The Masters, held annually in Augusta, were postponed and are tentatively rescheduled for November 12–15, 2020.

Entertainment

The touring production of Hamilton, originally scheduled to play at the Fox Theatre in April, moved its dates to August 4 – September 5, causing a production of Ain't Too Proud to be moved to later in the season and for a concert by Blackberry Smoke with The Wild Feathers and an appearance from Iliza Shlesinger to be postponed.

Judicial system

Grand juries were not allowed to convene through June 12, which consequently delayed a review over whether charges should be filed in the fatal shooting of Ahmaud Arbery in February.

Per-county case statistics


DateTotal tests
Mar 222
Mar 302
Mar 402
Mar 502
Mar 6113
Mar 7141158
Mar 8125311
Mar 93112415
Mar 1046217
Mar 11216227111027
Mar 12132381633
Mar 137515284133164
Mar 14721266
Mar 15962219106542042213399
Mar 167352212751231122121
Mar 1711042513156337411225146
Mar 1819956281878249331253301511971971508
Mar 192611683722202936624125323611216902872871831
Mar 205472101047613644117883236162113711412382221212311984854852386
Mar 212561441791350384147484994971114124241022437705555553616
Mar 22216118101679535229511142731682311227656206204020
Mar 2361212112414197917469711107152635101919121135311115413461808008005069
Mar 243276142126730172190216103107101125311212819158146161351162411311434656481108252413461479297109736110975484
Mar 25826335036212910921011251123186141020496919206212172511222865910101510415720121413160290138743813876179
Mar 26159383125294429371194144221371647141715123167922129932829314431310612771021113117257102266178256164350916438948
Mar 27710721152611515034531633510193219203321343222621347712121301441022737203147151013623162106313947207555219860721989865
Mar 281171371536435435571857122064246224351626272223781413131225013193934152820521312173313107525182292482446660244611051
Mar 29161191414170166059228106234273247382728284258145333561512435391811232185121521048102262372683678268312564
Mar 302319125311616649719369471622507143781762942327843204231364503117153178344426826111313444421216516414221226761431729171417122019153522121143493032773303213457
Mar 31154531913720228891234327851511228711202441161083608466513251448504759916172422675348630802390523723434525193116131731525404541615413540102031841910341310112818310854117885411716181
Apr 167201472239105133392855412830492142191137331049056346705056381918282577163295445104411494724373962234173371641441472517538461428195162131241448563147481013474820328
Apr 2315332541149613954494557165234128274821104095115216642685578537472120303725115491156104526254940726371935910524257648247172952161514666569654441129544422957
Apr 3511221593451551114766511459206422154433562413164831260778611617961910232131235381106143586132615123932715210114673142214610164181114967582367335026341301283161751533326452359671222596725265
Apr 45251604369191515881120622354534936642816539156858464966807195928234001171675915432713410379426111053935522450573185175626683457331218185141622368841663831266638326294
...
Apr 27587222018316110288241525292149483476126852983294682069133841282064381465109170144171881415517536218332311414742821995341919424167133263172605490518151531532181106220275691045621215762014141639263385330235104137317322394345029292222242428216757481613921543946213131015637316316142919572173622107162516515910028202135647322015998112123411934467702332142626228904665
Apr 286472221199171142922616261921524934741298730832946820891441214320661815051121791461719014159145465188124120149028720253419204241701342751727055405381545415701961116302757910478215157720141416392834854309361141413373224044452292902322526288177584816740225438492437510156381170161529199732136921071725169163992820213865734203581041131237121044973722332143599638235284744
Apr 296572221208201303072518297122252503583134903173454692211116444144216868156312518115522193151621459801925251211496311210534222142717413828617277063055886152169021912334028581094902181584221514163928378543133612415138752441444533130423228272921855949174452654395526375121583881771615302057222372230817251751731062821314267833210581181151237121045779892434147554972245005009
Apr 3070824232152413331625173061723595238851451063373584782261216467151227168162513818516023195151651461832029261291506321213535232142917614430018282269559263541794304134947276010104922221594211714164928388603193712515545792442454543331223228313051966448189462655405730404131594061891615292107924381260101727183186118312131486883321761126121124213104611069025351539643951915264155179
