Georgia with an interesting experiment
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Opening some of the highest risk stuff Friday and Monday. Gyms , restaurants, nail places, theaters.
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Gyms. First phase. Same with Trump’s plan.
I don’t get it. Who wants to be six feet away from a dude on a treadmill for 30m.
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@jon-nyc said in Georgia with an interesting experiment:
Gyms. First phase. Same with Trump’s plan.
I don’t get it.
Maybe somebody who owns a chain of gyms has been assisting in providing financial support to interested parties.
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@jon-nyc said in Georgia with an interesting experiment:
Gyms. First phase. Same with Trump’s plan.
I don’t get it. Who wants to be six feet away from a dude on a treadmill for 30m.
I don’t think people ever did. Do you get coronavirus from sweat?
But seriously I do get the coughing spread and you can’t wear a mask on a treadmill.
Again what would you open? A couple of days ago the beach was the apocalypse and suddenly that’s forgotten.
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Well, there's murmurings about Stephen Ross having influenced it, but I don't know how credible it is. It's true he's a minority investor in Equinox but his real interests lie in real estate.
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@Loki said in Georgia with an interesting experiment:
@jon-nyc said in Georgia with an interesting experiment:
Gyms. First phase. Same with Trump’s plan.
I don’t get it. Who wants to be six feet away from a dude on a treadmill for 30m.
I don’t think people ever did. Do you get coronavirus from sweat?
But seriously I do get the coughing spread and you can’t wear a mask on a treadmill.
Again what would you open? A couple of days ago the beach was the apocalypse and suddenly that’s forgotten.
I don't think sweat is an issue. But the heavy and deep breathing seems dangerous to me, intuitively. Like choir practice becoming a superspreader event.
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@jon-nyc said in Georgia with an interesting experiment:
@Loki said in Georgia with an interesting experiment:
@jon-nyc said in Georgia with an interesting experiment:
Gyms. First phase. Same with Trump’s plan.
I don’t get it. Who wants to be six feet away from a dude on a treadmill for 30m.
I don’t think people ever did. Do you get coronavirus from sweat?
But seriously I do get the coughing spread and you can’t wear a mask on a treadmill.
Again what would you open? A couple of days ago the beach was the apocalypse and suddenly that’s forgotten.
I don't think sweat is an issue. But the heavy and deep breathing seems dangerous to me, intuitively. Like choir practice becoming a superspreader event.
True. I can’t see specifically where the treadmills are running or are excluded but let’s say treadmills are no a go.
What would you open?
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It's a good question, I was going to start a thread on it.
It seems like there are some businesses where you can match reasonable economics with reasonable safety, in principle at least.
(I say in principle, because I don't know how good our grasp is on the efficacy of particular social distancing and sanitization measures in particular environments, but let's set that aside for now. Also, different people will have different views on what constitutes 'reasonable' safety. Let's set that aside too)
Some business can probably operate with reasonable constraints and be economically viable. This is the best of both worlds. Your average local hardware store might well be in this category. People usually need something enough to be willing to stand in line if they need to, and the business model doesn't require high traffic to pay the rent.
Other businesses aren't so easy. A bad example would be sit-down restaurants in Manhattan or movie theatres. There may well no set of guidelines that would give reasonable safety to the clientele and support the economics of the business. This could put you in the worst of both worlds, where we create a significant disease vector and the business still isn't viable.
I would say gyms are firmly in the latter camp. In practice at least, since demand for them is concentrated at certain times.
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Love the worst of both worlds comment. But thinking about what’s opening I see employment for those on the low end of the pay scale, I see not lots of traffic/high density mobilization of the public and gyms in particular can start charging their subscriptions again?
Theaters- that just strange but must fit a category.
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I also see an adverse selection problem. The gyms and movie theaters could open tomorrow and I bet very few people here would start going.
The people who self-select to hit the gym would be those who have been less concerned about social distancing in the first place. They're probably some of the same people that Jolly described in WalMart.
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Gyms are a weird case too because of their subscription models and the way they make it a little hard to cancel.
I quit my gym a couple weeks early. I'm guessing a lot of people never did, but the gyms quit charging the when they had to close.
If they could reopen tomorrow, they'd immediately start charging everyone, despite the fact that most wouldn't come. It would take time for their revenue to decline, and many people who were afraid to go might never bother canceling. (just like at any time other than January some huge percentage of gym members don't go but still get charged every month)
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@jon-nyc said in Georgia with an interesting experiment:
It's a good question, I was going to start a thread on it.
It seems like there are some businesses where you can match reasonable economics with reasonable safety, in principle at least.
(I say in principle, because I don't know how good our grasp is on the efficacy of particular social distancing and sanitization measures in particular environments, but let's set that aside for now. Also, different people will have different views on what constitutes 'reasonable' safety. Let's set that aside too)
Some business can probably operate with reasonable constraints and be economically viable. This is the best of both worlds. Your average local hardware store might well be in this category. People usually need something enough to be willing to stand in line if they need to, and the business model doesn't require high traffic to pay the rent.
Other businesses aren't so easy. A bad example would be sit-down restaurants in Manhattan or movie theatres. There may well no set of guidelines that would give reasonable safety to the clientele and support the economics of the business. This could put you in the worst of both worlds, where we create a significant disease vector and the business still isn't viable.
I would say gyms are firmly in the latter camp. In practice at least, since demand for them is concentrated at certain times.
Hardware stores here offer curbside services. Order it online or call and tell them what you need.
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If I were governor I would not have done this at this time. There was no need to have it be yesterday, except for politics. Could have easily been May 1 or could have started with things relating to the shore and islands. That said it does offer to the poor and minorities a reopening of their community which no one is talking about yet.
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This being the US, if Georgia experiences a large increase in illness, what are the chances that the Governor gets his ass sued?