Los Angeles Times

2,000 L.A. police, sheriff ’s workers are out with virus

- By Richard Winton

More than 2,000 employees of the Los Angeles Police Department and Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department are at home sick or quarantini­ng after testing positive for the coronaviru­s, officials said Wednesday.

LAPD Det. Meghan Aguilar said that 1,134 personnel out of 12,200 are currently at home, including 898 sworn officers. Those numbers are up 42% from the 803 personnel who were out Jan. 11.

On average, an LAPD officer sidelined with a coronaviru­s infection is missing 20 days of work and a civilian employee is missing 33 days, Aguilar said. Officials noted that average includes some personnel with longterm COVID-19 cases who have spent months recuperati­ng.

The new figures represent a massive increase from the 82 new cases among LAPD personnel during the week ending Christmas, and from fewer than 30 new cases per week as recently as a month ago.

On Wednesday, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department had 874 personnel quarantine­d out of about 18,000 employees, with 618 sworn deputies among them.

The LAPD has seen a surge in the number of vaccinated officers and other employees testing positive this month.

On Jan. 1, 22.2% of those testing positive were vaccinated, but by Jan. 15 that number had risen to 43.3%.

The Omicron variant of the coronaviru­s is causing more breakthrou­gh cases among vaccinated personnel but also producing less severe symptoms, officials said.

Early this month, LAPD Chief Michel Moore appeared with Mayor Eric Garcetti and Los Angeles Fire Chief Ralph Terrazas to reassure residents that the agencies were still filling patrol shifts and responding to fires despite the increasing numbers of ill and quarantini­ng officers, firefighte­rs and paramedics in the city.

At that time, there were just over 500 LAPD personnel out, fewer than half of this week’s number.

COVID-19 was the leading cause of death last year for law enforcemen­t officers in the U.S., with 301 dying of the disease, according to the National Law Enforcemen­t Memorial and Museum.

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