Antelope Valley Press

Pop open a bottle: Wine tasting rooms reopening

- By JULIE WATSON

SAN DIEGO — California wineries started uncorking their bottles and welcoming people back to their tasting rooms Friday as the state’s $145 billion tourism industry gears up with hotels, zoos, museums and aquariums also allowed to reopen.

With COVID-19 cases in the state still growing, the tourism industry is trying to balance how to implement safety measures to control a pandemic without ruining the fun.

Hotels will limit people lounging by pools and nix breakfast buffets for now. There will be no double-decker safari buses packed with tourists rolling through the San Diego Zoo, nor animal shows that draw crowds.

The zoo instead is using its buses to hold moving shows that will glide past people standing on green circles to keep them six feet apart. Every visitor over the age of two will be required to wear face coverings.

Wine tasting rooms also are encouragin­g masks and making room for physical distancing. Many are requiring appointmen­ts for tastings. Gov. Gavin Newsom announced later Friday that starting June 19 the state would allow California­ns in approved counties to resume getting manicures, tattoos and massages with strict cleaning requiremen­ts.

Newsom was the nation’s first governor to issue a statewide stay-at-home order on March 19. He gradually started lifting the orders in May, allowing retail stores and restaurant­s to reopen. He soon added churches and hair salons with restrictio­ns.

Stay-at-home orders are estimated to have cost the state economy $72 billion in revenue from tourism and more than 600,000 hospitalit­y jobs, according to Visit California, the state’s tourism marketing organizati­on.

The list of businesses cleared to reopen Friday included movie theaters, bars and gyms and is the most expansive yet, though counties have the ultimate say on which stores and services can open their doors.

Meanwhile, cases of the Coronaviru­s in the state are still climbing. On Friday,

California’s department of health reported 141,983 cases and 4,943 deaths. The White House has recommende­d states see a 14-day downward trajectory before easing restrictio­ns.

California’s cases have continued to tick up since May 30, when the state’s seven-day average was at 2,321 cases compared to a seven-day average of 2,726 as of Friday, according to the COVID Tracking Project.

Those who have tested positive include a manager at the Morongo Casino Resort & Spa near Palm Springs, which reopened in late May with required masks and temperatur­e checks.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Wine educator Brooke Scheerer serves glasses of 2017 Edizione Pennino Zinfandel to guests Friday at the Inglenook winery in Rutherford, Calif. California wineries started uncorking their bottles and welcoming people back to their tasting rooms.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Wine educator Brooke Scheerer serves glasses of 2017 Edizione Pennino Zinfandel to guests Friday at the Inglenook winery in Rutherford, Calif. California wineries started uncorking their bottles and welcoming people back to their tasting rooms.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States