Each of In-N-Out Burger’s two newly opened Colorado restaurants has active Govt-19 eruptions, with 80 employees testing positive for the virus between the two locations, state reports said.
The popular fast food chain debuted in Aurora and Colorado Springs on November 20; According to the Colorado Department of Public Health and the Environment, each is now seriously exploding.
State health officials consider the eruption to be two or more cases related to the same place or event. Eruptions are considered active until four weeks have passed without any new cases.
The eruption at the Aurora site was reported as December 17, of which 20 employees were confirmed to have tested positive for the virus, and 16 employees were listed as COVID-19 cases.
The location of the Colorado Springs eruption was confirmed on Dec. 6. The El Paso County site has 60 positive employee lawsuits, and nine cases.
The government did not explode any customers.
Both restaurants are open, and state health officials are generally not required to close restaurants or other retail spaces where explosions occur.
Denny Warnick, vice president of In-N-Out, acknowledged in a statement that “the number of Colorado associates who have tested positive for Govt-19” is “nothing more important to us than our health and safety as clients and associates.”
Warink said all employees who tested positive and those who were in close contact with them were “excluded from the workplace.”
“We continue to work with our public health agencies and ensure appropriate measures are in place to help protect our communities,” he said. “These steps include: restricting the minimum number of employees required to serve our customers, using staff cooperation to control potential exposure, and restricting dining room access to takeout orders only when appropriate body distance is ensured.”
Since it opened to more fans in Colorado last month, each location has enjoyed long lines. That mania lasted; The driver-through line at Aurora last Saturday was still over three hours. There is no active indoor food in the Colorado locations of the fast food chain due to state COVID-19 regulations.
There are currently several active explosions at fast food establishments in Colorado. Chick-fil-A, McDonald’s and Wendy each exploded in one or two places – less than 10 employee cases each – and no customer infection was linked to any of the restaurants.
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