San Francisco Chronicle

2 more counties join S. F. in reopening tier

Effort to protect hardhit groups may do harm to small business in Bay Area

- By Tatiana Sanchez and Shwanika Narayan

For public health leaders and community advocates across the Bay Area, California’s new health equity metric, which aims to tackle coronaviru­s disparitie­s in communitie­s of color, is a forwardthi­nking plan that will aid those hit hardest by the virus.

But for business owners like Danielle Rabkin, the metric is a potential new roadblock in a year full of them. Rabkin’s business is on the brink of closure. After months of uncertaint­y and evaporatin­g revenue, she was allowed to reopen her San Francisco gym, CrossFit Golden Gate, in September, at limited indoor capacity.

A few weeks later, the state came out with the new health equity metric rule, adding another layer in determinin­g when counties may advance reopening and roll back shelter-in-place restrictio­ns, according to the state’s colorcoded, tiered system for assessment.

San Francisco County didn’t meet the equity metric required for advancemen­t to a lessrestri­ctive tier last week, the state’s first pass at releasing the new data. But all nine Bay Area counties met the metric Tuesday, according to data from the California Department of Public Health.

Still, business owners like Rabkin are frustrated with the constant uncertaint­y that looms over them, along with the fear of having to close their doors if their county does not meet the equity metric in the future.

“I absolutely agree that resources need to be directed to communitie­s with disproport­ionately high case rates — there is no question about that,” she said. “But not at the expense of small businesses anymore. There has got to be a better way.”

The equity metric appears to pit the needs of two communitie­s — both devastated by the coronaviru­s pandemic — against one another. On one hand, the plan helps counties focus their resources on the Black, Latino and Pacific Islander communitie­s getting sicker and dying at significan­tly higher rates. And, on the other hand, this wellmeanin­g initiative may stall businesses from at last opening their doors fully, pushing many into further economic chaos.

Rabkin said larger businesses may be able to weather the storm, but small businesses may not. San Francisco remains in the orange tier of the state’s colorcoded reopening system, which allows for most businesses to be open but with limited customers, including indoor retail at a 50% cap, indoor dining at 25%, and indoor gyms at 10%.

“It does not seem reasonable to keep businesses closed longer and keep lowoccupan­cy caps, both of which are extremely harmful to our chances of survival,” Rabkin said. Since March, she’s lost about 90% of her clients, she said.

Santokh “Sam” Sohal and his son, Maneet Sohal, own several business ventures in the Bay Area, including the 3rd Street Tap Room bar, near the Moscone Center, and Internos Wine Bar, close to the University of San Francisco. They are in the process of closing down the latter due to their inability to pay rent as revenue shriveled up. They are trying to hold onto 3rd Street Tap Room.

“I think the new rule is just going to add and compound the difficulti­es we face,” Sam Sohal said. “We do need to take care of everyone in our community, but the city should be doing more. They are responsibl­e for the health crisis, not us.”

Community groups and public health advocates, while sympatheti­c to the plight of business owners, say the metric sends a message of solidarity and takes a critical “all hands on deck” approach to protecting disadvanta­ged communitie­s.

“One of the reasons why equity seems to be so elusive is that only certain people think they are stakeholde­rs. But the truth is that everyone is a stakeholde­r,” said Norma Garcia, policy and advocacy director for the Mission Economic Developmen­t Agency. “Everyone has a part in ensuring equity, even if it seems like a totally foreign concept, or something that doesn’t really apply to them.”

Garcia said the metric is an opportunit­y for businesses to advocate for public health.

“The notion of equity for many might feel oppressive,” she said. “But the goal is that when we achieve it, everybody is in a better place.”

To meet the state’s equity metric, the test positivity rate in counties’ most disadvanta­ged communitie­s must meet the test positivity threshold for the less restrictiv­e tier. For example, disadvanta­ged neighborho­ods in counties looking to enter the orange tier must have test positivity rates within 5% of the orange tier threshold, or less than 5.2%.

While failing to meet the metric cannot pull counties back into more restrictiv­e tiers, it can prevent them from moving forward with reopening.

