Sturgis motorcycle rally: A person with Covid-19 may have exposed others at a bar
The potential exposure came during the city’s 80th annual Sturgis motorcycle rally August 7-16.
Health experts were concerned the mass gathering could be a “super-spreader” event, as many attendees travel from all over the country — including coronavirus hotspots — and could bring infections back home when they return.
The bar-goer visited One-Eyed Jack’s Saloon in Sturgis on August 11 from noon to 5:30 p.m. while able to transmit the virus to others, health officials said. Anyone who visited the saloon during that period should monitor for symptoms for 14 days after the visit.
A little more than 60% of people in Sturgis voted against holding the motorcyle event. But city officials said they felt they wouldn’t have been able to stop the crowds from coming in and instead opted to prepare for the event as best they could.
“There are people throughout America who have been locked up for months and months,” Daniel Ainslie, the city manager, told CNN last week. “So we kept hearing from people saying it doesn’t matter, they are coming to Sturgis. So with that, ultimately the council decided that it was really vital for the community to be prepared for the additional people that we’re going to end up having.”
South Dakota is one of 12 US states that have seen an increase in new cases this past week compared to the week prior, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. The state’s seven-day average of new daily cases has increased since late July and topped 100 new daily cases on Tuesday.
Adjusted for population, South Dakota’s seven-day moving average of new cases is about in the middle of all US states, nestled between North Carolina and Arizona.
CNN’s Christina Maxouris contributed to this report.