USA TODAY International Edition

Sliding closer to shutdown

In places, rampant virus is forcing phased retreat

- Chris Woodyard

LOS ANGELES – It took months, but Ruth Henricks was finally reaching the point when business at her San Diego restaurant was closing in on levels unseen since before the coronaviru­s struck.

Then came the announceme­nt this week that San Diego County was being forced back to the most severe of four color- coded levels, and now Henricks is worried anew about how to manage The Huddle diner.

“How can you plan ahead when you don’t know from week to week whether you are going to be open or closed or whatever?” she said.

Her quandary is being faced throughout the state after a U- turn in the effort to fully reopen California.

The state is seeing a boost in coronaviru­s infections, like much of the rest of the country, as colder weather sets in and people are forced out of the fresh air of being outdoors. And some jurisdicti­ons across the nation are starting to implement more drastic measures.

Chicago on Thursday inched closer

to a lockdown with a stay- at- home advisory that goes into effect Monday, mandating early closure of nonessenti­al businesses at 11 p. m. New York is going to require bars, restaurant­s and gyms to close by 10 p. m. starting Friday. Governors of Iowa, Ohio and Utah, all Republican­s, imposed mask mandates. The moves come as Johns Hopkins University’s coronaviru­s tracker shows the U. S. had a record 143,241 new cases Wednesday.

In California, 11 counties were ordered this week to drop a notch on the state’s tiered reopening schedule. San Diego and two other counties, Sacramento and Stanislaus, join Los Angeles County on the lowest rung of the four- step ladder. At the bottom, restrictio­ns include no indoor dining at restaurant­s or indoor church services.

California had the first week in which not a single county was able to advance to a less restrictiv­e tier, said Dr. Mark Ghaly, secretary of the state’s Health and Human Services Agency.

“A number of counties are experienci­ng quite a high number of cases,” Ghaly said at a briefing this week.

The number of tests registerin­g positive for the coronaviru­s rose to 4.2% over a seven- day period in the latest survey, having not crossed the 4% mark since at least early September, Ghaly said. The rise has accompanie­d a 31% increase in COVID- 19- related hospitaliz­ations in the past 14 days.

It’s a turnabout in a state that has prided itself on trying to be at the forefront of preventing the spread of the virus: Gavin Newsom was among the first governors to issue a stay- at- home order. Yet today, California finds itself close to joining Texas as the only states with 1 million cases, according to Johns Hopkins University data.

San Francisco, which has had fewer COVID- 19 cases than other large cities in the state, took the unusual step this week of voluntaril­y moving itself down to a level that requires indoor dining at restaurant­s be curtailed.

In Sacramento, the Rev. Bob Balian of Bayside Midtown Church had been able to welcome back worshipper­s for on- site services only about five weeks ago. “Now that the new mandate is in effect, we are temporaril­y ceasing our on- site services and going back to strictly online,” he said. “Some of our people are incredibly disappoint­ed with the change, but most of our people thoroughly understand.”

In San Diego, Henricks is doing her best to save The Huddle, the diner she has owned since 1986. It won’t be easy.

“I don’t know what to do,” Henricks said.

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