South Dakota's Sturgis Motorcycle Rally: A 'cautionary
tale' in the age of Covid-19
By Ray
Sanchez, CNN
Updated
1634 GMT (0034 HKT) August 6, 2021
(CNN)Duston
Van Balen took a road trip with his family and a wooden urn containing the
ashes of a man he considered a brother, with stops at the Grand Canyon in
Arizona and Zion National Park in southwest Utah.
It's been
nearly a year since Albert Aguirre, 40, was found dead at his home in
Vermillion, South Dakota, and Van Balen's long excursion this week was a
celebration of his longtime friend's free spirit and love for the outdoors.
But Van
Balen will not be stopping at South Dakota's annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally,
which Aguirre attended about a month before his September 10 death from what
authorities listed as Covid-19.
"Too
much of a risk," Van Balen, 42, said of the rally, which was attended by
460,000 people in 2020 in what infectious disease experts likened to "a
superspreading event."
An even
larger crowd from around the country is expected for this year's 10-day event
-- starting Friday -- as concerns mount over the highly contagious Delta
variant.
"It's
definitely a cautionary tale," Van Balen said of his friend's death.
In South
Dakota, where 59% of the population has received at least one dose of the
coronavirus vaccine, the health department reported 52 cases per day in the
past week -- a 68% spike from the 31 cases per day the previous week.
Aguirre's
friends aren't entirely sure where he got sick. After the rally, he took a trip
to Oklahoma and had gone out in the college town where he lived alone. But they
wonder whether he would still be alive had he avoided the Sturgis rally's
crowded bars and packed concerts where few revelers wore masks or kept a
distance from others.
'Everybody
wants to be free'
Steve
Sample, a 67-year-old land surveyor from Arizona, will be attending the 81st
annual Sturgis rally. It's his fifth straight year, and he will be there with
his wife, who is vaccinated against Covid-19, he said. He is not.
"I'm
going to go every year until I die, whether Covid kills me or a head-on
collision," he said. "That's the way I am."
A report by
infectious disease experts from the US Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention and South Dakota health officials traced 649 Covid-19 cases around
the country and at least one death to the 2020 rally. The report said the
"true national impact" of the rally on the pandemic is likely underestimated.
"The
Sturgis rally had many characteristics of a superspreading event: large crowds,
high intensity of contact between people, potential for highly infectious
individuals traveling from hotspots, and events in poorly ventilated indoor
environments," the report said.
Another CDC
report linked the rally to a Covid-19 outbreak in Minnesota, where at least 51
residents who attended the event became sick, and another 35 people were
infected after coming into contact with a person who went to the rally. Those
35 people were household, social and workplace contacts, it said.
Of those 86
cases, four people were hospitalized, and one died, according to the report.
In early
September, Minnesota's health department identified the Covid-19 death from the
rally. A spokesman for the department said the person was in their 60s, had
been hospitalized in the ICU and had underlying health conditions.
"I
didn't see one mask on anybody and I was there for 10 days," Sample said.
"Everybody wants to be free."
'There's a
risk associated with everything'
While the
last rally went on despite opposition from local residents, Sturgis City
Manager Daniel Ainslie said this summer there was no pushback.
"We
continue to encourage people that if they don't have immunity and if they're in
a high-risk category that it's probably not wise for them to come," he
said. "And we definitely don't encourage people who have several high-risk
categories to attend."
Sturgis,
the South Dakota Department of Health and Monument Health announced this week
that Covid-19 self-test kits will be made available to rally participants.
Additionally, Ainslie said, hand sanitizing stations have been set up in
downtown Sturgis for months.
South
Dakota has placed few restrictions on businesses during the pandemic and, at
the last rally, there were no state, county or city mask mandates in effect,
according to the CDC report.
The state
has had 14,197 cases per 100,000 people, joining North Dakota and Rhode Island
with the highest rates in the nation.