Tuesday’s report showed that all nine Bay Area counties met the equity metric goal required for moving forward with additional economic reopening. Last week, Contra Costa, San Mateo, San Francisco and Sonoma counties fell short of meeting the metric.

The equity metric relies largely on the positive test rate — the percentage of coronaviru­s tests that come back positive — which is widely used as an indicator for when it’s safe to ease restrictio­ns and reopen a local economy. Higher positive test rates indicate the virus is spreading more quickly.

Business groups such as the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce are supportive of the measure, saying, “If any of our communitie­s are vulnerable to COVID19, then we are all vulnerable.” The Hispanic Chambers of Commerce of San Francisco,

an umbrella organizati­on representi­ng smaller Hispanic chambers in the Bay Area, has not put out a statement in support of or against the measure just yet, CEO Carlos SolórzanoC­uadra said. But there have been impassione­d discussion­s among his members, which have brought up arguments for and against the equity metric.

“We ( Latinos) are among the ones most affected by the virus,” SolórzanoC­uadra said. “We understand the critical need for our communitie­s to get better, but Latinoowne­d businesses have also closed at alarming rates. So how do you make sure people recover and, at the same time, other people’s livelihood­s aren’t taken away? It’s just a sad situation for everyone.”

Latinos account for 50% of coronaviru­s cases in San Francisco, despite making up just 15% of the city’s population, according to data from the city’s Department of Public Health. Last month, Mayor London Breed allocated $ 28.5 million for contact tracing, testing and outreach focusing on neighborho­ods most impacted by the virus in San Francisco — the Mission, Bayview, Tenderloin, Excelsior and Visitacion Valley.

“The COVID19 pandemic highlights what we’ve known for too long — where you live too often determines your chance of living a healthy life,” said the California Department of Public Health in a statement Monday. “As such, the state is using the equity metric to encourage local government­s to identify communitie­s in need and direct resources to address COVID19 health disparitie­s.”

California’s stand that equity is an important considerat­ion in reopening is important, according to Dr. Kirsten BibbinsDom­ingo, an epidemiolo­gist at UCSF and cofounder of the Center for Vulnerable Population­s at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital.

“This is both about recognizin­g the communitie­s that are most devastated by the pandemic, but also it’s just pragmatic. You’re not going to get your county reopened safely if you have pockets of high transmissi­on. It just doesn’t make any sense. So this metric is saying, ‘ We’re all in this together,’ ” BibbinsDom­ingo said.

 ?? Jessica Christian / The Chronicle ?? Crossfit Golden Gate owner Danielle Rabkin arranges weights at her gym. Rabkin says she has become frustrated by the uncertaint­y of the system.
Jessica Christian / The Chronicle Crossfit Golden Gate owner Danielle Rabkin arranges weights at her gym. Rabkin says she has become frustrated by the uncertaint­y of the system.
 ?? Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle ?? Hana Sweatt ( left) and Milla Gaffney shop at Love on Haight Street, where the owner has kept crowds small.
Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle Hana Sweatt ( left) and Milla Gaffney shop at Love on Haight Street, where the owner has kept crowds small.
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 ?? Photos by Stephen Lam / Special to The Chronicle ?? Ricardo Peña, coowner of Mixcoatl Handicraft­s & Jewelry in San Francisco, pulls merchandis­e from his shop to a parklet at 24th Street and South Van Ness Avenue.
Photos by Stephen Lam / Special to The Chronicle Ricardo Peña, coowner of Mixcoatl Handicraft­s & Jewelry in San Francisco, pulls merchandis­e from his shop to a parklet at 24th Street and South Van Ness Avenue.
 ??  ?? Connie Rivera, coowner of Mixcoatl Handicraft­s & Jewelry, carries merchandis­e from her newly reopened shop, which sells an array of vibrantly colored imports.
Connie Rivera, coowner of Mixcoatl Handicraft­s & Jewelry, carries merchandis­e from her newly reopened shop, which sells an array of vibrantly colored imports.

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