The Signal

State to prioritize educators for vaccines

Guidelines set for youth sports to resume

- By Raychel Stewart Signal Staff Writer

Gov. Gavin Newsom announced during a news conference Friday that vaccines allocated next month will be prioritize­d for educators, while also setting guidelines for youth sports to resume.

Ten percent of all first vaccine supplies delivered to the state after March 1 will be set aside for educators and child care workers in an effort to reopen in-person instructio­n for students quicker, Newsom said.

“We are also setting aside 10% of all first doses,” Newsom said during the briefing, “beginning with a baseline of 75,000 doses every week that will be made available for educators and child care workers that are supporting our efforts to get our kids back into in-person instructio­n.”

This announceme­nt comes after Los Angeles County Public Health officials broadened vaccine eligibilit­y to include teachers and certain sectors of frontline essential workers beginning March 1.

Grocery store workers, agricultur­e workers and law enforcemen­t personnel are among the frontline essential workers who will be eligible to make vaccine appointmen­ts next month.

Youth sports

Newsom also announced new guidance that allows youth sports to resume in counties that have COVID-19 case rates of 14 people or less per 100,000. L.A. County has yet to qualify for youth sports to resume as the case rate remains above the threshold.

Nineteen counties across the state meet the threshold to resume youth sports, Newsom said.

“This is for outdoor sports and contact sports like football, rugby and water polo,” Newsom said.

“We’re moving forward with caution and recognitio­n of the significan­t advantages in terms of mitigating transmissi­on when it comes to outdoor sports versus indoor sports. We’ll continue to work on indoor (sport) issues.”

Los Angeles County Department of Public Health officials released the following updated COVID-19 statistics Friday:

Countywide COVID-19 cases reported in the past 24 hours: 2,459

Total COVID-19 cases in L.A. County: 1,176,772 New deaths related to

COVID-19 reported in the past 24 hours: 150

Total COVID-19 deaths in L.A. County: 19,662

Hospitaliz­ations countywide: 2,640, 31% of whom are in the ICU

Hospitaliz­ations at Henry Mayo Newhall Hospital as of Feb. 19: 13, with 1,129 discharged since the onset of the pandemic

COVID-19 cases reported in the Santa Clarita Valley in the past 24 hours: 64

Total COVID-19 cases in the SCV: 25,463

Total COVID-19 deaths in the SCV as of Feb. 18: 246, with one new death reported Friday by Henry Mayo.

The number of SCV cases, including all area health care providers’ daily figures and those at Pitchess Detention Center, broken down into region, are as follows:

City of Santa Clarita: 18,650 Unincorpor­ated — Acton: 429

Unincorpor­ated — Agua Dulce: 248

Unincorpor­ated — Bouquet Canyon: 43

Unincorpor­ated — Canyon Country: 763

Unincorpor­ated — Castaic: 3,535 (majority of Castaic cases come from Pitchess Detention Center; exact number unavailabl­e)

Unincorpor­ated — Lake Hughes: 40

Unincorpor­ated — Newhall: 66

Unincorpor­ated — Placerita Canyon: 0

Unincorpor­ated — San Francisqui­to Canyon/Bouquet Canyon: 14

Unincorpor­ated — Sand Canyon: 15

Unincorpor­ated — Saugus: 127

Unincorpor­ated — Saugus/ Canyon Country: 38

Unincorpor­ated — Stevenson Ranch: 1,019

Unincorpor­ated — Val Verde: 305

Unincorpor­ated — Valencia: 171

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