Las Vegas Review-Journal

Los Angeles vaccinatio­n mandate takes effect

Businesses worry how customers will react

- By Christophe­r Weber and Stefanie Dazio

LOS ANGELES — Yoga studio owner David Gross felt relieved after Los Angeles passed a vaccine mandate that is among the strictest in the country, a measure taking effect Monday that requires proof of shots for everyone entering a wide variety of businesses from restaurant­s to shopping malls and theaters to nail and hair salons.

For Gross, the relief came from knowing he and his co-owner don’t have to unilateral­ly decide whether to verify their customers are vaccinated. In another part of town, the manager of a struggling nail salon feels trepidatio­n and expects to lose customers. “This is going to be hard for us,” Lucila Vazquez said.

Los Angeles is among a growing number of cities across the U.S., including San Francisco and New York City, requiring people show proof of vaccinatio­n to enter various types of businesses and venues. But rules in the nation’s second-most-populous city, called Safepassla, apply to more types of businesses and other indoor locations including museums and convention centers.

They are being implemente­d as new cases have started inching up following a sharp decline from an August peak driven by the delta variant.

This was the time of year in 2020 when the worst spike of the pandemic was just beginning in California, which by January saw an average of 500 people die every day. Los Angeles became the state’s epicenter and its hospitals were so overloaded with patients that ambulances idled outside with people struggling to breathe, waiting for beds to open.

So many people died that morgues reached capacity and refrigerat­ed trucks were brought in to handle the overflow. That stark scene played out as coronaviru­s vaccines arrived and California and Los Angeles moved aggressive­ly to inoculate people.

Among L.A. county’s roughly 10 million people, 80 percent of eligible residents now have received at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose and 71 percent of those eligible are fully vaccinated, according to public health officials.

To guard against anything resembling the January carnage, the L.A. City Council voted 11-2 last month for the ordinance that requires people 12 and older to be fully vaccinated to enter indoor public spaces including sports arenas, museums, spas, indoor city facilities and other locations.

Negative coronaviru­s tests within 72 hours of entry to those establishm­ents would be required for people with religious or medical exemptions for vaccinatio­ns. Customers without proof can still use outdoor facilities and can briefly enter a business to use a restroom or pick up a food order.

While the order takes effect Monday, city officials say they won’t start enforcing it until Nov. 29 to give businesses time to adjust. A first offense will bring a warning but subsequent ones could produce fines running from $1,000 to $5,000.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, who tested positive for the coronaviru­s last week while attending the United Nations climate change conference in Scotland, said the mandate will encourage more people to get shots and make businesses safer for employees and customers.

“Vaccinatin­g more Angelenos is our only way out of this pandemic, and we must do everything in our power to keep pushing those numbers up,” Garcetti said.

Business trade groups say the mandate will sow confusion because Los Angeles County’s own vaccine rules — which apply to dozens of surroundin­g communitie­s — are less sweeping. Cities are allowed to pass rules more stringent than the county’s.

 ?? Damian Dovarganes The Associated Press ?? Erica Adamson, left, verifies a mobile digital COVID-19 Vaccine Record on Tony Lai’s iphone on Saturday at Highland Park Yoga in Los Angeles.
Damian Dovarganes The Associated Press Erica Adamson, left, verifies a mobile digital COVID-19 Vaccine Record on Tony Lai’s iphone on Saturday at Highland Park Yoga in Los Angeles.

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