San Diego Union-Tribune

NEWSOM TO STUDY HOW OUT-OF-STATE THEME PARKS HAVE FARED

- BY LORI WEISBERG & HUGO MARTIN

Gov. Gavin Newsom, in a move to ensure an eventual safe reopening of California theme parks, said Monday that he was sending a team of people to parks already open in other states to learn what precaution­s they are taking to avoid the spread of COVID-19.

While the governor has yet to offer a timeline for when he will allow large parks like Disneyland and SeaWorld San Diego to resume operations, he made it clear that he remains concerned about the potential for virus transmissi­on from visitors traveling to

the state from other parts of the country and the world.

At the same time, he said he wants to continue working with California parks on a plan for letting them resume their operations following a nearly seven-month shutdown.

Although Newsom made it sound as though the planned visits had yet to take place, a spokeswoma­n for the California Health and Human Services Agency said late Monday that it had already sent health officials last week to reopened theme parks outside the state “to assess the health safeguards in practice.” Among those parks visited was Walt Disney World in Florida, said spokeswoma­n Kate Folmar.

In addition, a delegation that includes the state Department of Public Health, Cal/OSHA, and the governor’s Office of Business and Economic Developmen­t plans to visit California parks this week, in collaborat­ion with the operators, Folmar said. The itinerary for those inspection­s, she said, has yet to be firmed up.

“These visits will help inform our pending theme park guidance,” Folmar said.

News of the series of site visits cheered the California Attraction­s and Parks Associatio­n, which has been pushing the governor’s office for permission to reopen amusement parks up and down the state.

“We applaud the governor for accepting our invitation to visit California’s iconic parks and we are eager to work together so theme parks can reopen responsibl­y and soon,” the coalition said in a statement. “Doing so will allow tens of thousands of people to get back to work and provide a much-needed jump start for local and state economies that have been decimated by the shutdown.”

Disneyland said Monday that it has no objections to Newsom’s plan to investigat­e the pandemic conditions at other theme parks.

“We welcome the opportunit­y to showcase our responsibl­e health and safety protocol that we’ve successful­ly implemente­d in our parks around the world and at Walt Disney World,” said Disneyland spokeswoma­n Liz Jaeger.

Universal Studios Hollywood noted that its parent company has worked with health officials to safely reopen theme parks in Florida and Asia and is ready to use what was learned in those parks to reopen its park in Los Angeles.

Although there have been news reports that reopened parks have not experience­d outbreaks among workers or guests, Newsom said he wants his staff to find out what is happening.

“We’re doing our own stubborn research and going across states to learn more and not just make this an academic exercise,” Newsom said during a news conference that included an update on the state’s response to COVID-19.

“I want folks to come back and tell me what they saw, what their own experience was, because this is serious. At the end of the day, we may be at a 2.6 percent positivity rate but we’re entering not just the f lu season but we’re entering into a period of time where people are more likely to start congregati­ng and mixing back indoors.”

Newsom’s latest remarks come amid the backdrop of a prolonged closure of California theme parks, which months ago prepared guidelines that they say should have enabled them to safely invite guests back to their properties. Florida began letting parks reopen in June, and Disney parks overseas have also opened to guests after closing for several months.

California had been poised to issue reopening guidelines this month but backed away after sharp criticism from the theme parks. They were especially concerned about a restrictio­n that would have limited their guests to those living within a 120-mile radius of the parks.

Newsom said last week that he did not anticipate any of the large parks reopening anytime soon “until we see more stability in terms of the data.”

On Monday, he reiterated his concern about the increased possibilit­y of virus spread at theme parks, which he likened to small cities that attract visitors from around the world.

“So I am very sober about the responsibi­lity and the expectatio­n that is placed upon this administra­tion and administra­tions across this state to keep people safe and at the same time balance the economic imperative of reopening with modificati­ons,” Newsom said.

“But I am mindful of trend lines you’re seeing across the country and for that matter, around the world, from Germany to the U.K. and other parts of the globe that have had setbacks as they enter into the winter months, and I want to make sure we get this right,” he continued.

Disney recently reported that it is laying off 28,000 U.S. employees, a move it said was “exacerbate­d” by California’s shutdown.

Andrew Noymer, associate professor of population health and disease prevention at the University of California Irvine, said he believes it is possible to reopen the theme parks in California by imposing some major changes to the way they operate.

But he added that he doesn’t see any harm in waiting until the governor’s representa­tives investigat­e the conditions around theme parks in Florida and other states.

“If he is sincere that he wants the informatio­n, I don’t see any harm,” he said. “It sounds reasonable to me.”

In San Diego County, SeaWorld was able to partially reopen in late August when the marine park got authorizat­ion to do so under state guidelines for zoos and aquariums, which meant limitation­s on the capacity for outdoor exhibits and animal shows. Advance reservatio­ns are also acquired, and rides remain closed.

Legoland California Resort remains closed but has reopened its Sea Life Aquarium. The Carlsbad park also this month launched “Halloween in Miniland,” which is taking place each weekend in October. Legoland’s Miniland U.S.A. has been transforme­d into a Halloween destinatio­n for families.

Last month, Disney officials suggested that if the Anaheim parks were allowed to reopen, they would have hand-washing stations, offer attendance by reservatio­n only, add a team of designated employees to enforce face-covering requiremen­ts, mandate temperatur­e checks for all guests, expand the use of mobile food ordering, and put stickers on the ground to remind visitors to physically distance.

Dr. Timothy Brewer, a professor in the division of infectious diseases at UCLA’s David Geffen School of Medicine, said the governor’s plan to investigat­e other theme parks makes sense but he worries that it will be difficult to determine if the steps taken at other parks are directly responsibl­e for preventing coronaviru­s outbreaks.

“With so much COVID transmissi­on going on, how do you know if Person A got it at Epcot or at some shopping center,” he said, referring to the theme parks in the Walt Disney World Resort in Florida.

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