Greenwich Time

Calif. imposes virus rules based on ICU capacity

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California Gov. Gavin Newsom says he will impose a new stay-at-home order for areas where capacity at intensive care units falls below 15 percent.

Newsom announced the new plans on Thursday amid an unpreceden­ted surge of new coronaviru­s cases in the nation’s most populous state.

The new order divides the state into five regions. Newsom said none of the regions currently meet the threshold for the new rules.

When they do, the state will order them to close hair salons and barber shops, limit retail stores to 20% capacity and only allow restaurant­s to offer take-out and delivery.

The rules don’t apply to school districts.

Newsom — who is staying at home after three of his children were exposed to the virus — already has imposed restrictio­ns, including a nighttime curfew in 51 of the state’s 58 counties, an area with nearly the entire state population.

Los Angeles County, the nation’s most populous with 10 million residents, also has imposed tighter stay-athome restrictio­ns and a three-week ban on in-person restaurant dining because of what county health director Barbara Ferrer called “terrifying increases in numbers.”

On Wednesday night, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti issued a city order in apocalypti­c tones telling people to remain in their homes.

LA “is now close to a devastatin­g tipping point“that could overwhelm the hospital system, “in turn risking needless suffering and death,“the order said.

The order also bars gatherings of people outside of immediate households with some exceptions and requires travelers arriving from outside the state to fill out an online form. It allows retail businesses to remain open for in-person shopping subject to a county curfew already in place.

Garcetti also urged police and the city attorney to enforce the order, which carries misdemeano­r penalties.

In Santa Ana, a city of more than 300,000 people in Orange County, the City Council authorized a mandatory face mask rule and called for police to enforce it.

Overall, California has reported more than 1.2 million COVID-19 cases and more than 19,300 deaths. The state reported 20,759 new cases on Wednesday, surpassing the previous high of 18,350 set just last week.

Public health officials have said the current figures don’t include the COVID-19 infections likely to arise from Thanksgivi­ng holiday travel and gatherings that ignored social distancing precaution­s.

Those cases probably will start showing up in hospitals around Christmas, said Brad Pollock, associate dean for public health sciences at the University of California, Davis School of Medicine.

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