I think re-opening needs to get started, but I think it needs to be done at the local level. No reason to keep places with hardly any cases shut down, but stupid to force everyone back to work in places that are still hot spots.
Georgia is doing it the exact wrong way with the governor's order being something even Trump bashed. He jumped right to phase 2 with reopening close contact businesses like salons, tattoo and massage places etc. statewide AND banned local leaders from keeping things shut down. As above, fine to reopen these things in the rural counties that have barely had any cases at all, but not in metro Atlanta, the rural counties around Albany, GA that are still getting slammed etc.
For me and my wife, it doesn't effect us as we both are working from home (her for good as her company planned to go fully remote this summer when their lease was up anyway) for full salaries and can keep distancing. But I have some friends and acquaintances that I'm scared for as some are high risk, and some live with high-risk family members, and are being forced back to work of get fired for not showing up and then be in-eligible for unemployment. People shouldn't be put in that position. Let local leaders decide when it's safe to reopen, or at the least, come up with a way for at least at risk people (including those who live with at-risk people) to stay on unemployment, go on disability or whatever until it's safe to return to their job in their area.
Beyond that, I hope we don't allow crowds of thousands or tens of thousands until there's a vaccine or the virus has run it's course if herd immunity pans out. With how crazy it spread from things like funerals of couple hundred attendees the last thing we need is packed football stadiums, arenas etc. in places that still have outbreaks or in the fall when epidemiologists say a bounce back is almost guaranteed and will coincide with flu season. We got lucky this time that this hit at the tail end of flu season this spring. If we have packed stadiums etc. and tons of people catching both this and flu hospitals will get overwhelmed.
Aside from big crowds, I think most things will need to be up and running with social distancing in place by next month. We just can't shut down the economy any longer than that IMO. The big crowd events are a relatively small part of the economy relative to everything else and there's still a lot of TV money to be made by pro leagues if they can find a way to safely play without crowds.