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Health officials in 3 states have traced new COVID-19 cases to the Sturgis motorcycle rally where hundreds of thousands of bikers gathered

Dan Whateley   

Health officials in 3 states have traced new COVID-19 cases to the Sturgis motorcycle rally where hundreds of thousands of bikers gathered
LifeInternational1 min read
  • Health officials in South Dakota, Nebraska, and Minnesota have now traced multiple new COVID-19 cases back to a motorcycle rally held in Sturgis, South Dakota between August 7 and 16.
  • The rally, which drew hundreds of thousands of bikers to the 6,900-person city, has been tied to 15 new coronavirus cases in Nebraska, seven in Minnesota, and multiple incidences in South Dakota, according to CNN.
  • The event was one of the largest public gatherings in the US since the coronavirus pandemic began.

Less than a week after the close of a massive 10-day motorcycle rally in Sturgis, South Dakota, health officials in the state, as well as in Nebraska and Minnesota, have traced multiple new COVID-19 cases back to the event.

The rally, which drew hundreds of thousands of bikers to Sturgis, has been connected with 15 new COVID-19 cases in Nebraska, seven in Minnesota, and several new cases in South Dakota, according to CNN. Social distancing and mask-wearing were relatively sparse at the rally, according to The New York Times.

Kris Ehresmann, director of the infectious disease division of Minnesota's health department, told CNN that the state expects its number of positive tests tied to the rally to increase in the coming days.

The rally was one of the largest public gatherings in the US since the coronavirus pandemic began, with South Dakota's department of transportation counting 462,182 vehicles entering the city during the event.

Phone-location data aggregated by the data firm X-Mode Social revealed that visitors came to Sturgis from all parts of the US, including states that recently experienced surges in COVID-19 cases like Arizona, Texas, and Georgia.

This year's rally, which was the city's 80th, occurred despite opposition from Sturgis' own residents. A majority of its residents favored postponing the event, according to a city-sponsored survey sent to 3,290 homes.

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