Ohio restaurants with outdoor seating, salons and barbershops will begin to reopen next week, with a more expanded opening of restaurants coming the following week, Gov. Mike DeWine announced Thursday. Personal services — barbershops, hair salons, day spas, nail salons and others — can reopen May 15, as can outdoor-seating areas of restaurants. Dine-in service in Ohio restaurants can begin May 21. "This is a good day as we continue to reopen Ohio, but this is a high-risk operation," DeWine said via a statement on his verified Twitter acount. "It would be high-risk if we didn't do anything — if we sat back and said we can't do anything." DeWine's administration put together a group of workers in the personal services and restaurant industries to look at best practices. Those people worked with the Ohio Department of Health to determine the best practices to reopen businesses in their industries. Barbers and stylists will wear masks, and customers will be asked to wear masks, said Debbie Penzone, president and CEO of Charles Penzone Salons and the chair of the salon and barbershop working group commissioned by the governor. The reopening of eating establishments comes with limits, including parties of 10 or fewer and spacing between tables either by a barrier or 6 feet of distance. Ohio had 22,131 coronavirus cases and 1,271 deaths, including 555 new cases and 46 news deaths Thursday. "It's a gamble," DeWine said. "We're on a road that has never been traveled before in Ohio. It's a road with danger signs on it. "If we relax and take things for granted, things will not go the way we want them to go. We don't want to see a spike and be forced to decide if we pull back again on the economy. What we all do today will determine where this state goes." The Associated Press contributed.