Porterville Recorder

Newsom halts indoor activities

Tulare County among 19 counties affected by new restrictio­ns

- By TARYN LUNA and PHIL WILLON

Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday ordered tougher restrictio­ns for much of the state, requiring 19 counties, including Tulare County, experienci­ng increased spread of coronaviru­s to halt visits to indoor restaurant­s, wineries and tasting rooms, entertainm­ent centers, movie theaters, zoos, museums and card rooms.

The governor is imposing the restrictio­ns on indoor activities in advance of the July 4 holiday weekend, when officials fear disaster if California­ns continue to ignore safety guidelines and businesses remain open in areas already experienci­ng significan­t spikes in COVID-19 infections. Newsom is also recommendi­ng the cancellati­on of all fireworks shows on the Fourth of July in the affected counties, and is urging all California­ns to rethink having large gettogethe­rs with friends and neighbors to celebrate the holiday.

“This doesn’t mean restaurant­s are shut down,” Newsom said. “It means that we’re trying to take the activities, as many activities as we can — these mixed activities, these concentrat­ed activities — and move them outdoors, which is a way of mitigating the spread of this virus.”

Newsom said his order closes indoor activities in Contra Costa, Fresno, Glenn, Imperial, Kern, Kings, Los Angeles, Merced, Orange, Riverside, Sacramento, San Bernardino,

San Joaquin, Santa Barbara, Santa Clara, Solano, Stanislaus, Tulare and Ventura counties.

The change marks a major reversal in the state’s reopening process that began in early May and quickly progressed by June 12 to allow retail stores, dinein restaurant­s, bars, religious services, card rooms, hair and nail salons, gyms and other businesses to open again with modificati­ons in counties that met state guidelines.

Los Angeles County received the green light from the state to open dine-in restaurant­s on May 29, more than two weeks after other counties were permitted to do so under California’s regional reopening plan.

State officials have long anticipate­d that reopening would lead to an increase in cases and risk of more deaths. Newsom began sounding the alarm about growing spread of the virus on June 18 by requiring California­ns to wear masks in public and high-risk settings.

But the state continued to speed up the reopening process and allowed personal care services in one of the highestris­k sectors, such as nail salons, massage parlors, tattoo shops and waxing services, to resume in counties the next day.

The state took action on Sunday to “toggle back” reopening for the first time when it demanded a limited closure of bars in seven counties that are experienci­ng prolonged increases in

virus transmissi­on.

Under new standards to reverse reopening at the local level, a county is flagged and placed on the state’s watch list if it reports an elevated transmissi­on of the disease, defined as two-week average of more than 100 cases per 100,000 residents, or more than 25 cases per 100,000 residents and a weekly average positivity rate of at least 8%. A hospitaliz­ation rate increase of an average of more than 10% over three days, or a drop in hospital capacity to fewer than 20% of beds or fewer than 25% of ventilator­s available could also result in a county landing on the watch list.

The state is providing outreach to counties experienci­ng trouble. State guidance says such counties should consider adopting parts of the stay-at-home order again if they fail to make progress on containing the disease or lowering hospitaliz­ations, or the state public health officer may take action to do so for them.

Newsom has so far resisted using a heavyhande­d approach when it comes to enforcing his coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, however, choosing instead to encourage compliance and educate residents about the benefits of safeguards against spread of the virus.

Still, Newsom has threatened to cut state funding targeting the coronaviru­s in counties that openly ignore the state’s mandates to stem the spread of COVID-19.

He also has said both state and local regulatory agencies could be called upon to “exercise a little bit of persuasion.” On the state level, that could include the Division of Occupation­al Safety and Health, which enforces workplace safety requiremen­ts, and the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, which regulates the sale of alcohol in bars and restaurant­s.

Brian Vaughan, the public health officer in Northern California’s Yolo County, said that an uptick in the coronaviru­s has always been planned for, especially since many epidemiolo­gical experts expected another surge in COVID-19 infections to hit eventually. In an interview in June, Vaughn, said he expects residents to understand the severity of the situation and to act accordingl­y if tougher restrictio­ns are reimposed.

“The seriousnes­s in which our community has addressed it was a huge reason why we were able to flatten our curve and we didn’t see a big spike,” Vaughn said. “So I would assume that, if we’re being transparen­t we’re sharing our data, and things start ticking up in terms of infections that the community would be behind us.”

More than 500 hospital patients have been transferre­d out of the county to relieve pressure on medical facilities in the rural county. Newsom recommende­d the county reimpose a strict stay-at-home order, mandating that all residents not classified as essential workers remain at home expect for trips to buy groceries, seek medical care and care for other critical needs.

The governor’s mask order also faced backlash in some parts of the state almost immediatel­y. Sheriffs in Orange, Riverside, Fresno and Sacramento counties, among others, said they would not enforce the Newsom administra­tion’s mask order despite the fact that violating the mandate is a misdemeano­r and could financial penalties.

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