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Indiana's statewide mask order will continue for another three weeks under a new order Gov. Eric Holcomb announced Wednesday.
Darron Cummings/AP
Indiana’s statewide mask order will continue for another three weeks under a new order Gov. Eric Holcomb announced Wednesday.
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Indiana’s statewide mask order will continue for another three weeks under a new order the governor announced Wednesday even as he has faced public discontent over coronavirus restrictions amid his reelection campaign.

Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb said he would be dropping most other limits on businesses and crowd sizes as of Saturday. The mask order will be extended until Oct. 17.

Holcomb said those restrictions could be removed because the state has seen progress in recent weeks in slowing the coronavirus spread. His action lifts statewide capacity limits for restaurants and bars and crowd limits for social events.

The mask order was first issued two months ago and has drawn ire among conservatives who believe his executive orders in response to the pandemic have gone too far. That has complicating his reelection campaign against Democratic challenger Woody Myers, with some saying they will support Libertarian candidate Donald Rainwater.

Myers, a physician and former state health commissioner, said before Holcomb’s announcement that dropping the mask mandate would be irresponsible and lead to chaos with differing rules among the state’s 92 counties.

State health officials on Wednesday added 10 more COVID-19 deaths to the state’s toll. The newly recorded deaths raise the state’s death toll to 3,530, including confirmed and presumed coronavirus cases, since the state’s first such death was reported on March 15, according to the Indiana State Department of Health. That is an increase of 58 deaths in the past week.

Also Wednesday, the State Department of Health COVID-19 dashboard showed that Lake County was reporting 43 new cases, bringing the county total to 10,334 with 319 deaths.

Marian County has the most cases with 20,936 and 761 deaths, the state said.

The Porter County Department of Health reported 2,099 COVID-19 cases and 49 deaths.