OLYMPIA — Washington Gov. Jay Inslee announced Wednesday that churches, mosques and synagogues can resume in-person services, with those in counties in the second stage of the state’s COVID-19 reopening plan allowed to have smaller in-building services and the remainder limited to outdoor services with no more than 100 people.
Religious organizations are required to have a plan that encompasses sanitation and physical distancing of seats or pews, limiting access points to buildings, and requiring all employees, members and visitors to wear face coverings, regardless of whether the service or event is inside or outside.
There also must be no direct physical contact, and anything to be consumed — such as a communion wafer — may not be presented in a communal container or a plate. Additionally, while singing is permitted during a service, people must keep face coverings on, and choirs will not be allowed to perform during services.
“We know that people treasure religious gatherings,” Inslee said. “So this has been a difficult issue about how we simultaneously defeat this virus and maintain our congregations.”