Porterville Recorder

California­ns eager to return to events

- By JANIE HAR and AMY TAXIN

SAN FRANCISCO — For the last year, Emily Redenbach has had to watch her beloved Los Angeles Kings hockey team play on television, without the camaraderi­e of fellow season ticket holders who have become her friends.

“It’s not the same, but that’s the closest I could get to having hockey,” said Redenbach, 35.

But starting April 15, Redenbach and other loyal sports fans may be able to return to a large arena to cheer on their team team after California lifts its ban on live indoor performanc­es as coronaviru­s rates remain low and vaccinatio­n numbers climb. The Kings, as well as the Golden State Warriors in San Francisco and the Los Angeles Lakers, have announced that they are working with local health officials to welcome back fans.

The return of live events and performanc­es and larger indoor private gatherings indoors comes as health officials warn of the possibilit­y of another surge, but it offers a glimmer of normalcy for residents after more than a year of fluctuatin­g restrictio­ns. More than 58,000 people in California have died from the virus, and several eastern states are seeing surges in cases driven by new virus variants.

Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administra­tion believes it is safe to reopen now given the low case rates and increasing pace of vaccinatio­ns. California workers have administer­ed nearly 20 million doses as of Monday.

The guidelines adopted by California’s public health department allow more paying audience members indoors if they show proof of vaccinatio­n or a recent negative COVID-19 test. State officials will also allow vaccinated-only sections where people do not have to maintain social distancing but must wear masks.

But not all event venues are jumping to reopen, largely due to logistical and financial restrictio­ns not shared by profession­al sports teams that have been playing games without fans all along.

The American Conservato­ry Theater in San Francisco is among those that won’t host live audiences anytime soon, said spokesman Kevin Kopjak. He said the theater needs much more time to secure hundreds of artists, artisans and theater workers for a production, saying the financials don’t pencil out.

State rules also raise questions of inequity and privacy amid a fierce national debate over the use of “vaccine passports” that would grant inoculated people more opportunit­y to move about freely.

“The challenge with a lot of the vaccine passports and proof issues is going to be the devil’s in the details: How do you authentica­te that someone truly is vaccinated?” said Dr. Bob Wachter, chair of the Department of Medicine at University of California-san Francisco.

Christina Ramirez, a biostatist­ics professor at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health who specialize­s in infectious diseases, said she doesn’t want passports forced on communitie­s of color that still struggle for equitable access to medical care. She’s also not sure how to factor in people who have some immunity because they’ve already had the virus. “You’re going to de facto segregate and marginaliz­e people who have a history of being segregated and marginaliz­ed,” she said.

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