Imperial Valley Press

Nail salons, theaters and gyms cleared for limited reopening

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — More of California was cleared to reopen additional businesses Tuesday, including most of the San Francisco Bay Area and one of Southern California’s largest counties, as coronaviru­s infection rates have fallen to their lowest level of the pandemic.

Dr. Mark Ghaly, the state health secretary, also said nail salons could resume operations with restrictio­ns statewide, though he cautioned that California’s reopening must remain “slow and stringent” and residents cannot let their guard down as flu season arrives and cases rise in Europe and other parts of the U.S.

The lifting of some restrictio­ns in counties that have shown improvemen­t comes as California tries for a second time to recover from the devastatin­g impact COVID-19 has had on business. An earlier effort to reopen more quickly backfired with a surge in cases and hospitaliz­ations in late spring and early summer.

That forced a second shutdown that was punishing for business owners, but helped bring the infection rate to 2.8 percent for the last week. Hospitaliz­ations dropped to a level not seen since the first week of April. The state has had more than 790,000 confirmed cases, the most in the country. It’s more than 15,000 deaths ranks fourth nationwide, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

The state’s more conservati­ve approach to reopening is based on the percentage of positive tests and per capita new cases in each of the 58 counties.

Each of the four tiers for reopening include ranges for those categories and a county must meet both for two consecutiv­e weeks before advancing to a higher tier.

If they fail on one or both counts for two weeks, they are bumped to a more restrictiv­e tier that could force closures or restrict indoor operations.

That majority of counties are now out of the most restrictiv­e tier, meaning that places of worship, restaurant­s, gyms and movie theaters can resume limited indoor operations.

No county has a double-digit infection rate and even the state’s largest — Los Angeles, which has had a disproport­ionately large number of cases and deaths — is now poised to move out of the most restrictiv­e tier next week.

While about two dozen counties remained in that category, no county was forced to revert to stricter rules. San Diego, which had a spike in cases tied to an outbreak at San Diego State University that has affected about 850 students, narrowly avoided having to close down or impose new restrictio­ns on businesses.

San Diego County Supervisor Jim Desmond said that staying in the same tier was no cause for celebratio­n.

“There is no business plan for a gym to operate at 10 percent capacity or a restaurant to operate at 25 percent capacity,” Desmond tweeted. “It’s ridiculous that churches continue to be limited to a 100 person capacity while marijuana shops remain open.”

Under the changes announced Tuesday, the Bay Area counties of Alameda, San Mateo and Solano, and San Luis Obispo and Riverside counties in Southern California moved from the most restrictiv­e tier.

El Dorado, Lassen and Nevada counties improved from substantia­l to moderate. Mariposa County improved to the minimal category.

If improvemen­t trends continue, Ghaly said he anticipate­s restrictio­ns will be eased for more counties next week.

Business owners, however, remain frustrated that their efforts to get back on their feet are being throttled by the state.

Hundreds of people protested Monday outside Fresno City Hall vowing to reopen Oct. 1 regardless of whether the county has curbed its infection rate.

About 20 people rallied at the Draft Republic restaurant in Carlsbad, north of San Diego, to promote a petition titled “Open California Now,” urging Gov. Gavin Newsom to allow a quick return to normal operations.

Cohn Restaurant Group, which owns Draft Republic and 23 other restaurant­s in Southern California and Hawaii, said it laid off 1,800 of its 2,000 employees in the San Diego area after the pandemic hit. The 200 who stayed made meals for families of the workers who lost their jobs.

 ?? AP Photo/Ashley Landis ?? In this July 22 file photo, Tyson Salomon (left) gets a pedicure outside Pampered Hands nail salon in Los Angeles.
AP Photo/Ashley Landis In this July 22 file photo, Tyson Salomon (left) gets a pedicure outside Pampered Hands nail salon in Los Angeles.

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