Jimmie Arnold, left, and Gary Arnold celebrate Christmas with Jimmie Arnold's mom, Chloe Millard, inside the couple's Bryan home.
Jimmie Arnold, left, and Gary Arnold celebrate Christmas with Jimmie Arnold’s mom, Chloe Millard, inside the couple’s Bryan home. Courtesy of Jimmie Arnold
The Weekend Brief podcast for Sept. 12, 2020

Jimmie Arnold says the state’s recent decision allowing for limited visitation at nursing homes is “political smoke and mirrors.”

The Bryan woman last saw her mom and mother-in-law — who were residents at the same area facility — in mid-March and says the relaxed visitation guidelines have not changed the situation. She’s still shut out.

In early August, state health officials reversed a policy intended to keep the state’s most vulnerable populations safe from COVID-19, the illness caused by the new coronavirus. Under the new guidance, some indoor visits are permitted at assisted-living facilities, provided there are plexiglass barriers, there are no active cases of the novel coronavirus among residents and there are no confirmed cases among staff in the last two weeks. Physical contact between residents and visitors is not permitted, state officials said.

The restrictions are tighter on nursing facilities, which must test staff members weekly and can offer only outdoor visits. Without any plans for her mom’s nursing home to test regularly, Arnold has been unable to enter.

Arnold says she knows COVID-19 is deadly but that isolation has consequences, too.

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Alana Rocha was the director of news partnerships for The Texas Tribune until June 2022. She was previously a multimedia reporter, after working in television and radio news for eight years. Alana covered...

Todd Wiseman was the senior editor for video and multimedia at The Texas Tribune, where he worked from 2010 to 2023. Todd previously worked at the Austin School of Film and Synthetic Pictures and interned...

Faith Castle was a 2020 multimedia fellow. A graduate of the University of Texas at Austin, Faith is a co-founder of BlackPrint, UT’s only Black interest publication. She has worked as a multimedia intern...