May 17292523226251413202617312192359544086153103337375471123012164761552372481672141187162252091716716618620652812915313252135362321530177145308192880695811264541843325146651296111114922341597222014165129389623213712515646812442456533331824227323132006649190522555405931424141614111911615292118124382260917281841901223122315068833222601291271243131056311190253515810806521022274375276
May 271112623229311553242817319202359544286151103357382511123012164821562577891749144188163252131816716669021492913115343352145362921531181145331202929735911364551936344169458296111115122371610823201516592939964327371251586381244245654333192422733320205645019456275240593142513163415194161530215872538526091828185191126322031546983122560132129134413105781189025351621062652896283335369
May 3711126232293115532428173192023595442861511033573825111230121648215625778917491441881632521318167166690214929131153433521453629215311811453312029297359113645519363441694582961111151223716108232015165929399643273712515863812442456543331924227333202056450194562752405931425131634151941615302158725385260918281851911263220315469831225601321291344131057811890253516210626520283335369
May 4711126232293115532428173192023595442861511033573825111230121648215625778917491441881632521318167166690214929131153433521453629215311811453312029297359113645519363441694582961111151223716108232015165929399643273712515863812442456543331924227333202056450194562752405931425131634151941615302158725385260918281851911263220315469831225601321291344131057811890253516210626520283335369
May 57918302926533188359361936822236457428916610934738952132831215554174278761620111601991703124819179167210623913113415553652245383422533188153359253250836812077552236379193311231601514551281201172622171764313810703383912517274812737505593033833230373502356751214613158416333516131674302241516322239127387241918281932221393720516873833245611431461346131058313790264017810898332976313095790
May 67918302926533188359361936822236457428916610934738952132831215554174278761620111601991703124819179167210623913113415553652245383422533188153359253250836812077552236379193311231601514551281201172622171764313810703383912517274812737505593033833230373502356751214613158416333516131674302241516322239127387241918281932221393720516873833245611431461346131058313790264017810898330313095790
May 77918302926533188359361936822236457428916610934738952132831215554174278761620111601991703124819179167210623913113415553652245383422533188153359253250836812077552236379193311231601514551281201172622171764313810703383912517274812737505593033833230373502356751214613158416333516131674302241516322239127387241918281932221393720516873833245611431461346131058313790264017810898330313095790
May 87918302926533188359361936822236457428916610934738952132831215554174278761620111601991703124819179167210623913113415553652245383422533188153359253250836812077552236379193311231601514551281201172622171764313810703383912517274812737505593033833230373502356751214613158416333516131674302241516322239127387241918281932221393720516873833245611431461346131058313790264017810898330313095790
May 99320433127136193363391936729256460441071801173793955317304121660918627921172175175207183322761818517811092536321461593414226638422453419915738826350997173122835724473862012128326617146042862112325241717663140118034044125185768529405176532352344334737125867562236333674466345561416844723915173423591314002719202819824215640205186788342506515216515571310588154952740183156610042524338335976
May 109320433127136193363391936729256460441071801173793955317304121660918627921172175175207183322761818517811092536321461593414226638422453419915738826350997173122835724473862012128326617146042862112325241717663140118034044125185768529405176532352344334737125867562236333674466345561416844723915173423591314002719202819824215640205186788342506515216515571310588154952740183156610040338335976
May 119320433127136193363391936729256460441071801173793955317304121660918627921172175175207183322761818517811092536321461593414226638422453419915738826350997173122835724473862012128326617146042862112325241717663140118034044125185768529405176532352344334737125867562236333674466345561416844723915173423591314002719202819824215640205186788342506515216515571310588154952740183156610040338335976
May 129320433127136193363391936729256460441071801173793955317304121660918627921172175175207183322761818517811092536321461593414226638422453419915738826350997173122835724473862012128326617146042862112325241717663140118034044125185768529405176532352344334737125867562236333674466345561416844723915173423591314002719202819824215640205186788342506515216515571310588154952740183156610040338335976
May 1399205033278412563794420379322864614511419511644103996720344161666719127973362334188229197332801918917831152644361521644425239113847254362011653952936211061741238857253240021191413474191761829322126262420167031411186342451251978289293853972353844453355405262665623569376944693459714169476248151838237943641127111222919926917041217192819362557216016616621411788175982840194157214592025358586318
