Several Washougal City Council members say they believe many of the statewide restrictions meant to slow the spread of COVID-19 are no longer necessary on a local level.
“It seems like some of these restrictions are for the Seattle area and not Clark County and Washougal,” Councilwoman Julie Russell said during the council’s May 11 workshop.
Councilman Ray Kutch agreed.
“(Inslee’s orders seem to say that) what is good for Seattle is good for the rest of the state as well, and that’s not true,” Kutch told the Post-Record. “We need to be aware of what’s going on in our own areas and make decisions we have to make. We shouldn’t just rubber-stamp what Olympia says. (Residents) didn’t elect us just to say, ‘OK, the governor says this, so it’s obviously gospel, and we have to do exactly what he says.’ It all starts right here at the local level. The governor should be looking at this through many lenses, not just one, and I don’t think that’s happening.”
The councilors in favor of allowing a local loosening of COVID-19 restrictions referenced a recent decision by Battle Ground City Council members to write to Inslee and request reconsideration of the stay-at-home orders that have been in place since March and will continue through at least May 31.
“We appreciate your efforts and leadership in dealing with the pandemic, but (we) fear that the efforts are not sufficient to deal with the fallout,” the letter reads. “Our local economy is suffering. Businesses are closing for good, and those that are attempting to remain open are faced with escalating debt and no clear idea when things will return to ‘normal.’”