Los Angeles Times

S.F. on pace to resume indoor dining

The city could move into next tier this month if virus rates continue to drop.

- By Maura Dolan

San Francisco will allow inside dining at restaurant­s when the city moves into the next tier of reopenings, possibly by the end of the month, city officials said Friday.

Indoor dining will be limited to 25% capacity, up to 100 people. The Department of Public Health is working with the restaurant industry to develop health and safety guidelines for the reopening.

“Restaurant­s have been hit hard by COVID-19,” Mayor London Breed said in a news release. “Many have adapted with takeout and outdoor dining, but they’ve still been barely hanging on and, sadly, some have closed for good.”

California has establishe­d color-coded tiers for reopening. San Francisco is now in the red zone, the second most-restricted tier, indicating transmissi­on of the virus is substantia­l.

City officials said restaurant­s can reopen for indoor dining when the city moves into the less-restrictiv­e orange tier, which “will occur no sooner than the end of the month,” the release said.

Under the current system, counties are allowed to reopen indoor dining at limited capacity while in the red tier.

However, San Francisco — the second densest city in the country after New York — has moved more slowly than other places to reopen, following its own local health indicators rather than the state’s.

“Our measured approach to reopening is grounded in science and facts, and science clearly tells us that indoor activities come with additional risk,” said Dr. Tomás Aragón, the city’s health officer.

“We must work with the restaurant­s and business owners to implement strong safety protocols that help mitigate this additional risk and protect the safety of our employees, customers and the community.”

City officials said inclassroo­m instructio­n with limited capacity would resume Monday for schools that have submitted safety plans and received approval.

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