May 1499205033278412563794420379322864614511419511644103996720344161666719127973362334188229197332801918917831152644361521644425239113847254362011653952936211061741238857253240021191413474191761829322126262420167031411186342451251978289293853972353844453355405262665623569376944693459714169476248151838237943641127111222919926917041217192819362557216016616621411788175982840194157214590358586318
May 1510820513328041255382442038432286461451121961174610400702034417166761922898336236319124119732280191931784115266438152164342923812384625436204169395303625105174124885725524002125142347419176213062212626242216703041118634345125201828929385397236387455335541126380552366935694471386071416948024915183823994374122711122291992761704321719281936255741581691663141198817598284019115551363119359776348
May 16108205133280412553824420384322864614511219611746104007020344171667619228983362363191241197322801919317841152664381521643429238123846254362041693953036251051741248857255240021251423474191762130622126262422167030411186343451252018289293853972363874553355411263805523669356944713860714169480249151838239943741227111222919927617043217192819362557415816916631411988175982840191155513630359776348
May 17111226133290432633964722397333964654511619912250104087126363191572320030100942242920025321231285191972084128285644162166443923116454826538210187405333751111177128926026804552164161347422176273182213226252316743041119534147136208839329465510703638995834614402648055241693875448036798151694912501620402421133941930112223019928818546218201849372617416417416671411787188953045197164922162306382836964
May 18111226133290432633964722397333964654511619912250104087126363191572320030100942242920025321231285191972084128285644162166443923116454826538210187405333751111177128926026804552164161347422176273182213226252316743041119534147136208839329465510703638995834614402648055241693875448036798151694912501620402421133941930112223019928818546218201849372617416417416671411787188953045197164922160382836964
May 191132269322914426540548224083443666545116199122511041772283701917739200301010422467202255212312861920020841292880441621667439231194669265382111874053337631121781299260275845721871703575241862932322134262523168231421198343471362078393304755117036391100834624442658156242693877448036798161694942511720402431134042030112223119928818546218208841037263741661761667141178719397304619716652250438387216998
May 20115246832296462724194825408334666674612220512252124257728388191975820030103446258421026221435286242032095140297947163167245223653486926539215208434353793117181134936028204702230169357526236153242213726262616783244129434547156226889532475711733639610883466456275825626169398445863583815170501251162041251117404253111322292033021944721821585103826781172191167115111091206983049206163924321080398017141
May 211162670332984627241948294133346666747120205123521243277284012019767205311038462601216266219382912320420991413008471631719455236544969265392152134403538101231821349360286947222321673578262362132723137262726167832461295344541582288894324857117537400109834694652778256263693984458638868151715032531720412511204042732113222920530219947218218901039269811871911771151199121898305720616862598604404057205
May 2211626703329846272419482941333466667471202051235212432772840120197672053110384626012162662193829123204209914130084716317194552365449692653921521344035381012318213493602869472223216735782623621327231372627261678324612953445415822888943248571175374001098346946527782562636939844586388681517150325317204125112040427321132229205302199472182189010392698118719117711511991218983057206168625980404057205
May 23132297533331732834435834433395166705212120912656134451012944524248102243511194927022482962234633126221271011463257481681727490234616371265402202274493640541351851389364305650023221913683262663234323147313326187634511210134365151224588953849621278383991179367855030410358277704389499539871115170527265162742253122424453511521322113112195022825010013392739418920917741611994279983265209191326572497429027417
May 24132297533331732834435834433395166705212120912656134451012944524248102243511194927022482962234633126221271011463257481681727490234616371265402202274493640541351851389364305650023221913683262663234323147313326187634511210134365151224588953849621278383991179367855030410358277704389499539871115170527265162742253122424453511521322113112195022825010013392739418920917741611994279983265209191326570429027417
