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The state government announced that it will launch public transport services in Santa Catarina, but has not yet set a date for the restart. A meeting with companies in the sector is scheduled for this Thursday (14), to detail the health rules that have already been built by the team from the Emergency Health Operations Center (Coes). The information was confirmed by Governor Carlos Moisés da Silva (PSL) at a press conference in the late afternoon on Wednesday (13).
According to the governor, in addition to the economic losses that the sector has suffered since the restrictions were imposed in March, when an emergency was decreed in the state, the essential nature of public transport has already been understood and the return must be sanctioned.
– We will regulate this project, but you must pass a specific ordinance, which will take time to adapt. Companies must organize, because we are not in normal conditions, he said.
We are a family owned and operated business.Bolsonaro delivers exams that show negative results for coronavirus to the Supreme CourtWe are a family owned and operated business.
However, circulation may not occur in all regions, the chief executive said. He said that the State should indicate the regions where it is possible to circulate public transport and the regions that are not indicated. According to Moisés, in addition to the demand for the service, the indicators of transmissibility and availability of local beds in the ICU will be taken into account when preparing the ordinance:
– We cannot jeopardize everything we have built so far. It is important to say that some activities may take a few days, as in the case of public transport, but it is not suitable for all regions of the state.
We are a family owned and operated business.MEC extends the suspension of classroom classes at universities and institutesWe are a family owned and operated business.
Present at the conference, the Health Secretary, André Motta Ribeiro, emphasized that the indicators will support the ordinance, so that the publication “does not harm us,” he said.