Try it again without taking shots.
Here's how I'd classify each team's chances of playing:
Sitting out:
Norfolk
Atlanta
State/Provincial/National Covid-19 Guidance Indicates No Chance:
Adirondack
Brampton
Cincinnati
Kalamazoo
Maine
Newfoundland
Reading
Toledo
Worcester
Teams that could go either way based on the state's guidance:
Indy
Utah
Teams in states that don't have strong covid restrictions (for now):
Allen
Florida
Greenville
Idaho
Jacksonville
Kansas City
Orlando
Rapid City
South Carolina
Tulsa
Wheeling
Wichita
Good luck playing with a 14-team league spread across two thirds of the country when revenues will be off by as much as 85 or 90 percent in some markets.
The smallest markets, Wheeling and Greenville, would incur massive losses and almost certainly fold were they to play in such a league, perhaps at the end of the season, perhaps before. Idaho and Rapid city are on travel islands and would see their travel costs balloon. Take those four teams out, and you're left with 8 or 10 teams:
Allen
Florida
Jacksonville
Kansas City
Orlando
South Carolina
Tulsa
Wichita
Even if you play with two four-team divisions without any inter-division games, the revenue from playing won't stanche the bleeding of increased costs. Fans are going to stay away until they know it's safe. Sponsors aren't buying advertising from teams that play in front of empty seats. Workman's comp and liability policies are going to be prohibitively expensive.
Until Covid-19 is under control, the situation is untenable and hockey really can't be played. If you can't understand that, I don't know what to tell you.