Marysville Appeal-Democrat

California theme parks, stadiums can reopen as early as April 1

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

California theme parks and sports stadiums will be allowed to welcome back visitors far sooner than expected under new guidance the state unveiled Friday.

While the changes don’t mean it’ll be business as usual at large-capacity facilities, they do reflect the state’s growing sentiment that, with case rates on the decline and the COVID-19 vaccine rollout continuing to ramp up, it is now possible to resume some activities — particular­ly those that can be held outdoors with additional safety modificati­ons.

“Throughout the pandemic, California’s business community has been committed to protecting the health and safety of workers and customers — and that won’t change now,” Dee Dee Myers, senior advisor to Gov. Gavin Newsom and director of the governor’s Office of Business and Economic Developmen­t, said in a statement Friday. “We will continue to work together with our partners across all sectors of the economy as we reopen safely, sustainabl­y and equitably.”

Starting April 1, amusement parks will be eligible to reopen with limited capacity in counties that are in the red tier — the secondstri­ctest of California’s four-category reopening roadmap.

Capacity will be limited to 15% for parks in the red tier; the cap rises to 25% once a county progresses to the orange tier and 35% upon reaching the most lenient tier, yellow.

Officials said attendance will be limited to instate visitors. Other restrictio­ns will include no indoor dining and limits on indoor rides, though details were not immediatel­y available.

Outdoor sports — with fans — and live performanc­es also will be allowed to resume April 1, subject to the following limitation­s:

For counties in the strictest tier, purple, capacity will be limited to 100 people or fewer, and attendance will be regionally limited. Advanced reservatio­ns will be required, and there will be no concession or concourse sales.in the red tier, capacity will be limited to 20%, with primarily in-seat concession sales. The capacity limit will rise to 33% for counties in the orange tier and 67% for those in the yellow. Attendance will be limited to in-state visitors in the red, orange and yellow tiers.counties that have entered the red tier include Santa Clara, home to California’s Great America.

Three counties in Southern California with large theme parks — Los

Angeles, Orange and San Diego counties — are in the purple tier and will not be able to immediatel­y open. How soon those areas could reopen depends, in part, on when California can administer an additional 400,000 vaccinatio­ns to people living in the state’s lowestinco­me areas, which will trigger a broad relaxation of the opening criteria.

Even when meeting the state’s threshold, counties have the authority to impose stricter limits than authorized by the state.

Newsom administra­tion officials said the changes are being made with a clearer understand­ing of how fresh circulatin­g air, masking and maintainin­g physical distancing all help blunt transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s.

“With case rates and hospitaliz­ations significan­tly lower, the arrival of three highly effective vaccines and targeted efforts aimed at vaccinatin­g the most vulnerable communitie­s, California can begin gradually and safely bringing back more activities, especially those that occur outdoors and where consistent masking is possible,” Dr. Mark Ghaly, California’s health and human services secretary, said in a statement. “Even with these changes, California retains some of the most robust public health protocols in the country.”

The announceme­nt represents one of the most aggressive relaxation­s of California’s coronaviru­s restrictio­ns since the pandemic began.

Under the state’s original blueprint, large amusement and theme parks such as Disneyland and Six

Flags Magic Mountain were not allowed to reopen until their home county progressed to the yellow tier — which would require an adjusted coronaviru­s case rate of fewer than 1 new case per day per 100,000 people.

The red tier, by comparison, requires an adjusted daily coronaviru­s case rate at or below 7.0 new cases per day per 100,000 people.

Reaching the red tier should become easier under another change the state unveiled this week.

California will now dedicate 40% of available COVID-19 vaccine to residents in the state’s most disadvanta­ged areas — including South Los Angeles, East L.A., Koreatown, Compton, southeast L.A. County, Santa Ana and the eastern San Fernando Valley.

Once 2 million doses have been administer­ed in these communitie­s, the state will relax the threshold to enter the red tier, allowing counties to progress with a rate of up to 10 new cases per day per 100,000 people.

Los Angeles and Orange counties — home to some of California’s largest and most beloved theme parks — already meet that revised case criterion, positionin­g them to move into the red tier within a week or two.

 ?? Tribune News Service/los Angeles Times ?? Dancers join Mickey Mouse at the new daytime parade at Disneyland in Anaheim.
Tribune News Service/los Angeles Times Dancers join Mickey Mouse at the new daytime parade at Disneyland in Anaheim.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States