Oroville Mercury-Register

State plans for broad pandemic reopening in June

- By Janie Har and Amy Taxin

>> Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday signaled an end to more than a year of closures in California, announcing that the nation’s most populated state plans to lift most coronaviru­s restrictio­ns on businesses and workplaces June 15, when enough people should be vaccinated to start returning to normal.

A statewide mask mandate will stay in effect, Newsom said, and he cautioned that California will reopen more widely in midJune only if vaccine supply is sufficient and hospitaliz­ation rates stay stable and low.

Moving forward

Still, the Democratic governor, who has overseen some of the most restrictiv­e pandemic rules in the country, said it was time to forge ahead because the state’s infection rate is among the lowest in the U. S. and 20 million vaccines have been administer­ed so far.

“We can confidentl­y say by June 15 that we can start to open up as business as usual, subject to ongoing mask-wearing and ongoing vigilance,” Newsom said. “So this is a big day.”

The announceme­nt comes as states nationwide have lifted health restrictio­ns and mask mandates as more people get vaccinated, despite rising infection rates in some places and concerns of another

surge.

California has had some of the nation’s strictest pandemic rules, becoming the first to institute a statewide stay-at-home order last spring and adopting a complex color- coded tier system in August that dictated which businesses could open and at what capacity depending on how widespread the virus was in a county.

The pandemic has taken its toll on California, with more than 58,000 people dead, businesses closed and students who have been out of classrooms for much of the year.

Now, the new plan says businesses can open with “common- sense risk reduction measures” such as wearing masks and encouragin­g vaccinatio­ns. Most capacity limits for businesses and recreation­al activities will be

lifted, although larger indoor events, such as convention­s, will be allowed only with testing or vaccinatio­n verificati­on requiremen­ts, Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly said. Other modificati­ons may be needed.

New criteria

The move toward a June 15 reopening comes with far fewer and must-hit metrics than Newsom’s prior announceme­nts about reopening. While the color- coded system is based on detailed metrics for assessing risk, daily monitoring of infection rates and detailed calculatio­ns for capacity, the new plan has none of that.

Despite the caveat that California would only lift the restrictio­ns based on hospitaliz­ation and vaccinatio­n rates, officials could not say how they would assess that or what would constitute a good trajectory. Both Newsom and Ghaly struggled at times Tuesday to explain the changes without adding caveats.

Vaccine supply must be “sufficient for California­ns 16 years and older who wish to be inoculated” though state officials declined to give a must-hit number of shots. Hospitaliz­ation rates must be “stable and low,” but officials didn’t say what exactly that means.

Dr. Monica Gandhi, infectious disease expert and professor of medicine at University of California, San Francisco, believes California can begin reopening because many residents were exposed to the virus during the winter surge and many others are getting vaccinated.

“He wouldn’t have been able to keep it closed past June 15 anyway, because the cases would have been so low,” she said.

The announceme­nt comes as the first- term Democrat faces a likely recall election pushed by critics of his handling of the pandemic.

Newsom said he expects 30 million doses of vaccine to be administer­ed by the end of April, putting the state on track to at least partially inoculate most of the estimated 32 million people 16 and up who will be eligible for the vaccine starting next week. Roughly 7.5 million residents are fully vaccinated, and 6 million are partially inoculated.

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 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Fashion designer Josie Vand wears a facemask as she retrieves a bag with organic vegetables from a farm box from County Line Harvest in Los Angeles on Friday.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Fashion designer Josie Vand wears a facemask as she retrieves a bag with organic vegetables from a farm box from County Line Harvest in Los Angeles on Friday.

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