Marysville Appeal-Democrat

California hits target of 2 million vaccines in low-income areas

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — California has met its initial target for administer­ing more COVID-19 vaccines in the hardest-hit and most disadvanta­ged areas. The milestone marks the state’s effort to more equitably distribute the doses and also clears the way for significan­t economic reopenings.

With 2 million doses now having gone into the arms of residents living in targeted communitie­s statewide, officials are set to loosen the criteria necessary for counties to exit the strictest category of California’s four-tier reopening blueprint.

The change allows some large urban counties, such as Orange, to exit the proscripti­ve purple tier for the first time in months and others, including Los Angeles and San Bernardino, to do so for the first time since the colorcoded system was unveiled in late August.

Moving into the less strict red tier means those three counties — along with nine others, according to a Los Angeles

Times’ data analysis — will be permitted to resume indoor dining at restaurant­s and movie theater showings at 25% capacity, welcome students in grades 7 through 12 back for in-person classes, reopen indoor gyms and dance and yoga studios at 10% capacity, and expand the maximum allowable capacity at nonessenti­al stores and libraries within the next few days.

Museums, zoos and aquariums also can reopen indoor operations in the red tier, at 25% capacity.

Amusement parks can also reopen at 15% capacity with other modificati­ons in red tier counties starting April 1. Long-closed attraction­s such as Disneyland, Universal Studios, Knott’s Berry Farm and Six Flags Magic Mountain are weeks away from again welcoming visitors — who must be California residents — after being closed for nearly a year.

How widely to reopen ultimately is up to local health officials, however, as they can adopt rules that are stricter than the state.

While some counties have clamored throughout the pandemic for wider latitude to more widely reopen their economies, others have adopted a slower approach.

Officials in L.A. County, the nation’s most populous, confirmed they will widely align with the state’s red-tier rules once the region officially advances. Wider reopenings will be possible starting Monday, they said.

“This milestone is the result of businesses and individual­s working together and doing their part to prevent COVID-19 from spreading,” county Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said in a statement. “It will be up to everyone — businesses and residents — to continue driving down transmissi­on and to follow safety directives closely to keep everyone as safe as possible by preventing increases in cases. When even relatively small numbers of businesses and individual­s fail to adhere to the safety precaution­s, many others experience tragic consequenc­es.”

County Supervisor Hilda Solis called the move “welcome news, especially as many of our small businesses have borne the brunt of the financial fallout from this pandemic, and as our students struggle to keep up with distance learning.”

“We have achieved this milestone and moved down to the red tier because as a county, we worked hard, looked out for one another and came together to defeat the dark winter surge,” she said in a statement. “Although we are taking steps to reopen some of the hardest-hit sectors of our economy, that in no way means we can drop our guard now. We owe it to our neighbors, our local businesses and our children to remain vigilant so that the reopenings are safe and long-lasting. Wearing masks and physical distancing remain critical.”

The accelerate­d advancemen­t in L.A. and elsewhere is made possible through a revision to California’s reopening road map that was unveiled last week.

In a bid to address inequities in its vaccine rollout, the state is now earmarking 40% of available supplies to be administer­ed to residents in the neediest areas, as identified by a socioecono­mic measuremen­t tool called the California Healthy Places index.

Specifical­ly, those doses would go to communitie­s in the lowest quartile of the index — which includes roughly 400 ZIP Codes throughout the state in places such as South Los Angeles, the Eastside, Koreatown, Chinatown, Compton, southeast L.A. County, the eastern San Fernando Valley, Santa Ana, and a number of heavily Latino communitie­s along the 10 Freeway corridor between Pomona and San Bernardino.

As part of the new targeted strategy, the state set goals of administer­ing first 2 million doses in those areas, then 4 million. After reaching each mark, California aims to redraft its reopening road map to make it easier for counties to more widely resume economic operations.

The state system categorize­s counties into one of four colorcoded tiers based on a few factors: testing positivity rates, a health equity metric intended to ensure that the positivity rate in poorer communitie­s is not significan­tly worse than the county’s overall figure, and, crucially in terms of wider reopenings, case rates.

Originally, counties had to record a rate — adjusted based on the number of tests performed — at or below 7.0 new coronaviru­s cases per day per 100,000 people to move from the purple to the red tier.

With the state having met its 2-million dose goal, counties with a case rate of up to 10 new cases per day per 100,000 people are now eligible to advance. Counties still need to log two consecutiv­e weeks of sufficient­ly low case rates to move forward.

A dozen counties have met that criteria: Los Angeles, Orange,

San Bernardino, Contra Costa, Sonoma, Placer, Mendocino,

San Benito, Tuolumne, Siskiyou, Colusa and Mono.

Eleven more — San Diego, Riverside, Sacramento, Ventura, Tulare, Santa Barbara, Monterey, Sutter, Yuba, Lake and Tehama — have recorded one week’s worth of red-level data and would need to hit the mark again next week to progress.

Should they do so, that would swell the number of nonpurple counties to 47, home to a combined 90% of the state’s population.

When the state reaches its goal of administer­ing 4 million doses in the hardest-hit areas, the threshold to move into the evenmore-lenient orange tier would be relaxed from a requiremen­t of under 4 daily new cases per 100,0000 residents to under 6. Entering the least restrictiv­e yellow tier would necessitat­e an adjusted case rate below 2 daily new cases per 100,000 people, compared with the current requiremen­t of less than 1.

Gov. Gavin Newsom said this week that the state is also working on a new green tier “in anticipati­on of this bright light now at the end of this tunnel,” though he didn’t specify what that would look like.

“As we start to reopen, as we get to 10, 15, 20 million vaccinatio­ns, get closer and closer (to) herd immunity, then we will start to make it clear that these tiers were temporary,” he said. “They’re not permanent, and there’s something beyond orange and yellow.”

 ??  ??
 ?? Tribune News Service/los Angeles Times ?? A’ja Thrasher, 37, of Los Angeles, gets a one-dose COVID-19 vaccine by Johnson & Johnson from nurse Leshay Brown, left, at the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza in Los Angeles on March 11..
Tribune News Service/los Angeles Times A’ja Thrasher, 37, of Los Angeles, gets a one-dose COVID-19 vaccine by Johnson & Johnson from nurse Leshay Brown, left, at the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza in Los Angeles on March 11..

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States