Coronavirus cancels events in North Myrtle Beach, Conway SC

Eufemia Didonato

Conway and North Myrtle Beach have canceled some group activities in response to the severe spike of coronavirus cases seen in Horry County over the past month. North Myrtle Beach canceled its youth basketball practices and games until at least Jan. 19, according to an alert from the city. Conway’s […]

Conway and North Myrtle Beach have canceled some group activities in response to the severe spike of coronavirus cases seen in Horry County over the past month.

North Myrtle Beach canceled its youth basketball practices and games until at least Jan. 19, according to an alert from the city. Conway’s parks and recreations department announced a similar change with youth and adult basketball at the Conway Sports and Recreation Center canceled. The basketball courts will be closed until further notice while the youth basketball will be halted until at least Jan. 19, a Facebook post from the department says.

“We are excited to kick off 2021 with you and ask for your continued patience and cooperation as we make your health and safety a priority,” the Facebook post reads.

Masks are required in the center until people begin their workouts and immediately after they conclude, the post says. It’s recommended people to register for fitness classes online to reduce contact with staff at the rec center. The cardio room, fitness room, weight room, track and pool will stay open.

In both Conway and North Myrtle Beach, parents and coaches will be contacted with an updated schedule for the youth basketball program.

The changes come after Horry County Schools put athletics on hold beginning this week due to coronavirus concerns. Winter sports games and spring athletics training are both halted until Jan. 19, the district announced Sunday.

Mary Norkol covers housing and homelessness for The Sun News through Report for America, an initiative which bolsters local news coverage. She joined The Sun News in June 2020 after graduating from Loyola University Chicago. She was editor-in-chief of the Loyola Phoenix, leading the paper to first place in its general excellence category from the Illinois College Press Association. Norkol won awards in podcasting, multimedia reporting, in-depth reporting and feature reporting from the ICPA. While in college, she reported breaking news for the Daily Herald and interned at the Chicago Sun-Times and CBS Chicago.

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