coronavirus

Here's Why Officials Say 1 Wedding Could Undo Maine's Coronavirus Fight

A single event on Aug. 7 is linked to outbreaks in at least two other locations, with more than 170 people COVID-19 cases and seven deaths

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The Maine pastor who presided over an East Millinocket wedding whose crowded reception has been linked to more than 140 virus cases has hired a lawyer known nationally for defending the religious rights of churches.

A rural church wedding and reception on a beautiful day in the shadow of Mount Katahdin was no doubt a happy day. But it has spread misery ever since.

That single event on Aug. 7 is linked to outbreaks in at least two other locations in Maine, with more than 170 people contracting the virus and seven deaths since.

Dr. Nirav Shah, director of the Maine Center for Disease Control, said the single event has the power to undo much of the state's progress during the pandemic. The virus can become "the uninvited guest at every single wedding, party or event in Maine," he warned.

The "super spreader" event started with wedding attendees in the Katahdin region and spread to the community at large and to a nursing home in Madison. An attendee worked at the York County Jail, 220 miles (355 kilometers) away, where there are more than 70 cases. The state is also investing an outbreak at a church in Sanford, home of the wedding's officiant.

The ramifications were swift.

Across the state, brides and grooms scrambled as event venues reassessed safety rules during the pandemic. The reception venue lost its business license, briefly, and hired a public relations firm. The pastor hired a law firm that specializes in religious liberty.

At least two dozen people have tested positive for COVID-19 after attending a wedding reception in Millinocket.

The outbreak changed the calculus of state health officials, who urged renewed vigilance in a state that had largely controlled the virus previously, Shah said.

"It is spreading in the community in and around York County with remarkable force," he said.

The epicenter was an unlikely place. Millinocket is a rural community that serves as gateway to North Woods made famous by Henry David Thoreau. Prior to the wedding, the community had no cases of the coronavirus.

It unfolded on a sunny day in August with a wedding at the Tri Town Baptist Church in East Millinocket and a reception at the Big Moose Inn in Millinocket, population 4,400.

The number of people infected by COVID-19 outbreaks tied to a wedding in Millinocket, Maine, continues to climb and another person has died.

There were 65 guests at the Big Moose Inn -- violating the state's 50-person limit for indoor events -- and many attendees didn't wear masks or socially distance from each other, state officials said. Other guests not affiliated with the wedding brought the number to more than 100.

The officiant at the wedding, the Rev. Todd Bell of Calvary Baptist Church in Sanford, joined several members of his congregation. About 10 of his congregants also have tested positive for the virus. He declined to speak to The Associated Press.

Bell continued to hold services in Sanford and bristled over attacks aimed at him on social media. In one sermon, he urged people to put their trust in God over government and questioned the wisdom of masks, likening their effectiveness to a chain-link fence trying to keep out mosquitoes.

An outbreak of COVID-19 among people affiliated with a church in Sanford, Maine, is under investigation by the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

On a video, which is no longer public on YouTube, he said he's been "reviled" because of the wedding.

Indeed many people have questioned the wisdom of having such a gathering in the midst of a pandemic.

"Tragic is the word for things that we don't have any control over. In this case, we don't have control over the virus but this pastor absolutely had the choice whether to perform the wedding," said the Rev. Erika Hewitt, a Unitarian Universalist in Bath.

Already struggling, Maine's summer wedding industry tightened rules, forcing people to pare down guest lists, or cancel events altogether.

In Belfast, Thom Roberts nearly blew a gasket when the Boathouse notified his daughter the venue might cancel her wedding.

"We have people already paid for travel arrangements, airline arrangements, rooms, and COVID-19 testing before traveling. Don't mess with my daughter's wedding less than a month before it," he said on social media.

His daughter, Amber, said she'd already reduced her guest list, and informed guests of Maine's quarantine and testing requirements. Her wedding is outside but she may have to drop more people from an indoor reception.

"I worry and stress out very easily," said the bride-to-be. "We're trying very hard to follow their guidelines so we can have a happy day."

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