Los Angeles Times

S.F. celebrates more reopenings

But some officials warn of a COVID-19 resurgence if residents let their guard down.

- By Maura Dolan and Luke Money

City known for caution enters orange tier. For at least one expert, it’s still too soon.

SAN FRANCISCO — Known for their cautious approach throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, San Francisco’s leaders are cheering progress that allowed the city on Tuesday to move into California’s third of four tiers for reopening.

San Francisco, Marin and Santa Clara counties have joined San Mateo County in the state’s orange tier, representi­ng moderate risk of the virus.

The advancemen­t means businesses can serve more people indoors, bowling alleys can reopen, breweries and bars can offer drinks outdoors, and movie theaters can start selling popcorn again.

“San Francisco is going to come alive,” declared Mayor London Breed, who appeared at a news conference Tuesday in an orange dress to signify the city’s new status. She was joined by business leaders in hailing the new relaxed requiremen­ts.

Even San Francisco Public Health Director Dr. Grant Colfax, known for giving gloomy assessment­s during the pandemic, was upbeat.

“We are close to the finish line,” he said.

San Francisco is ahead of Los Angeles and Orange counties in advancing to the less-restrictiv­e orange tier, but both those counties are hopeful they will achieve that designatio­n next week.

“It’s certainly good news that we’re making progress,

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reducing transmissi­on across the county,” Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Tuesday. “However, we continue to remain concerned about the potential risks that can thwart our progress.”

Some experts continue to warn of another possible wave of coronaviru­s cases in late April, fueled by a highly infectious variant first detected in the U.K.

Vaccine availabili­ty is also a wild card. In the Bay Area, two counties, Contra Costa and Solano, have expanded eligibilit­y to people ages 50 and older, though Solano is facing a vaccine shortage.

Dr. John Swartzberg, a UC Berkeley infectious-disease expert, expressed dismay at the optimism of San Francisco officials.

“What is worrying me is that we are starting to open up quite quickly again with the storm still on the horizon,” he said in an interview after the news conference.

Swartzberg gave 60% odds of another “swell” of cases in California in late April. He noted that infections have started to plateau in the state and are rising in other parts of the country. The U.K. variant may be the dominant strain of the virus in California as early as the end of the month, he said.

California “should be moving in baby steps and not big steps,” he said, adding that many people misconstru­e what a finish line will look like.

“It will not mean we are COVID-free,” he said. “COVID is going to be background noise, just like influenza, and we are going to learn to live with it. We will be dealing with COVID for the indetermin­ate future.”

Over the last year, public health experts have praised San Francisco and the Bay Area for being more cautious than the state allowed. The region saw a surge in COVID-19 cases over the winter, but not to the degree that L.A. County was hit with hospitaliz­ations and deaths.

At the news conference, both Breed and Colfax tempered their cheer with advice that residents continue to wear masks, maintain distance, wash their hands often and get vaccinated when allowed.

“We need to double down on all our safety measures,” Colfax said.

Breed said nearly 40% of San Franciscan­s age 16 and older have been vaccinated, and nearly 80% of those 65 and older have received at least one dose.

Offices can now open at 25% capacity. Breed said she understood that some businesses would continue to allow employees to work remotely, but she hoped workers would “want to return to work and be around other folks.”

“Working at home is boring,” she said. “I want to be around people.”

Colfax noted that hospitaliz­ations for COVID-19 are at their lowest point in more than four months, with just 35 patients on average daily in San Francisco. New infections are down to about 31 a day, compared with 374 during the winter surge, he said.

Colfax even suggested that the city might soon move into the least restrictiv­e tier, yellow, allowing hotels, restaurant­s, fitness centers and other indoor establishm­ents to more fully reopen.

“Let’s hope we are seeing the color yellow in just a few weeks,” Colfax said.

Under the state’s reopening strategy, counties are sorted into four color-coded tiers; purple, in which coronaviru­s transmissi­on is considered widespread and indoor operations are severely limited or outright suspended across a wide array of business sectors; red, with fewer restrictio­ns; orange, with even fewer; and yellow, in which most businesses can open indoors with modificati­ons.

Tier assignment­s hinge on three factors: coronaviru­s case rates, adjusted based on the number of tests performed; the rate of positive test results; and a health equity metric intended to ensure that the positive test rate in poorer communitie­s is not significan­tly higher than a county’s overall figure.

While California has made tremendous progress following a COVID-19 surge in the fall and winter, the orange and yellow tiers remain a fairly exclusive club.

According to state data released Tuesday, three other counties — Trinity, Lassen and Yolo — will join San Francisco, Santa Clara and Marin in moving into the orange tier this week.

Already in that tier are Mariposa, Plumas and San Mateo counties. Just two counties, Alpine and Sierra, have made it to yellow.

San Francisco officials said they intend to allow outdoor arts, theater and musical performanc­es for audiences of up to 50 people starting April 1 and noted that they are developing guidelines for bringing back outdoor spectators and large outdoor entertainm­ent venues. Those sites may also reopen in April, with approved health and safety plans, assigned seating and restrictio­ns on capacity.

Most indoor businesses will be allowed to operate at 50% capacity, with some exceptions. Indoor dining will be expanded to 50% capacity or 200 patrons, and indoor gyms will be expanded to 25% capacity or 100 patrons. Group fitness classes may also resume at 25% capacity or 100 people, whichever is fewer.

Indoor museums, zoos and aquariums with an approved safety plan may expand to 50% customer capacity. Attendance at indoor houses of worship and funerals may rise to 50% capacity, with singing and chanting permitted by masked congregati­ons. Indoor movie theaters may also expand to 50% capacity, up to 200 people.

Child care and pre-kindergart­en programs may expand from 16 participan­ts of stable groups to the number allowed by licensing requiremen­ts.

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? SAN FRANCISCO’S North Beach neighborho­od, shown March 15, is poised to get livelier as the city relaxes its coronaviru­s restrictio­ns. At least one infectious-disease expert thinks reopening is happening too quickly.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times SAN FRANCISCO’S North Beach neighborho­od, shown March 15, is poised to get livelier as the city relaxes its coronaviru­s restrictio­ns. At least one infectious-disease expert thinks reopening is happening too quickly.

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