San Antonio Express-News

L.A. issues order to stay home as COVID surges

- By Brian Melley

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles County announced a new stayhome order Friday as coronaviru­s cases surged out of control in the nation’s most populous county.

The three-week order takes effect Monday. It came as the county confirmed 24 new deaths and 4,544 new confirmed cases of COVID-19.

The county had set a threshold for issuing the stay-home order — an average of 4,500 cases a day over a five-day period — but hadn’t expected to reach that level until next month.

However, the five-day average of new cases reported Friday was 4,751.

“We know we are asking a lot from so many who have been sacrificin­g for months on end,” Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said. “Acting with collective urgency right now is essential if we want to put a stop to this surge.”

The order advises residents to stay home “as much as possible” and to wear a face covering when they go out. It bans people from gathering with others who aren’t in their households, whether publicly or privately.

However, exceptions are made for church services and protests, “which are constituti­onally protected rights,” the county Department of Public Health said in a statement.

Retail businesses, which make much of their profits during the Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas holiday seasons, are allowed to remain open but with limited capacity, including nail salons and other personal care services.

Restaurant­s in the county already were recently barred from in-person dining. They can still offer pickup, delivery and takeout services.

Beaches, trails and parks will remain open, with safety requiremen­ts.

The order, which runs through Dec. 20, is more modest than a statewide closure order issued by Gov. Gavin Newsom in mid-March. That order closed schools and most businesses and severely restricted movement except for essential workers or to perform essential chores such as buying groceries or picking up medication­s.

The restrictio­ns are said to have slowed the spread of COVID-19 and some restrictio­ns were eased but the caseload picked up again in summer and in recent weeks has surged to record levels throughout most of the state — as well as throughout most states in the country.

Daily cases numbers in California have set records in recent days. Hospitaliz­ations statewide have increased more than 80 percent in the last two weeks. Nearly 2,000 people in the county are now hospitaliz­ed and the new order is part of an effort to prevent the county’s health system from being overwhelme­d.

Meanwhile, public health officials are bracing for a wave of cases that could follow gatherings at Thanksgivi­ng. Officials say it usually takes two to three weeks for such serious cases to show but about 12 percent of those infected could wind up hospitaliz­ed.

 ?? Elias Funez / Associated Press ?? Registered nurse Barbara Zartun-Ries administer­s a nose swab test Tuesday in Grass Valley, Calif.
Elias Funez / Associated Press Registered nurse Barbara Zartun-Ries administer­s a nose swab test Tuesday in Grass Valley, Calif.

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