Los Angeles Times

L.A. is on track for more reopenings

That would come in October if virus cases continue to fall, county official says.

- By Maura Dolan

If Los Angeles County can continue its downward trend of coronaviru­s cases, Los Angeles County could see additional reopenings in the next month, the county’s public health chief said Wednesday.

Barbara Ferrer, director of the county Department of Public Health, said during an online news conference that the daily average of new cases was still preventing the county from moving to a less restrictiv­e tier in California’s system for reopening.

The county has a daily average of 8.1 cases for each 100,000 residents. That number needs to be under seven for L.A. County to move up from the most restricted tier, Ferrer said.

“If we don’t see a surge in cases and hospitaliz­ations associated with activities over Labor Day, and we continue to reduce our rate of community transmissi­on over the weeks ahead, we could enter Tier 2, which is less restrictiv­e, some time in October,” she said.

Under the state’s colorcoded, four-tier system, Los Angeles County is in the purple tier, Tier 1, which indicates the virus is widespread. One step up, the red tier indicates substantia­l spread. Orange shows moderate spread, and yellow suggests minimal spread.

To move to a less restrictiv­e tier, counties must meet two metrics — the daily average rate of new cases and the test positivity rate — for two consecutiv­e weeks during a three-week period.

L.A. County meets only one of the metrics: the positivity rate. It is at 3.2%, which Ferrer said would put the county in the orange tier if that were the only measuremen­t required.

“We are still very much on the edge of moving in one direction or the other,” she said.

She urged residents to obtain seasonal flu vaccines, which are now available.

A person who contracts both COVID-19 and seasonal flu may have a more serious health outcome, Ferrer said.

The county’s primary goal is to reduce transmissi­on. allowing restrictio­ns on schools to be relaxed so that children may have “all the educationa­l opportunit­ies they need,” she said.

Previous holiday weekends during the pandemic have sparked surges of infections, which generally show up two weeks later. Ferrer has said the county should not reopen further until the numbers from Labor Day start coming into focus next week.

The county has reported more than 256,000 infections — about one-third of the state’s more than 773,000 cases. And L.A. County accounts for more than 40% the state’s deaths, which are nearing 15,000.

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