- Associated Press - Friday, April 24, 2020

DENVER (AP) - Health officials have ordered the closure of a Walmart in suburban Denver as three people connected to the store died after being infected with the coronavirus and at least six employees tested positive.

The Tri-County Health Department announced late Thursday that a 69-year-old man who worked for a private security company at the Aurora store died along with a 72-year-old store employee and her 63-year-old husband, who did not work at the site.

In its closure order, the health department cited the infections as an “outbreak” among employees and said the store had not adhered to social distancing requirements under Colorado’s stay-at-home order that allowed some businesses deemed essential, like the Walmart, to remain open.

It said the move followed a series of complaints from employees and shoppers about the lack of social distancing in the store, too many people inside at once and employees not wearing masks.

In a statement Friday, Walmart said in recent weeks it has limited the number of people who can be in the store at the same time, installed clear barriers in checkout lanes and pharmacy areas, and placed decals at entrances and checkout lanes to help customers social distance from each other.

“We recognize how hard this is for our associates in Aurora and everyone impacted by this difficult situation,” the company said. “We want to do everything we can to support them at this time. We will continue to work closely with Tri-County Health Department and take additional steps as needed to re-open the store.”

The dates of the deaths were not disclosed by the health department. Walmart said its records show the 72-year-old woman last worked at the end of March. The site has about 300 workers.

Besides the six other confirmed cases, three employees suspected of having COVID-19 were awaiting test results, the health department said, noting that it did not have information about the conditions of the workers who tested positive.

The closure came as the statewide shutdown order issued by Democratic Gov. Jared Polis was set to expire Sunday, although some communities including Denver have decided to extend restrictions through May 8.

Polis cited the economic and psychological toll the statewide stay-at-home order has taken in announcing this week that some limits will be relaxed on Monday and that non-essential businesses can reopen, with restrictions, on May 1, even as the state struggles to increase its testing and tracing capacity.

Polis has said local governments will have flexibility to adopt their own stronger measures to fight the coronavirus pandemic but on Friday he noted that counties could lose emergency funds and businesses could lose their operating licenses if they do not comply with statewide health orders.

Denver Mayor Michael Hancock, a Democrat, insisted Friday that time is needed to ramp up testing and the tracing of contacts to “box in” the virus and ensure “it is our punk and that we are not its punk anymore.” Hancock said he is not defying the governor but believes metro Denver’s population and business density requires more precautions.

In other developments:

- The Colorado Department of Corrections said at least 146 inmates have tested positive for COVID-19 at the Sterling Correctional Facility. The results of testing on about 200 other inmates were pending. Inmates who test positive are being isolated and other prisoners are being kept in their cells except to use restrooms or showers, the department said.

- A JBS USA meatpacking plant in Greeley that was struck by an outbreak that claimed four lives and sickened 102 other people reopened after a two-week disinfection conducted with federal, state and local health authorities. JBS said the plant’s 6,000 workers were quarantined during the closure and were undergoing health screenings when reporting to work, among other new safety measures.

For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia and death. The vast majority of people recover.

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This story has been corrected to say that the employee who died last worked at the store at the end of March.

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