>>8990713 Last Bread Churchgoers Must Register With the Government in Kansas City
Mayor Lucas' recent decree does appear to call for data collection for "Religous gatherings."
kcmo webpage:
Kansas City MO plans on reopening with a '10-10-10 Rule', basically 10 percent occupancy or 10 person or 10 minutes
What changes from previous orders?
Kansas City will begin operating under a “10/10/10 rule.” The primary changes are as follows:
Non-essential business operations that are not open to the public can resume in-person and delivery operations, provided they operate in accordance with guidance provided by the Health
Department and allow workers to maintain social distancing.
Most non-essential business operations that are open to the public (such as non-essential retail stores and personal care services) can resume in-person operations provided business operators follow the “10/10/10 rule.” The 10/10/10 rule specifies that these businesses must limit the number of customers allowed to no more than 10 percent of building occupancy or 10 people (whichever is larger), and record the names, contact information, and approximate entry/exit time of all customers who are on premises for more than 10 minutes.
In-person religious gatherings (including weddings and funerals) may resume, subject to the 10/10/10 rule (if held inside) or limited to 50 people outside, provided social distancing precautions are followed and event organizers maintain records of all attendees.
How do I know if a business is subject to the 10/10/10 rule?
All non-essential businesses that are open to the public are subject to the 10 percent/10-person occupancy restriction. Businesses—primarily retail stores—where the typical customer is on-site for less than 10 minutes do not have to record customer names and contact information.
A good rule of thumb is that businesses must record contact information if customers typically sit down to frequent a business. Examples include beauty salons and other personal service providers where the typical customer remains on-site for more than 10 minutes."
Which businesses must remain closed?
Gyms, museums, bars, in-person restaurant dining, dog parks, playgrounds, movie theaters, and public access to government buildings and community centers. We currently anticipate that these establishments will be able to re-open on May 15, subject to 10/10/10 rule.
Can restaurants re-open after May 6?
No, in-person dining at restaurants must stay closed until at least May 15.
Why are you requiring certain businesses to record information about customers?
One of the primary means for transmission of COVID-19 is in-person interactions that last more than a few minutes. By recording customer names, businesses will enable the Kansas City Health Department to more quickly trace, test, and isolate individuals who may have been exposed to COVID-19 if an employee or customer had the virus at the time they frequented the business. All data obtained by the Department of Public Health will remain confidential and will be used only to address public health concerns and contact individuals who may have been exposed to COVID-19.
https://www.kcmo.gov/city-hall/departments/health/coronavirus-covid-19-kcmo-information-and-response/reopen
Mayor Declaration pdf page 3 item H "Religious gatherings" specifies 10-10-10 rule and data collection.
https://www.kcmo.gov/home/showdocument?id=5225