Lodi News-Sentinel

California will wait to adopt mask guidelines

- Luke Money and Rong-Gong Lin II

LOS ANGELES — California­ns fully vaccinated against COVID-19 can go mask-free in most indoor settings starting June 15 — which also is the target date for reopening the state’s economy, officials announced Monday.

The June 15 change will bring the state into alignment with recently released guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Federal health officials said last week that available evidence demonstrat­ed it was safe for fully vaccinated people to go without masks in most places, whether outdoors or inside.

That was only a recommenda­tion, though, and the final call was largely left to state and local government­s.

Dr. Mark Ghaly, California’s Health and Human Services secretary, said state officials were opting to wait a bit before implementi­ng the new guidelines to give businesses and workers time to prepare for the change — and residents more time to receive their shots.

“It’s in no way saying that the science or the direction by the CDC is wrong or there’s a challenge to it,” he said during a briefing Monday. “It’s really just giving ourselves across the state some additional time to have it implemente­d with a high degree of integrity, with a continued focus on protecting the public.”

People are considered fully vaccinated two weeks after receiving their final dose.

California’s existing rules, last updated May 3, generally require masks to be worn in indoor settings that are outside your own home, with exceptions, such as when it’s a nonworkpla­ce setting and everyone there is vaccinated, or when only members of one unvaccinat­ed household are present and all have a low risk of severe complicati­ons should they get COVID-19.

Unvaccinat­ed people must also wear masks outdoors at any time they can’t maintain 6 feet of distance from someone else, and fully vaccinated people need to wear masks in crowded outdoor settings, such as live performanc­es, parades, fairs, festivals and sports events.

Monday’s announceme­nt doesn’t mean June 15 will bring a completely maskless existence, though. Under the federal guidance, unvaccinat­ed or partly vaccinated people are still asked to wear masks in almost all indoor settings and most outdoor venues when interactin­g with people from outside their household who may not be vaccinated.

Members of a single household of unvaccinat­ed people can be maskless indoors if everyone else is vaccinated and can go without masks at small outdoor gatherings with other unvaccinat­ed people.

Ghaly also noted that California’s guidance is “not a ceiling on the restrictio­ns, in some ways it’s a floor,” and individual businesses or local health jurisdicti­ons can ultimately opt to either delay relaxing mask requiremen­ts, or maintain them in certain instances.

The California Division of Occupation­al Safety and Health’s mask-wearing requiremen­ts at businesses, including restaurant­s and supermarke­ts, remain in effect at this point.

Following the CDC’s announceme­nt some retailers

— including Trader Joe’s, Walmart and Costco — said they would no longer require fully vaccinated shoppers to don masks.

Ghaly, though, said “we expect businesses in California to adhere to where the state is and move to implement these standards, or prepare for them, on June 15 as opposed to now.”

California’s strict mask rules have long been a hallmark of the state’s pandemic response, with officials noting that properly worn masks can significan­tly stymie transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s.

However, the thinking around COVID-19 has evolved throughout the pandemic.

“The science now shows that your vaccinatio­n protects you as well as being masked or better than being masked,” President Joe Biden said during a briefing Monday.

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