May 25132297533331732834435834433395166705212120912656134451012944524248102243511194927022482962234633126221271011463257481681727490234616371265402202274493640541351851389364305650023221913683262663234323147313326187634511210134365151224588953849621278383991179367855030410358277704389499539871115170527265162742253122424453511521322113112195022825010013392739418920917741611994279983265209191326570429027417
May 26138358036335803074526538436405068725312321412955134901113047230248502493511735728542543792294538329223271041563421501741774517236967573265402322434923942301391931379465330750623781924084262865535624153323430188234571610536268161225991984149651278393991199378156833510858294704391521013988121617555326817324326212946454371192134213323234532282681061441279102217221187317119953031053365213191717901081439837602
May 27138358036335803074526538436405068725312321412955134901113047230248502493511735728542543792294538329223271041563421501741774517236967573265402322434923942301391931379465330750623781924084262865535624153323430188234571610536268161225991984149651278393991199378156833510858294704391521013988121617555326817324326212946454371192134213323234532282681061441279102217221187317119953031053365213191717900439837602
May 28148419134342923214697142444455169746012122313062135161193347733248692703712045829482614612434840328228281081813635511771764528238104757327541231258507454367148111214893673619514245019442892832672363251753238331982356620104361721615283959949536716824140911993785593344111583097045975411340881219177576278165044267136514663812022362133242475523828311415432801122462251874181113993221063368208190313191283452667788
May 29148419134342923214697142444455169746012122313062135161193347733248692703712045829482614612434840328228281081813635511771764528238104757327541231258507454367148111214893673619514245019442892832672363251753238331982356620104361721615283959949536716824140911993785593344111583097045975411340881219177576278165044267136514663812022362133242475523828311415432801122462251874181113993221063368208190313190452667788
May 30148419134342923214697142444455169746012122313062135161193347733248692703712045829482614612434840328228281081813635511771764528238104757327541231258507454367148111214893673619514245019442892832672363251753238331982356620104361721615283959949536716824140911993785593344111583097045975411340881219177576278165044267136514663812022362133242475523828311415432801122462251874181113993221063368208190313190452667788
May 31160491263434788326478744645345576874621212281326213525135325059924909284391230593032277467248494172823529109186374651179177254323811874752854423526551573453315411191631106837925202476195439832346933662818436374319823768211063618216163059910154576716854140912193792625352116613287248100541194290122017959528517544627614752476391272237213325256562410316118174628114226522818741913131013781143369211215217642230474967988
Jun 1160491263434788326478744645345576874621212281326213525135325059924909284391230593032277467248494172823529109186374651179177254323811874752854423526551573453315411191631106837925202476195439832346933662818436374319823768211063618216163059910154576716854140912193792625352116613287248100541194290122017959528517544627614752476391272237213325256562410316118174628114226522818741913131013781143369211215217640474967988
Jun 2161511313435093328485774947248587075671222341346414524142335181542591129539123859305627748425147422282373710920438035218317845492441217575275472372745321044638156113316611468389153025081974710233356953763019839374421834071251083618216163199910256596716874241312111389663737011662330744810054126429312231795982891655452771475248939127223721333227056241232012817462841622692281874201313103391117337022321441561711482078286
Jun 31705313634352863334968148481485972777712323713566145351453352216025923296411260593097285488266454322823739110206387452185179055624712575752854923928153410546881571135170117714063538253919749111343571638131199403846218244732410836183161632610110459596916954241512413389967337611963334765010556131439514251796062971655452801475349040129233721534627158261334513418482901712732341874221313105408117346922621831338687488948371
Jun 417254137353808733350484514944861767877123240136681356814632525166259342994212826531652895232664744028238401102053939521861794571247130777628650241292535123472415811391811197342675452566196501203637742390332104538472283487527108361851616356101104615970159942416123113810069738212063340765010957138439714251816093021756452811445449040129233821734927760271336313418482891782882381874221313110427117347022823191196953498478503

NOTE: Case counts shown above may be accounted for inaccurately due to illnesses yet to be reported or test results still pending. See https://ga-covid19.ondemand.sas.com/ for latest counts.