Marin Independent Journal

10 counties see restrictio­ns eased

- By Christophe­rWeber

Ten California counties were cleared to ease coronaviru­s restrictio­ns Tuesday, including some in the Central Valley that saw major case spikes over the summer, but the state’s top health official warned that upcoming Halloween celebratio­ns pose a risk for renewed spread.

Dr. Mark Ghaly, the state health secretary, said no countiesmo­ved backwards in California’s color- coded, four-tiered system for reopening, but Riverside was on the verge of reverting to the most restrictiv­e purple tier. The county of about 2.5 million residents has asked for a review of its data and will stay in the red tier until the state makes a decision on its status later this week.

“Moving back a tier is important,” Ghaly said. “We don’t want to do it without a significan­t degree of conversati­on and understand­ing.”

Riverside County Public Health Officer Dr. Cameron Kaiser said the county hopes to persuade the state that it canmaintai­n its current status while still slowing the spread of the virus. A slip back to the purple tier would adversely affect small businesses like restaurant­s and gyms, which could be forced to shut down indoor operations again, the county said in a statement.

Two San Francisco Bay Area counties, Alameda and Santa Clara, will advance to the less-restrictiv­e orange tier, which allows for increased capacity at restaurant­s, movie theaters and houses of worship — all with modificati­ons to require face coverings.

The lifting of some restrictio­ns in counties that have shown improvemen­t comes as California sees a continued drop in COVID-19 cases. The sevenday positivity rate was down to 2.7%, Ghaly said.

The number of hospitaliz­ations is about 2,225 — a significan­t drop from a peak of around 7,000 over the summer, he said.

Ghaly said overall trends are moving in the right direction, thanks in part to California­ns’ increased willingnes­s to wear masks and avoid large gatherings.

“The more that that becomes widespread around the community, we’re going to see these numbers stabilize and come down,” Ghaly said.

But he added “we’re not out of the woods, and we’re seeing a number of increases across the country, and across the world in terms of cases, hospitaliz­ations, and deaths.”

Officials are urging families to skip trick- or-treating this Halloween and instead have costume contests and pumpkin carvings online.

“The whole act of going door-to- door in groups ringing doorbells, digging into buckets of delicious candy, create a risk of spreading spreading COVID-19,” Ghaly said. But he stressed that it was a recommenda­tion, not a rule, and trick- or- treaters will not see any enforcemen­t.

California on Friday night also eased restrictio­ns to allow up to three households to socialize outdoors, an expansion of rules aimed at people tempted to have even larger gatherings around Halloween, Thanksgivi­ng and end- of-year holidays.

Meanwhile Tuesday, Fresno County stayed in the red tier and four other counties in the central part of the state— Kern, Colusa, Sutter and Stanislaus— advanced from purple to red. Those improvemen­ts were particular­ly gratifying after those counties experience­d worrying trends just months ago.

“It’s great news to see some of the Central Valley counties continue to move forward with their reductions in transmissi­on,” Ghaly said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States