Porterville Recorder

Vaccine checks beginning at San Francisco eateries, bars

- DAISY NGUYEN

SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco became the first major city in the nation to require proof of full vaccinatio­n against COVID-19 on Friday for people dining inside restaurant­s, working out in gyms or attending indoor concerts.

Restaurant­s and bars posted signs and added extra staff to begin verifying people’s proof of vaccinatio­n before allowing them in.

“There’s definitely some anxiety around how it’s all going to work,” said Pete Sittnick, a managing partner of Waterbar and EPIC Steak restaurant­s on the city’s waterfront.

He anticipate­s a slowdown in checking in diners, possible pushback from guests who disagree with the requiremen­t and awkward scenarios where someone shows up without proper documentat­ion.

“The good thing is, if somebody doesn’t have their verificati­on of vaccinatio­n they can still eat outside. There is an option and we just need to be ready for different scenarios,” he said.

Mayor London Breed announced the requiremen­t more than a week ago in an attempt to stem rising COVID-19 cases, saying she was worried the highly contagious delta variant of the coronaviru­s could disrupt the city’s economic rebound. The mandate goes further than New York City, which requires people to be at least partially inoculated for a variety of high-risk indoor activities, and New Orleans, which requires proof of vaccinatio­n or a negative COVID-19 test for indoor dining or drinking.

It follows a number of tough COVID-19 measures San Francisco im

posed since the beginning of the pandemic. The city and its neighborin­g counties in the Bay Area were the first in the nation to order residents to stay at home in order to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s, and was the first big city in the nation to require all city employees to be vaccinated, without the option of testing regularly.

The majority of 36,000 city workers said they are vaccinated, but about 4,300 have not. This week, the city sent letters recommendi­ng a 10day suspension without pay for 20 employees in police, fire and sheriff’s department­s who refused to report their vaccinatio­n status by the Aug. 12 deadline, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

Gov. Gavin Newsom has also had to tighten the rules after announcing the reopening of California’s economy in June. He has required the state’s health care workers to get vaccinated to keep

their jobs and all teachers and state workers to either get vaccinated or submit to weekly testing.

Local business groups have supported the new vaccine mandate, saying it will protect their employees’ and customers’ health and keep them from having to limit capacity indoors. Some businesses that had taken it upon themselves to check for proof of vaccinatio­n at the door said a citywide policy helps set clear expectatio­ns for all customers.

When Vegan Picnic announced in late July it would only allow vaccinated customers, the deli quickly received one-star reviews on Yelp, many from internet trolls who had never eaten there, and threats from callers who viewed the requiremen­t as a violation of their personal rights and privacy, owner Jill Ritchie said.

“The phone was ringing with people yelling at us, and at the same time we had an outpouring of support from people saying ‘Thank you, I feel safe going to your store,’” Ritchie said.

She said checking people’s vaccinatio­n status has been easy, and soon the computer software her business uses for online ordering and payment processing will handle the verificati­on digitally and warn customers of the mandate ahead of time.

Online reservatio­n systems such as Opentable are also telling diners about the rule when they RSVP, and businesses that cater to the city’s tourism industry launched a campaign called “Relax, We’re Vaxxed” to get the word out to outof-town visitors.

City officials said a paper card issued by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a photo of the CDC card, or a verified digital vaccine record will suffice. Proof of vaccinatio­n issued by foreign government­s is also acceptable.

Pearce Cleaveland, co-owner of the Temple nightclub, said his security guards have been trained to check all forms of vaccinatio­n proof and they have caught some people with falsified copies of vaccinatio­n

cards.

“We’ve had people who get upset at the door when they’re turned away, but in general they’re understand­ing,” he said. “It’s the tourists who are generally disappoint­ed, when they’re unaware of the requiremen­t and can’t get vaccinated quickly enough.”

Workers have until Oct. 13 to prove they are fully vaccinated and Cleaveland said he expects to meet compliance by then. The mandate does not apply to people ineligible

for vaccines, including children under 12.

After a sharp increase in coronaviru­s cases and hospitaliz­ations in the San Francisco Bay Area over the summer, the numbers appear to be leveling off but remain high, said Dr. Peter Chin-hong, an expert on infectious diseases at the University of California, San Francisco.

He said reinstated restrictio­ns have helped slow the spread of the coronaviru­s. For example, after Los

Angeles County reinstated a mask mandate for indoor businesses, the increase in daily COVID-19 cases slowed significan­tly over the last few weeks, Chinhong said.

“There is no magic bullet, just a combinatio­n of a hard stick and soft stick,” he said. “The proof of vaccinatio­n mandate is a soft stick because you can still eat outdoors, but if you want to hang out with people indoors you better get vaccinated.”

 ?? AP PHOTO BY JEFF CHIU ?? In this Nov. 12, 2020, file photo, diners Mitchell Bryant, left, and Darla Scott eat inside at the Buena Vista Cafe amid the coronaviru­s outbreak in San Francisco.
AP PHOTO BY JEFF CHIU In this Nov. 12, 2020, file photo, diners Mitchell Bryant, left, and Darla Scott eat inside at the Buena Vista Cafe amid the coronaviru­s outbreak in San Francisco.

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