The Union Democrat

Play areas can stay open

- By LUKE MONEY

LOS ANGELES — Following outcry from parents and some legislator­s, California has reversed course on closing playground­s to contain a surge in coronaviru­s cases.

According to the updated state guidance, which was released Wednesday morning, “playground­s may remain open to facilitate physically distanced personal health and wellness through outdoor exercise” — an about-face from the previously announced rules, which stated they would be closed in regions where critical care services were strained due to COVID-19.

Officials with the California Department of Public Health did not immediatel­y comment on the rationale behind the change.

Though several aspects of California's latest regional stay-athome order have come under fire since Gov. Gavin Newsom unveiled it last week, the closure of playground­s sparked particular backlash — with parents expressing outrage and confusion about why their children's play areas would be off-limits while places like malls remain open.

In a letter to Newsom last week, some California lawmakers also noted that lower-income areas would be hit hardest by the rule because many residents don't have backyards and other open spaces to take their kids.

“While we must appropriat­ely consider best practices to reduce the risk of COVID-19 transmissi­on, we also must ensure the children across the state are not unfairly deprived of their opportunit­ies for outdoor access and play,” said the letter, which was signed by a dozen legislator­s. “The broad closure of playground­s unfairly negatively impacts children and families.”

One of the letter's signers — Democratic Assemblywo­man Lorena Gonzalez of San Diego — greeted the state's reversal Wednesday with an emphatic, “Yay!”

“Thank you to all the legislator­s who joined me in asking the state to review playground closures,” she wrote on Twitter.

It remains to be seen how the state's turnabout will trickle down to the local level. Generally, counties are allowed to adopt regulation­s that are more restrictiv­e, but not more lenient, than the state's.

Los Angeles County, for instance, closed outdoor public playground­s prior to the state's order as part of its own set of restrictio­ns meant to slow an unpreceden­ted surge in coronaviru­s cases.

Though the county has not publicly linked outbreaks to playground­s, officials previously said they believed the closures were necessary.

Before issuing the regulation­s, health officials “went back and forth for many days” about how to handle reports from local parks department­s about crowding, children playing without masks and the difficulty of sanitizing playground equipment, according to L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer.

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