The Mercury News

The do’s and don’ts of the new COVID-19 travel order.

- By Evan Webeck ewebeck@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Not even the San Francisco 49ers are exempt from their home county’s newly implemente­d quarantine order. Barred from playing or practicing in Santa Clara County, they won’t return home for at least three weeks.

The new order, which took effect Monday, requires anyone — even residents coming home from a trip from at least 150 miles away, by any means of travel — to quarantine for 14 days. The county’s means to enforce the quarantine, however, are less clear.

What exactly does the order entail, and how does it impact other travel advisories in California? More importantl­y, what does it mean for you?

Sit back, relax and read up; you’re about to have a lot of time on your hands.

On this, the county is clear and strict: You must remain “at home

or another place of temporary shelter” without any contact with anyone outside of “one’s own immediate traveling party or one’s household” for 14 days after arriving in the county, according to the order.

This applies to anyone “traveling into Santa Clara County, whether by air, car, train or any other means, directly or indirectly from a point of origin greater than 150 miles from the county’s borders.”

Fear not, Bay Area traveler, while nonessenti­al travel is advised against, you are still free to pass through or visit anywhere in Santa Clara County without quarantini­ng as long as you’re coming from within a 150-mile radius. For example, that extends as far east as Sacramento but not all the way to Lake Tahoe, and as far south as Big Sur but certainly not Los Angeles.

Additional­ly, workers in certain “critical infrastruc­ture” sectors, as outlined here, as well as those performing an “essential government function,” are exempt from the order.

Anything less than an overnight stay in the county also does not require a quarantine period.

Just one: to seek medical care. And, should you venture out of isolation for that, you’re advised to avoid public transit.

Well, nobody can dine indoors at a restaurant in Santa Clara County right now, so you’re at least not missing out on that. Trips to the grocery store, or even for an al fresco bite, are strictly forbidden for two weeks once you arrive inside the county limits.

To assist, the county provides support services for anyone in isolation or quarantine. This can include help buying groceries and other supplies, as well as lodging if there is nowhere else for you to isolate. The support hotline is available at (408) 808-7770, between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.

So far, travelers arriving at San Jose Internatio­nal Airport are being issued notices of the quarantine order. Hotels, motels and other lodging establishm­ents are also required to inform guests of the new rules. But there is no enforcemen­t mechanism outlined in the travel directive, and the county is taking fewer steps to trace new visitors than some of its counterpar­ts.

In Los Angeles County, travelers are required to provide contact informatio­n while acknowledg­ing the local quarantine order, which is similar to the one in Santa Clara County. Other states, like New York and Hawaii, also have forms for any new arriver to fill out, as well as penalties for refusing to do so or for breaking quarantine.

There is no statewide travel order, only an advisory against nonessenti­al travel that says anyone arriving in California from outside of the state, including residents returning home, “should” quarantine for 14 days, but there is no requiremen­t to do so.

Some other locales allow travelers to test out of quarantine, but for now, that is not an option in Santa Clara County.

It has been reported that, in hopes of increasing compliance, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are considerin­g shortening the recommende­d quarantine period from two weeks to possibly to 7-10 days. Its current guidance, however, still says, “Stay home for 14 days after your last contact with a person who has COVID-19.”

The virus is known to have an incubation period of between two and 14 days, meaning it can take up to two weeks for symptoms to appear.

Cases are exploding in Santa Clara County, and hospitaliz­ations are following. In announcing the new order, Dr. Sara Cody, the county’s health officer, said she was “gravely concerned by the continuing surge in COVID-19 cases and hospitaliz­ations.”

On Monday, Santa Clara County reported its highest single-day case count of the entire pandemic, according to data compiled by this news organizati­on, and its daily infection rate reached an all-time high. The number of people hospitaliz­ed in the county has nearly doubled in two weeks to its highest point of the pandemic.

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