Los Angeles Times

Most counties are allowed to reopen cinemas

Moviegoing could resume as early as Friday. Seating will be sharply reduced.

- By Rong-Gong Lin II and Phil Willon

SAN FRANCISCO — California counties that have been allowed to accelerate their reopening of their economy, including Los Angeles County, could decide to reopen movie theaters as early as Friday, according to state guidelines released Monday.

Each local health officer has the authority to decide whether to move forward with relaxing restrictio­ns on reopening theaters. While the state provides guidance on how businesses can reopen, counties decide when they occur.

The new rules would limit the number of guests in a movie theater to 25% of theater capacity or a maximum of 100 attendees, whichever is lower.

Also, theaters would need to implement a reservatio­n system to limit the number of attendees entering the theater at a time when possible. “Designate arrival times as part of reservatio­ns, if possible so that customers arrive at and enter the theater in staggered groups,” the state’s rules say.

To keep guests six feet away from others, theaters are to close or otherwise remove seats from use, which may require seating every other row or blocking off seats in a checkerboa­rd style, in which no one is sitting directly behind other patrons.

The rules would ask patrons to wear face coverings when not eating or drinking. Staff would need to be available to help usher people before the show begins and at its conclusion to reduce crowding when entering or exiting.

The guidelines also suggest using disposable or washable seat covers in theaters, “particular­ly on porous surfaces that are difficult to properly clean. Discard and replace seat covers between each use,” the guidelines say.

Los Angeles, San Diego, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura are among 51 California counties that will be given the option by the state to allow movie theaters to reopen.

All but seven of California’s 58 counties have filed attestatio­n paperwork to reopen their economies at an accelerate­d pace. Six of the counties that have not done so are in the San Francisco Bay Area — Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco, San Mateo and Santa Clara — and the seventh is Imperial east of San Diego, which is facing a bad outbreak.

The rules would also allow other family entertainm­ent center operators, such as bowling alleys, miniature golf and arcades to reopen.

Last week, state officials released suggested industry guidance for fitness facilities that could allow gyms to open up in much of California as early as this Friday.

Suggested rules include spacing equipment at least six feet apart, with greater distance for treadmills and other high-exertion aerobic fitness equipment, considerin­g suspending child-care service and enacting a reservatio­n system.

Under the guidelines, personal trainers must use face coverings and avoid close contact, and patrons are strongly encouraged to wear a face covering too. Group exercise classes would need to be limited to keep six feet of distance between people, and the guidelines suggest moving the classes outdoors or larger spaces.

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? THE VISTA Theatre in Los Feliz in L.A. in April, weeks after coronaviru­s-driven shutdowns.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times THE VISTA Theatre in Los Feliz in L.A. in April, weeks after coronaviru­s-driven shutdowns.

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