Lake County Record-Bee

Newsom announces new stay-at-home order

If any of the five regions of California fall below 15% ICU capacity, a large swath of the state's population will face additional restrictio­ns

- By Evan Webeck

Many parts of California could soon face deeper restrictio­ns under Gov. Gavin Newsom’s latest plan to control the coronaviru­s outbreak surging throughout the state.

On Thursday, Newsom announced a new, regional stay-athome order, which will force additional restrictio­ns in any of the five regions of the state where fewer than 15% of intensive care units remain available. None of the regions — defined as Northern California, the Bay Area, Greater Sacramento, the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California — currently meet the threshold but some could “in the next day or two,” Newsom said.

“The bottom line is, if we don’t act now, our hospital system will be overwhelme­d,” Newsom said at a virtual news conference Thursday afternoon. “And if we don’t act now, the death rate will continue to climb and we’ll see more lives lost. That’s why today, we are … pulling that emergency brake … in a much more broad and comprehens­ive way.”

Once a region’s ICU capacity falls below 15%, a rash of new restrictio­ns will take effect 48 hours later. The new order resembles California’s initial shelter-in-place order from the spring but with some modificati­ons.

Schools that are already open will be allowed to remain open, and retail will be allowed to remain open at 20% capacity. Sports and other entertainm­ent will be allowed to continue, though without any live audiences. Restaurant­s will be restricted to takeout only, and places of worship will be forced outdoors. Hotels and offices can remain open only for “critical infrastruc­ture” employees.

Forced to close entirely: all personal care services, including barbershop­s and nail salons; playground­s inside and outside; bars, breweries and wineries; and all entertainm­ent centers, including amusement parks, movie theaters, card rooms and casinos.

Under the new order, travel is prohibited “except as necessary for permitted activities,” but state officials encouraged residents to continue participat­ing in safer outdoor activities.

Once the order takes effect, it will remain in place for at least three weeks. At that time, individual counties would be reassigned tiers within the reopening blueprint if the region’s capacity is projected to be above 15%. If the region is still below that threshold, the order would remain in effect and be reassessed on a weekly basis.

In the state’s projection­s, every region but the Bay Area will reach that threshold within the next week. The Bay Area “may have a few extra days,” Newsom said, and is projected to reach 15% capacity by midto late-December.

Under California’s current reopening guidelines, 99% of the state’s population already falls under the most restrictiv­e purple tier, which has shuttered many of the businesses that reopened over the summer and fall.

In those places, it’s not just case rates but the capacity in local hospitals and intensive care units that state health officials are monitoring in “real time,” Newsom said.

Dr. Mark Ghaly, the state’s top health official, said on Monday that ICU capacity was “what we worry about at this time specifical­ly.”

“Because when that capacity goes away,” Ghaly said, “… we know the quality of care sometimes takes a dip and we see outcomes we don’t want to see.”

COVID-positive patients currently occupy about 25% of all the ICU beds in the state, while about 23% remain open, though some hospitals are verging on capacity. By mid-December, all of California’s ICUs could be full if no action is taken, according to state projection­s.

On Tuesday, the number of California­ns in ICUs climbed over 2,000 for the first time since the height of the summer surge, with about 1,800 beds still available, according to the California Department of Public Health. That same day, the total number of California­ns hospitaliz­ed with the virus grew to over 8,500, nearly 20% higher than the peak during the summer surge.

California is averaging nearly 15,000 new cases per day, more than any other point of the pandemic. Its positivity rate, which was 5.3% two weeks ago and as low as 3% at the start of November, has reached 7.3%.

In Santa Clara County, nearly nine in 10 hospital beds are full, and no hospital in the county has more than five open ICU beds, officials said Wednesday. In San Mateo County, about 83% hospital beds are occupied, while in Alameda County, about 39% remain open.

On Monday, Newsom said about 59% of all hospital beds in California were occupied but that number was projected to grow to 78% by Christmas. In the Bay Area about 58% of hospital beds were full Monday and projected to fill to 62% by Christmas, Newsom said.

“The bottom line is, if we don’t act now, our hospital system will be overwhelme­d. And if we don’t act now, the death rate will continue to climb and we’ll see more lives lost. That’s why today, we are … pulling that emergency brake

… in a much more broad and comprehens­ive way.”

— Gov. Gavin Newsom

 ?? RANDY VAZQUEZ — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Many parts of California could soon face deeper restrictio­ns under Gov. Gavin Newsom’s latest plan to control the coronaviru­s outbreak surging throughout the state.
RANDY VAZQUEZ — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Many parts of California could soon face deeper restrictio­ns under Gov. Gavin Newsom’s latest plan to control the coronaviru­s outbreak surging throughout the state.

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