An extended "stay at home" order by Governor Gretchen Whitmer bans selling fruit and vegetable plants. Workers at greenhouses and nurseries say that makes no sense.
The governor wants people to restrict their trips from home to getting the essentials such as fuel and food. Retail garden centers have been ordered to close temporarily.
Callie Gafner works at a small garden center. She says banning fruit and vegetable plants does not help limit the spread of COVID-19.
“If you’re growing them yourself, you're reducing the contact between people because you're not going anywhere. You're going out in your own garden and picking them up rather than going into the store and coming into contact with how many people?” Gafner explained.
She says garden centers can do "no contact" sales following guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).
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The governor wants people to restrict their trips from home to getting the essentials such as fuel and food. Retail garden centers have been ordered to close temporarily.
Callie Gafner works at a small garden center. She says banning fruit and vegetable plants does not help limit the spread of COVID-19.
“If you’re growing them yourself, you're reducing the contact between people because you're not going anywhere. You're going out in your own garden and picking them up rather than going into the store and coming into contact with how many people?” Gafner explained.
She says garden centers can do "no contact" sales following guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).
Full Story:
Garden centers at large stores must close under governor's order
An extended "stay at home" order by Governor Gretchen Whitmer bans keeping garden sections of stores open for businesses with more than 50,000 square…
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