Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Will the Bay Area’s 5- to 11-year-olds be required to show proof of vaccinatio­n for indoor events?

- By Maggie Angst mangst@bayareanew­sgroup. com

Just as children ages 5 to 11 are beginning to receive COVID-19 vaccines, Bay Area officials are considerin­g whether they will be required to show proof of vaccinatio­n before entering certain public venues.

Officials in both San Francisco and San Jose indicated this week that they plan to expand their vaccinatio­n verificati­on orders to this age group once parents have been given adequate time to get their children vaccinated. Contra Costa County, on the other hand, isn’t ready to make a call on it just yet.

The first COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns were provided to Bay Area children ages 5-to-11 on Wednesday, just one day after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommende­d the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for this age group.

Under current local orders, San Francisco, Berkeley and Contra Costa County require people ages 12 and older to show proof that they are fully vaccinated before entering indoor businesses where they remove their masks to eat or drink or tend to breathe heavily from exercising. San Jose requires that people ages 12 and older show vaccinatio­n proof for events with more than 50 people held at public-owned indoor facilities such as the SAP Center, the convention center and city-owned theaters.

San Francisco Health Officer Dr. Susan Philip said at a recent virtual town hall meeting that she expects the city’s order requiring eligible people to show proof of vaccinatio­n prior to entering public indoor spaces, such as restaurant­s, bars and movie theaters, to be extended to younger children in a couple of months.

“We definitely want to wait and make sure children have an opportunit­y to get vaccinated, no sooner than eight weeks after the vaccine is available for kids,” Philip said. “There will be a limited time where there will not be those requiremen­ts. But then at some point, 5-to-11-year-olds will also have to show proof of vaccinatio­n to access some of those settings.”

Officials from the San Francisco Department of Public Health echoed that plan, saying that the city will reevaluate its vaccinatio­n and masking requiremen­ts once the younger children have been given enough time to get vaccinated.

“As with children 12-17 who may not have personal identifica­tion, we will follow the same approach with the younger kids such that they would not be penalized for not having an ID,” a department spokespers­on wrote in an email.

San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo said Thursday that he also would like to expand the city’s proof-of-vaccinatio­n requiremen­t to younger children in the coming weeks, though it would require a vote by the full city council.

“It’s important for us to give families the time it takes to get their children vaccinated,” he said. “But I will support extending a vaccinatio­n mandate for our large public event venues because those indoor venues bring thousands of people together in an environmen­t where it’s imperative for us to do everything to mitigate the risk of a supersprea­der event and vaccinatio­n is the best strategy to reduce that risk.”

Although COVID-19 infection rates may seem manageable at the moment, Liccardo said the city needs to use “sensible strategies” like this to mitigate the risk of a future spike in community spread.

Meanwhile, Contra Costa Health Services spokespers­on Karl Fischer said the county does not yet have any plans to extend its vaccinatio­n proof order to include children younger than 12.

“We do know that it will take some time before most families in Contra Costa County with 5- to 11-yearolds have had an opportunit­y to vaccinate newly eligible children, and so we are not currently considerin­g a change to the order,” Fischer said in an email. “We cannot predict whether pandemic conditions will require a change in the future.”

 ?? DAI SUGANO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Henry Galush, 8, of Belmont reacts as he receives his Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine shot at the COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site at Emmanuel Baptist Church in San Jose.
DAI SUGANO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Henry Galush, 8, of Belmont reacts as he receives his Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine shot at the COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site at Emmanuel Baptist Church in San Jose.

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