The Reporter (Vacaville)

State eases more virus restrictio­ns

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO >> California has relaxed coronaviru­s restrictio­ns in 40 of its 58 counties, including all but one in the Bay Area where the illness first took hold in the state, even as signs emerge of a possible surge of new cases.

On Tuesday, state officials upgraded seven counties from its most restrictiv­e rules, clearing the way for a return to indoor restaurant dining, worship services, gym workouts and movies in theaters — all with modificati­ons to require face coverings and limit capacity to ensure physical distancing.

The state is moving more slowly than the reopening last spring that brought with it a dramatic spike in cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths. California leads the nation with 815,000 confirmed cases and its 5,730 deaths are the fourth-highest state total, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

In the last two months hospitaliz­ations have fallen to their lowest level since early April and the statewide rate of new cases among those tested is a record-low 2.8% over the last two weeks.

But the state continues to move slowly on reopening. Disneyland and other amusement parks have urged the state to allow them to resume operations. The Walt Disney Co. announced Tuesday it is laying off 28,000 workers at its parks in California and Florida and blamed California’s “unwillingn­ess to lift restrictio­ns “as a reason for its troubles.

For weeks, Gov. Gavin Newsom and other state officials have said they were close to establishi­ng rules.

“We’re working with those industries to put out something that’s thoughtful, allows us to maintain the rest of our framework in a strong way, and really following those principles of slow and stringent to ensure those large activities are done responsibl­y,” Dr. Mark Ghaly, California’s top

public health official, said at his weekly briefing that ended just as Disney made its announceme­nt.

The state’s more conservati­ve approach to reopening was unveiled last month and is based on the percentage of positive tests and per capita new cases in each of the counties. The four tiers for reopening include ranges for those categories and a county must meet both for two consecutiv­e weeks before advancing to a less-restrictiv­e tier.

Local officials can choose to restrict activities even if the state allows them. San Francisco Mayor London Breed announced Tuesday the city will allow indoor dining and worship services for the first time since March. The city has met the state’s criteria for weeks, but its leaders have only recently begun relaxing local rules.

San Francisco is the largest county to move ahead two tiers in the reopening process. All but one — Sonoma — of the nine counties in the San Francisco Bay area have now met state standards to leave the most restrictiv­e level.

The state also lifted its most restrictiv­e rules in Butte, Contra Costa, Fresno, Sacramento, San Joaquin, Santa Barbara and Yolo counties. Los Angeles County narrowly missed its chance to reopen more businesses, a setback for its 10 million residents.

Ghaly renewed his warning that a potential new surge of cases, driven partly by infections from the Labor Day holiday weekend that are only emerging now, could increase coronaviru­s-related hospitaliz­ations by 89% in the next month.

He expressed faith in the state’s “slow and stringent” system of reopening, saying it takes into account those trends.

“As we sound a bit of the early alarm it’s really a reminder to be able to do more to reduce transmissi­ons in our communitie­s,” Ghaly said.

For most people, the new coronaviru­s causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia and death.

The state issued guidelines late Monday for public playground­s to reopen across the state. But the rules are strict, requiring everyone 2 and older to wear facemasks and mandating parents keep their children at least 6 feet ( 1.8 meters) away from others.

Officially, playground­s have been closed during the pandemic. But in many parts of the state children have been playing on them for months as local officials shunned enforcemen­t.

 ?? JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A boy walks with his skateboard past a playground sealed off due to the coronaviru­s pandemic in Commerce. California public health officials say it’s OK for public playground­s to open across the state.
JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A boy walks with his skateboard past a playground sealed off due to the coronaviru­s pandemic in Commerce. California public health officials say it’s OK for public playground­s to open across the state.

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