At his Tuesday press conference, Governor Roy Cooper announced that the state is introducing a county alert system to identify North Carolina counties with the highest levels of COVID-19 community spread.
The COVID-19 County Alert System uses metrics informed by the White House Coronavirus Task Force and North Carolina’s key metrics to categorize counties into three tiers: yellow, orange and red.
Yellow indicates significant community spread, orange indicates substantial community spread and red indicates critical community spread.

COVID-19 County Alert System, color-coded by the severity of community spread.
Because no one metric provides a complete picture, the county alert system uses a combination of three metrics: case rate, the percent of tests that are positive and hospital impact within the county.
Cooper said this system will help North Carolina counties and local governments make decisions about what more can be done to slow the spread of the virus.
“This county alert system shows our viral hotspots,” Cooper said. “But let me be clear, the whole state is experiencing widespread transmission. Cases across the country are surging, forcing states to go backward. Right now our metrics are increasing, not surging. But a surge can happen quickly.”
As of Tuesday, North Carolina is reporting 317,495 total COVID-19 cases with 3,288 new cases, 1,501 people in the hospital and 4,852 deaths.
Cooper said the state may have no choice but to close if these trends continue to worsen.
“Right now, these are strong recommendations,” Cooper said. “However, if our metrics keep moving in the wrong direction, the state could impose additional orders, either at a local or statewide level. As numbers worsen, we need to treat this virus like the deadly threat it still is.”
Last week, the state reduced its indoor gathering limit to 10 people to help mitigate the spread of the virus. Capacity limits remain in place for retail stores, restaurants, entertainment venues and other businesses.
Read more about the COVID-19 County Alert System here.
Chapelboro.com does not charge subscription fees. You can support local journalism and our mission to serve the community. Contribute today – every single dollar matters.
Related Stories
‹
![]()
Nations Reopen yet Struggle to Define ‘a New Normal’As nations around the world loosen coronavirus restrictions, people are discovering that the return to normal is anything but. Schools, offices, public transportation, bars and restaurants are now on the front lines of post-lockdown life — back in business, in many cases, but not business as usual. How each of those key sectors manages social […]

As Virus Cases Near 100,000, Fear of ‘Devastation’ for PoorThe number of people infected with the new virus charged toward 100,000 Friday, with the global scare upending routines, threatening livelihoods and prompting quarantines in its spread. Asian and European shares were down following a rough day on Wall Street and the consequences of COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus, were becoming clear to people […]

Financial Pain Deepens as Nearly 60 Countries Report VirusA deepening health crisis became an economic one too Friday, with the virus outbreak sapping financial markets, emptying shops and businesses, and putting major sites and events off limits. As the list of countries hit by the illness edged toward 60 with Belarus, Lithuania, New Zealand, Nigeria, Azerbaijan and the Netherlands reporting their first cases, […]

Globe Braces for Long Battle Against Virus as Cases SpreadScientists raced to find a treatment, crews scrubbed everything from money to buses, and quarantines were enforced Wednesday from a beachfront resort in the Atlantic to an uninhabited island in the Pacific as the world fought the spread of a new virus. Worries over the ever-expanding economic fallout of the COVID-19 crisis multiplied, with factories idled, trade routes […]

5 Things We Know and Still Don’t Know About COVID, 5 Years After It AppearedCOVID-19 is less deadly than it was in the pandemic’s early days. But the virus is evolving, meaning scientists must track it closely.

Tracking the Number of Coronavirus Cases in North Carolina 
COVID-19 Cluster Reported at UNC's Avery Residence HallUNC has identified a cluster of COVID-19 cases at Avery Residence Hall on campus. This is the second COVID-19 cluster identified at UNC in 2021 and the first since the spring semester began on January 19. Earlier this month, a cluster was identified at Carmichael Residence Hall between students who lived on campus during winter […]

Mack Brown, Roy Williams Receive First Doses of the COVID-19 VaccineUNC coaches Mack Brown and Roy Williams have received their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, the university confirmed on Friday. “I think that everyone who has the opportunity to take the vaccination should,” Williams said in a Zoom call with reporters. Brown, 69, and Williams, 70, are eligible to receive the vaccine thanks to […]

North Carolina Shatters Single-Day Record With 10,000 New COVID-19 CasesNorth Carolina reported 10,398 new coronavirus cases on Thursday, shattering the single-day record for new cases as the state continues to see a significant spread of the virus. North Carolina’s Department of Health and Human Services reports a total of 592,746 coronavirus cases since the beginning of the pandemic. In addition, the state reported 137 […]

NC Introduces COVID-19 County Alert System Amid Record HospitalizationsGovernor Cooper announced that North Carolina is introducing a county alert system to identify counties with the highest levels of COVID-19 community spread.
›