Even as
cases surged in her state last November, Republican Gov. Kristi Noem refused to
mandate masks or put in place measures that many other governors took to slow
the spread. She insisted her state had been most effective by swiftly
identifying and isolating cases
The
governor's a strong supporter of the rally, saying that to hold events like it,
people should be given information that lets them protect their health but
still enjoy their way of life.
Noem, who
recently criticized fellow GOP governors who enacted Covid-19 measures, is
expected to attend a rally charity ride on Monday, according to the website of
the Sturgis Buffalo Chip campground.
"The
Sturgis rally is about hopping on your bike and exploring this great country
through our open roads," Noem said via Twitter on Wednesday.
"Bikers
come here because they WANT to be here. And we love to see them! There's a risk
associated with everything that we do in life. Bikers get that better than
anyone."
'You need
less time breathing that air to become infected'
The rally
means big money for the local economy, generating more than $500 million in
sales each year in South Dakota, according to Ainslie. It includes drag races,
charity rides, rock concerts, pub crawls, tattoo contests and processions of
Harley-Davidsons through the Black Hills mountain range. A popular T-shirt last
year read, "Screw COVID. I went to Sturgis."
"People
come here because they're free of all that unnecessary political government
control exercised over their lives," said Rod Woodruff, owner of the
Sturgis Buffalo Chip campground about three miles outside the city.
Woodruff
said he was not aware of a single Covid-19 case traced back to the rally.
"All
these people here ... know all the crap, all the baloney that has gone back and
forth about how dangerous all this unseen stuff is and the viruses," he
said. "Everybody's aware of all that and they have assumed the risk of
getting out of their home and getting away and going someplace else and hanging
out with people that are like-minded."
Indeed, the
dangers of cramming thousands of people into tight venues are well known. The
CDC even changed its guidance last week to recommend that vaccinated people
wear masks indoors again.
The
dangerous Delta variant has fueled the country's latest surge and infectious
disease experts warn that if more Americans don't get vaccinated and wear
masks, the country could soon see several hundred thousand cases a day.
"People
often associate with Sturgis being outdoors on the bike," said Dr. Michael
Osterholm, director of the University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious
Disease Research and Policy.
"That
makes it hard to imagine why there would be an increased risk of potential
COVID transmission. But it's what is done in Sturgis. It's indoors, in the
bars. It's in the tattoo parlors. It's in all the inside activities that really
put people at increased risk."
Osterholm
pointed to the July Fourth celebration that brought thousands of visitors from
across the country to the small town of Provincetown, Massachusetts, for
parties and festivities in Cape Cod.
A CDC study
published last week said 469 Covid-19 cases were identified in Massachusetts
residents who had traveled to Barnstable County -- which includes Provincetown
-- between July 3 and July 17. The cases were associated with "multiple
summer events and large public gatherings," the CDC said.
Roughly
three-quarters of Provincetown cases were among fully vaccinated people, a
finding that suggested inoculated people can also spread the virus, including
the Delta variant. The findings persuaded the CDC to change its face mask
guidelines.
Osterholm
said any inside activities involving crowds put people at risk.
"That
means that you need less time breathing that air to become infected
yourself," he said. "So that even now what might have been a
15-minute exposure indoors in a given environment may now only be five
minutes."
After
returning home to Vermillion from the August 7-16 Sturgis rally and a trip to
Oklahoma, Aguirre was found dead at home in September, according to friends and
Clay County Sheriff Andy Howe.
The sheriff
said authorities don't know how and where Aguirre contracted Covid-19. No
autopsy was performed after a posthumous test came back positive for the virus,
Howe said.
"Since
it came back positive that's what we determined the cause of death to be,"
Howe said, referring to Covid-19.
Van Balen
and other friends suspect Aguirre became ill at Sturgis. Some had even urged
him to stay away.
"We
tried to caution him: Maybe don't go this year. Or if you go, wear your
mask," Van Balen recalled as he celebrated his friend's life with a final
road trip. "But he was living his life. It frustrated a lot of us. He
wasn't one of the lucky ones."



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