Los Angeles Times

Yolo caps gatherings at 16 people

- By Hayley Smith

Officials in Yolo County have taken California’s coronaviru­s restrictio­ns a step further by placing a hard limit on socially distant gatherings. A health order issued last week said celebratio­ns and get- togethers must be capped at 16 people.

The Northern California county, which is primarily rural but includes the university town of Davis and parts of Greater Sacramento, enacted the new rules in an effort to avoid sliding back into the purple tier of the state’s colorcoded reopening system, which indicates the highest widespread risk of local infection.

Yolo County has been in the red tier, the second- most restrictiv­e coronaviru­s category, since Sept. 29.

The move is an enhancemen­t of California’s own revised guidelines, which were issued by Gov. Gavin Newsom on Oct. 9.

In advance of the holidays, the changes permit social gatherings for the f irst time since the state shut down in March but restrict groups to three households or fewer.

Yolo County spokeswoma­n Jenny Tan said local public health officials wanted to be more specific because the term “household” can apply to multigener­ational homes, which are often composed of many relatives and family members, or even fraternity and sorority houses on the UC Davis campus.

“When the state said ‘ maximum three households,’ well, that could mean 50 or 60 people are gathered,” Tan said. “We had to be smart about this. We know that people are going to gather, so how can we do it more safely?”

Yolo County’s health order includes other state guidelines, including twohour time limits for gatherings, and requiremen­ts that meet- ups be held outdoors.

The county’s 16- person cap will account for everyone present, including hosts and attendees — although officials said they would rather people not congregate at all.

“The more people interact and the longer they interact, the higher the risk of getting and spreading COVID- 19,” the order says. “The Yolo County health off icer strongly discourage­s gatherings of any size.”

At current levels, the 220,000- person county is seeing 5.3 new coronaviru­s cases a day for every 100,000 residents, according to the

California Department of Public Health, and 2.7% of its coronaviru­s tests return positive. That’s up from 2.4% two weeks ago.

The county has had more than 3,000 cases of COVID- 19 to date, and 58 people have died.

Despite rising case rates, not all Yolo County residents are on board with the new guidelines.

Multiple residents on the county’s Facebook page said they don’t see the difference between being around people in big- box stores ( an activity that is allowed) and gathering with loved ones at home.

Others said they won’t be following the recommenda­tions at all.

Gary Sandy, chairman of the county’s Board of Supervisor­s, said that although most people he encounters are in agreement with the guidelines, he is often “f labbergast­ed” by the degree to which they are politicize­d online.

“We seem to have lost this whole sense of public health in general, and how you would get to a pandemic other than the way we’re trying to do it,” he said.

Sandy recalled people eagerly lining up to receive the sugar cube polio vaccine when he was in elementary school.

“Everyone understood this was part of their civic responsibi­lity, and everyone understood that you were doing it to safeguard not only yourself but your entire community from the spread of a disease,” he said. “Somehow, that has really gone off the tracks.”

The new rules will be enforced primarily through educationa­l outreach and a complaint- driven approach, Sandy said, with violations considered a misdemeano­r.

The county previously passed an ordinance that allows for $ 10,000 fines for businesses that don’t comply with health orders.

Though there has been some resistance online, other Yolo County residents said the new limitation­s are a smart move.

“In reality, they are not quite restrictiv­e, although many are making it seem that way,” 15- year resident Juan Pi- Sánchez said Thursday.

Pi- Sánchez said his family members have “severely” socially distanced themselves and have been careful to follow the county’s guidelines since the start of the pandemic.

“We are interested in contributi­ng to the well- being of others,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States