Los Angeles Times

Officials face fresh ire over new rules

Kuehl is latest to be targeted by protesters after backing dining and other restrictio­ns.

- By Lila Seidman and Jaclyn Cosgrove

As coronaviru­s cases soar to dangerous new levels in Los Angeles County, some top officials are facing backlash over their push to slow the surge by restrictin­g public activities.

On Sunday, protesters marched in front of the home of Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer.

Days later, a handful of people gathered outside Los Angeles County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl’s house in Santa Monica.

Both demonstrat­ions, in which the majority of people were unmasked, were fairly small, but they ref lect growing political division and vitriol over restrictio­ns from a segment of the population weary and skeptical of such measures despite the growing health risk.

Tuesday’s protest at Kuehl’s home came on the heels of news that she dined out at a Santa Monica restaurant on Nov. 24, hours after voting to uphold a county ban on outdoor dining.

Kuehl did not violate any county rules because outdoor dining was still permitted at the time.

Kuehl confirmed that she did dine alfresco at Il Forno Trattoria near her house in Santa Monica on the day she and two other county supervisor­s voted to shut down outdoor dining.

“She loves Il Forno, has been saddened to see it, like so many restaurant­s, suffer from a decline in revenue,” Kuehl’s communicat­ions director, Barbara Osborn, said in a statement.

According to the statement, Kuehl took appropriat­e precaution­s while dining on the last day permissibl­e,

“and sadly will not dine there again until our public health orders permit.”

The closure was imposed by L. A. County Department of Public Health officials, not the supervisor­s, but there was a motion at the Nov. 24 meeting by Supervisor­s Kathryn Barger and Janice Hahn to overturn the recommenda­tion. The motion, however, was voted down, with Kuehl and Supervisor­s Hilda Solis and Mark RidleyThom­as opposing it.

“This is the only business that allows its customers to remain, and often for quite a while, unmasked,” Kuehl said of restaurant­s at the meeting last week. “And that, I think, is enough to single it out right there. We tried, but the numbers have gone up.”

But protesters did not agree.

“If you make a rule, you should follow it yourself,” screamed one woman while standing on the sidewalk across from Kuehl’s house Tuesday on a quiet Santa Monica street. The woman, like a half- dozen or so other protesters, declined to give her name.

Another protester said county health officials weren’t providing enough evidence to justify the dining ban, along with other restrictio­ns, including a slightly less strict stay- athome order than what was mandated in the spring.

“There’s no proof that I’m aware of that outdoor dining is dangerous,” she said. “And all the people who are working [ at the restaurant­s], many of them are low- income people; they’re going to be penalized the most.”

It was a similar argument made by a large industry group representi­ng restaurant­s in a suit against county health officials last week. However, an L. A. County Superior Court judge rejected the California Restaurant Assn.’ s claim that the public health department needed to provide proof for the ban to go forward.

Larry Aaronson, a Santa Monica resident who stopped to talk to the protesters, said he thought the county would be in better shape now if a lockdown had happened sooner.

His local business, Eco Coastal Cleaners, has suffered tremendous­ly amid the pandemic, but he said he trusted that public health officials were doing the right thing.

“If it was shut down properly, if people were wearing masks from the very beginning, my business would be better by now,” he said.

The protest outside Kuehl’s home followed similar backlash against other government officials as they work to stem the spread of the virus, which continues to rage unabated in the state.

The measures, which many health experts say are needed to avoid overwhelmi­ng hospitals as COVID- 19 hits unpreceden­ted levels, have caused economic misery for some businesses.

Added to that is the backlash over the behavior of some politician­s, most notably Gov. Gavin Newsom and his now infamous dinner at the French Laundry restaurant in Napa County. Newsom has since expressed regret for attending a birthday party for his political advisor, Jason Kinney, at the restaurant in Yountville on Nov. 6.

San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo took to social media Tuesday to apologize for defying health orders by attending a Thanksgivi­ng gathering with people from five households.

“I understand my obligation as a public official to provide exemplary compliance with public health orders, & not to ignore them. I commit to do better,” he said in his Twitter mea culpa.

The state currently allows people from no more than three households at any outdoor gathering, and Liccardo himself urged people not to attend large gatherings in a tweet the day before Thanksgivi­ng.

Hours after that statement, the San Francisco Chronicle reported that Mayor London Breed attended a dinner at the French Laundry a day after Newsom.

Her spokesman called it a “small family birthday dinner,” but gave no further details.

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? A HANDFUL of protesters gather outside the home of county Supervisor Sheila Kuehl in Santa Monica.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times A HANDFUL of protesters gather outside the home of county Supervisor Sheila Kuehl in Santa Monica.
 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? SUPERVISOR Sheila Kuehl dined at Il Forno Trattoria on Nov. 24, hours after she voted to uphold a ban on outdoor dining. The order began 10 p. m. Nov. 25.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times SUPERVISOR Sheila Kuehl dined at Il Forno Trattoria on Nov. 24, hours after she voted to uphold a ban on outdoor dining. The order began 10 p. m. Nov. 25.

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