Marin Independent Journal

Enforcemen­t of indoor vaccine mandates proves uneven in US

- By Caleb Jones and Olga R. Rodriguez

HONOLULU >> Go out for a night on the town in some U.S. cities and you might find yourself waiting while someone at the door of the restaurant or theater closely inspects your vaccinatio­n card and checks it against your photo ID. Or, conversely, you might be waved right through just by flashing your card.

How rigorously vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts are being enforced varies from place to place, even within the same state or city.

Proof of vaccinatio­n is required in several American cities to get into restaurant­s and bars, enjoy a concert or a play, catch a movie or go to a ballgame.

Ticket agents dutifully ascertain the vaccinatio­n status of everyone passing through the turnstile at pro sports venues in some cities from Seattle and New York, and restaurant hosts do the same in many places. In other locations, vaccine checks are cursory at best. Sometimes it’s practicall­y done on the honor system.

“There are some businesses that say they check for vaccinatio­n proof, but they are not even checking,” said Jay Matsler, of Palm Springs, California, who was visiting San Francisco’s Fisherman’s Wharf with his partner during a stop of their cruise along the California coast.

“We actually tell them, ‘I’m sorry, you’re not enforcing this. We’re not going to give you our business,’” Matsler said. He said they were recently in Prague and Paris and had to show their vaccinatio­n cards and IDs at every indoor space they visited.

Some places around the U.S. are afraid of losing business if they insist on proof. Some say they don’t

have enough staff to conduct such checks amid a nationwide labor shortage. Some object on principle.

And some don’t want to risk ugly confrontat­ions. At an Italian restaurant in New York City, a request that a group of customers show vaccinatio­n proof led to a brawl.

During the first month enforcemen­t in New York, inspectors issued warnings to 6,000 businesses for not checking patrons’ status, and 15 were fined $1,000 for being repeat offenders. The indoor dining area at an In-N-Out Burger joint in San Francisco was shut down this month by health authoritie­s for not demanding proof of vaccinatio­n.

Public health authoritie­s see the requiremen­ts as vital tools in slowing COVID-19 at a time when 1,500 or more Americans are dying each day from the virus. Such rules face deep opposition in conservati­ve states, meaning they are mainly in effect in Democratic-run locations.

At the Highway Inn restaurant in Honolulu on Monday, the hostess asked diners for proof of vaccinatio­n or a negative test before seating them indoors. The informatio­n on their

cards must match their IDs, and they must also give contact informatio­n that the restaurant keeps on record for two weeks in case of an outbreak.

Russell Ryan, the restaurant’s co-owner, said business declined when the vaccine requiremen­t for restaurant­s first went into effect in mid-September. A few unvaccinat­ed people “stormed off in a huff,” he said, but most have complied, and business has returned as more people have gotten vaccinated.

“Generally, it has been less confrontat­ional than we feared,” Ryan said. “We thought that we’d get some zealots who want to make a stand for whatever reason.”

In many places in the U.S., precisely how to enforce the vaccinatio­n rule is left up to businesses.

At a movie theater on a recent night in San Francisco, teenagers at the concession stand glanced at patrons’ cellphone photos of their vaccinatio­n cards before handing them their popcorn, candy and drinks.

At the city’s Opera House, however, an usher closely examines the proof of vaccinatio­n and compares it against a picture

ID. Anyone who fails to show proof will be asked to leave.

San Francisco health inspectors checking on the food permits of restaurant­s also routinely look to see whether businesses are complying with the proofof-vaccinatio­n rules, but the city relies largely on complaints of violations phoned in to its 311 line.

Since the city’s mandate went into effect on Aug. 20, only one restaurant has been penalized — the In-NOut at Fisherman’s Wharf that was closed for the day on Oct. 14 after refusing to ask for proof of vaccinatio­n despite several warnings from the city. The burger place now serves only takeout. A spokesman said the company refuses to be “the vaccinatio­n police for any government.”

In Los Angeles County, health inspectors found 38 venues that needed more training on vaccine rules out of about 250 bars, lounges, nightclubs, breweries, wineries and distilleri­es checked between Oct. 8 and Oct. 17. When the county visited 78 bars the next week, they found about 15% of them weren’t in compliance with customer vaccine verificati­on rules, triggering more training.

New Orleans is also among the big cities that have imposed such rules, and Los Angeles plans to roll out its own requiremen­ts next week.

In New York City, big venues, like Broadway theaters and museums, tend to enforce the rules strictly. A neighborho­od cafe might not.

“The vast, vast, vast majority of restaurant­s and all the other businesses are saying, ‘Yes, we’re going to work with this. We’re going to make it work for our employees, for our customers, keep everyone safe,’” Mayor Bill de Blasio said.

 ?? CALEB JONES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Highway Inn restaurant hostess Ku’uipo Lorenzo, left, checks a COVID-19 test result from Martin Day, center, as his wife, Ashley Day, right, prepares to show her vaccinatio­n card on Monday in Honolulu.
CALEB JONES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Highway Inn restaurant hostess Ku’uipo Lorenzo, left, checks a COVID-19 test result from Martin Day, center, as his wife, Ashley Day, right, prepares to show her vaccinatio­n card on Monday in Honolulu.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States