The Reporter (Vacaville)

State nears stay-home order

- By Adam Beam and Kathleen Ronayne

SACRAMENTO >> California will likely order most of its businesses to close or limit capacity in the coming days, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Thursday, part of new rules triggered when fewer than 15% of beds are available in intensive care units for regional hospital networks.

Newsom said four of the state’s five regions — excluding the San Francisco Bay area — will meet that threshold within a day or two. When they do, the state will order the closure of all hair salons and barbershop­s; bars, breweries and distilleri­es; casinos and indoor and outdoor playground­s.

Restaurant­s would be limited to take-out and delivery, while retailers would have to limit customers inside their stores to 20% capacity during the busy holiday shopping season. Once triggered, regions would have 48 hours to implement the rules, which must stay in effect at least three weeks. The rules don’t apply to public schools.

“The bottom line is if we don’t act now our hospital system will be overwhelme­d,” Newsom said. “This is the most challengin­g moment since the beginning of this pandemic.”

The rules signal a shift in strategy in the nation’s most populous state, which until now had based its coronaviru­s rules on county infection rates. Newsom previously ordered new restrictio­ns in 51 of the state’s 58 counties, including asking people to cancel their holiday travel plans and imposing a nighttime curfew in those areas that include nearly all of the state’s 40 million residents.

The new rules recognize the strain placed on hospital networks that serve multiple counties. California’s virus hospitaliz­ations have nearly quadrupled since mid-October. Thursday, the state reported 8,240 coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ations, including 1,890 in intensive care units. The state now has fewer than 2,000 intensive care beds available, down from more than 3,000 available in October.

Overall, California has reported more than 1.2 million cases and more than 19,400 deaths.

The new rules, once implemente­d, would be a return to the kind of lockdown first imposed in March, when the pandemic was new and public health officials were scrambling to figure out how to contain the spread.

Public health experts praised the state’s quick actions then, saying it likely saved lives. But the impact on the economy was severe: California lost 2.6 million jobs in March and April, prompting people to flood the state with unemployme­nt claims.

Since then, California has gotten 44% of those jobs back in a modest recovery as new cases fell dramatical­ly after large public gatherings ceased, and people wore masks and socially distanced at grocery stores and other public places.

 ?? PAMELA HASSELL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People walk near the Versace boutique on Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills on Monday.
PAMELA HASSELL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People walk near the Versace boutique on Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills on Monday.

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