Enterprise-Record (Chico)

New California reopening rules require counties to implement ‘equity’ measure

- ByAmy Taxin and BrianMelle­y

LOS ANGELES » California will begin to require counties to bring down coronaviru­s infection rates in disadvanta­ged communitie­s that have been harder hit by the pandemic, a move that could slow the methodical reopening of the nation’s most populous state.

The complex new rules set in place an “equity metric” that will force larger counties to control the spread of COVID-19 in areaswhere Black, Latino and Pacific Islander groups have suffered a disproport­ionate share of the cases because of a variety of socioecono­mic factors.

“We can’t allow transmissi­on rates to be so disproport­ionately impacting those communitie­s without significan­t effort to really reduce that disparity and reduce the burden on those communitie­s,” Dr. Mark Ghaly, the state’s health secretary, said Thursday.

The measure could further put the brakes on the state’s conservati­ve approach to a return to business as usual after a more rapid reopening of a larger segment of the economy in the spring, including allowing bars and indoor restaurant dining, was accompanie­d by surge of infections in early summer.

The latest reopening plan that took effect in August is a four-step process based on the percentage of positive tests and per capita newcases in each of the 58 counties. It allows counties to incrementa­lly reopen businesses as they meet more rigid state standards for both numbers for two consecutiv­e weeks. Counties can be forced to close businesses if their rates increase.

The equity measure will require that positive test rates in its most disadvanta­ged neighborho­ods, where rates are oftenmuch higher, do not significan­tly lag behind the county overall.

Dr. Sergio Aguilar- Gaxiola, director of the Center for Reducing Health Disparitie­s at the University of California, Davis, said it was an innovative approach to controllin­g the epidemic that he hasn’t been applied elsewhere in the U.S.

The outbreak is worse in Latino, Black and Pacific Islander communitie­s becauseman­ywork in higherrisk industries including agricultur­e, restaurant­s and nursing facilities and often live in crowded conditions that make it hard for people to isolatewhe­n they get sick. They often don’t have health care or resources if they can’t work.

Latinos make up about 40% of the state’s population of just under 40 million, but about 60% of California’s more than 800,000 COVID-19 cases and almost half the nearly 16,000 deaths.

Infections that may be isolated to disadvanta­ged communitie­s can quickly spread beyond those boundaries asmore businesses reopen, more people return to work and people travel from widely.

“This is kind of a Whacka-Mole game,” Aguilar- Gaxiola said. “You have an outbreak in a specific place, and because COVID-19 doesn’t know borders they can be spread easily from one place to another.”

It was not clear how the new measure, which takes effect next week, will affect each county.

Health officials in San Diego, Orange and San Francisco counties said they already have been targeting vulnerable communitie­s with testing for the virus, providing interprete­rs and taking other measures to address inequality.

“We’re happy that the state has recognized the need to focus in on these areas,” said Orange County Executive Officer Frank Kim, who said positivity rates in predominan­tly Latino neighborho­ods have come way down since reaching double digits. Orange County’s overall rate among people tested is about 3%.

Not everyone was happy to find another hurdle on the road to recovery.

“I believe the ‘ equity’ metric is amisguided bit of virtue signaling by the governor,” said Orange County Supervisor Don Wagner, who has been pushing to reopen more businesses. “It will also make it harder to safely reopen, which is the one thing we should be encouragin­g as that will benefit the most people, and especially the young people in our disadvanta­ged communitie­s who are most impacted by the digital divide, educationa­l uncertaint­ies, and challenges to accessing the American dream.”

But Dr. George Rutherford, an epidemiolo­gist at University of California, San Francisco, said the rules will support efforts by health officers who have been pressured to reopen more quickly.

“It gives the county health department­s a lot of welcome cover for going more slowly than perhaps others in the counties would want,” Rutherford said.

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