After a week of quickly-increasing COVID-19 cases in young people, and 21% of the cases stemming from bars, the Madison and Dane County Health Department this morning ordered a reduction in capacity for restaurants and the shuttering of all bars for any non-takeout service.
In doing so the county is temporarily abandoning its Forward Dane plan to re-open the county. Starting at 8 AM on Thursday the following take effect:
- Indoor dining at restaurants is reduced from 50% to 25% of capacity.
- Bars can be open for take-out only.
- Indoor gatherings are limited to 10 people or fewer, not including employees.
- Outdoor gatherings are limited to 25 people or fewer, not including employees.
- Bars and restaurants are allowed to provide outdoor seating, with physical distancing.
This is a level of control that has not been in place in Dane County since the state Safer At Home order was struck down by the courts in April.
From June 13 through June 26, 614 people tested positive for COVID-19 in Dane County. Below is what is known about these cases:
- 49% of cases were between the ages of 18 and 25.
- 54% of cases were tested at the community test site at Alliant Energy Center.
- 45% of cases interviewed reported attending a gathering or party with people outside of their household.
- 28% of cases (a total of 172) were associated with a cluster: 132 from bars, 14 from workplaces, 11 from congregate facilities, 3 from daycares/preschools, and 12 from other clusters.
- 13% of cases were asymptomatic at the time of the interview.
“For the past week, Dane County has seen a sustained, high number of cases. After consultation with our contact tracing team, gatherings and visits to bars and restaurants continue to be implicated in interviews with cases,” Janel Heinrich, director of Public Health Madison and Dane County, said in a statement. “We are acting now to immediately curb this increase in cases and protect the health and safety of our community.”
The current state in Dane County raises serious questions about what will happen when the city welcomes back students in the fall.
There will be a press conference at 11 AM.
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Sheriff puts uniform color above safety

The amazingly arrogant Sheriff David Clarke, having once again lost a legal case against the Milwaukee County deputies who work in his department, is threatening to lay off deputies in order to pay for new, different colored uniforms he wants them to wear.
I am not making this up.
Clarke is willing to put different color uniforms above public safety.
Incredible -- unless you know David Clarke, his incredible ego, and his history of disrespect for both the law and the deputies who are on the front lines every day.
Here's the story. The comments suggest that people may be beginning to see through him. Unfortunately, he just started a four-year term.
This from a guy whose own "uniform" is different every time you see him, sometimes even including a cowboy hat or a sweatshirt.
Graeme Zelinski lays it on WTMJ
This morning on WTMJ news, Graeme Zelinski from the Democratic Party of Wisconsin took WTMJ and Charlie Sykes to task for banging the drum on the crazed GOP talking points about the recall effort. The GOP now has two different lawsuits against the GAB, both attacking the GAB for enforcing the law as written (apparently something the GOP finds abhorrent, even if it's a law that they wrote themselves).
Steve is a member of LION Publishers , the Wisconsin Newspaper Association, the Menomonie Area Chamber of Commerce, the Online News Association, and the Local Media Consortium, and is active in Health Dunn Right.
He has been a computer guy most of his life but has published a political blog, a discussion website, and now Eye On Dunn County.
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