The Signal

Appeals court: County can limit outdoor dining

- By Emily Alvarenga Signal Staff Writer

As Los Angeles County inches closer to a loosening of restrictio­ns as COVID-19 figures continue their decline, a state appeals court ruled last week that county Department of Public Health officials could reinstate outdoor dining restrictio­ns on restaurant­s if cases spike again.

The new ruling by the California 2nd District Court of Appeal reverses a lower court’s December ruling, which would have required public health officials to prove in court how outdoor dining poses a significan­t risk for COVID-19 transmissi­on.

County Public Health officials released a statement following the ruling, which noted they are pleased that the court of appeal recognized the importance of taking quick, affirmativ­e measures to reduce transmissi­on of COVID-19.

Public Health officials also noted that the ruling “will help public health officials continue to protect the health and safety of all California­ns.”

The ruling comes as state public health officials have said L.A. County could soon be entering the red tier, where dining would again be allowed indoors at 25% capacity or 100 people (whichever is fewer), in the coming weeks.

Public Health officials released detailed guidelines under the red tier Thursday, which allow restaurant­s to reopen at this capacity, with additional safety modificati­ons, including:

▪ Eight feet distancing between tables.

▪ One household per table indoors with a limit of 6 people; outdoor dining can accommodat­e up to 6 people per table from 3 different households.

▪ The HVAC system is in good working order and has been evaluated, and to the maximum extent possible ventilatio­n has been increased.

▪ Public Health also strongly recommends that all restaurant employees interactin­g with customers indoors are provided with additional masking protection (above the currently required face shield over face masks); this can be fit tested N95 masks, KN95 masks, or double masks and a face shield.

▪ In addition, Public Health strongly recommends that all employees working indoors are informed about and offered opportunit­ies to be vaccinated.

However, county Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer has continued to warn of the potential for a new surge in cases if county residents relax as restrictio­ns are loosened, noting the county should be “extraordin­arily cautious” this month and next.

“We’ve been here before,” Ferrer told the county Board of Supervisor­s Tuesday. “We’ve been here with reopenings. We’ve been here with travel around Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas. We’ve seen what happens around holidays if we’re not really careful . ... We’ve got to keep everybody alive right now so they can get vaccinated and stay alive. So this would be a time for extreme caution.”

Ferrer cited a recent study by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that found on-premises restaurant dining — whether indoors or outdoors — contribute­s to increases in COVID-19 cases and deaths, as masks often aren’t worn during this time, increasing the risk of transmissi­on.

Even so, some board members, including Supervisor Kathryn Barger, whose 5th District includes the Santa Clarita Valley, said the county should align its health order with the state’s.

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