Sorry, it is the boat ramp.
“Our boat ramp certainly gets a lot of activity,” Boughton said in a phone interview. “There’s a parking lot where a lot of people tend to congregate. We’re trying to limit some of the interaction out on the lake. Boats are tying off — seven, eight, nine, 10 boats at a time. There’s no social distancing going on. Obviously, no masks are being worn, and that’s an area of concern for us.”
Oh wait, it was travel.
Kara Prunty, Danbury’s acting public health director, said Monday that the spike was due to “domestic and international travel, as well as small private gatherings.” She said city officials were conducting targeted outreach to provide free testing to residents who might be at risk.
“I heard there was one family of 14,” Boughton said, adding that he would not reveal any names. “They had a visit from an overseas relative, and that person was positive. ... This is community spread [overall]. It’s basically from international travel, national travel.
Sorry, it is only youth sports, not High School sports that is causing the problem.
"Things like Pop Warner Football, soccer leagues, they'e all going to have to shut down after this weekend," Boughton said during a livestreamed news conference on Wednesday night. The sports shutdowns do not include high school sports, Boughton said, as those are the purview of the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference.