Imperial Valley Press

Strict vax mandate begins for LA businesses

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R WEBER AND STEFANIE DAZIO Associated Press

LOS ANGELES – Before feasting on pancakes, burgers and milkshakes inside the Fred 62 diner in Los Angeles, patrons must now fork over proof of their COVID-19 vaccines for a waiter’s inspection under new city coronaviru­s rules that are among the country’s strictest.

The greasy spoon, famous for putting an LA spin on diner food, is one of thousands of businesses across the city where patrons were required to show proof of their vaccinatio­n status on Monday as the new measures aimed at slowing the spread of the coronaviru­s took effect.

For general manager Ian Hillan, the mandate is just one more thing the restaurant has to contend with during the pandemic. Staffing and supply chain issues – they recently had trouble getting napkins and certain kinds of beer – are more pressing problems.

In the last few weeks, Fred 62 finally reached pre-pandemic levels of patrons. Hillan is hoping the mandate might prove to be a good thing if more diners feel comfortabl­e eating inside.

“It may just help us stay busier,” Hillan said.

The new rule covers businesses ranging from restaurant­s to shopping malls and theaters to nail and hair salons. Business trade groups say the mandate will sow confusion and could present safety concerns for employees tasked with checking customers’ vaccinatio­n status.

City officials are giving businesses time to acclimate to the new rules and will not begin inspection­s and enforcemen­t until Nov. 29. Violators will be given a warning at first and fined $1,000 for a second offense. Additional violations will mean increased fines.

“These rules are in place to keep Angelenos safe, and help us get the economy back to full strength as quickly as possible,” Harrison Wollman, a spokespers­on for Mayor Eric Garcetti, said in a statement. Garcetti tested positive for the virus last week.

“We are committed to working closely with local businesses, so that they have the informatio­n and resources they need to better protect their workers and customers,” the statement said.

The new rules caused little disruption at Blue Bottle Coffee in the city’s Los Feliz neighborho­od, where a sign on the front door reminded patrons to show proof of vaccinatio­n for permission to eat indoors.

Manager Matthew Cadena said the morning rush was mostly smooth as customers handed over their vaccine cards or showed photos of the cards on their cellphones.

“Most people are accommodat­ing and understand­ing,” Cadena said.

The mandate was anticipate­d at Body Builders Gym in the Silverlake neighborho­od, where employees for months have logged the vaccinatio­n status of patrons in an internal system so that proof is already verified the next time members come to the gym.

Manfred Del Cid, the gym’s assistant general manager, said many patrons volunteere­d to show their proof before the mandate started.

“It seems like our demographi­c wants to know they’re safe,” he said.

Los Angeles is among a growing number of cities across the U.S., including San Francisco and New York City, requiring people show proof of vaccinatio­n to enter businesses and venues.

But rules in the nation’s second-most-populous city, called SafePassLA, apply to more types of businesses and other indoor locations including museums and convention centers.

Hundreds of people opposed to vaccinatio­n mandates for Los Angeles city and county workers rallied in a downtown park Monday. The “March for Freedom” was organized by a firefighte­r group that claims such mandates are unconstitu­tional.

The proof-of-vaccinatio­n regulation­s went into force as new infection cases have inched up in California, following a sharp decline from an August peak driven by the delta variant.

November was the time of year in 2020 when the worst spike of the pandemic was just beginning in California. By January of this year, 500 people were dying every day in the state.

Los Angeles became the state’s infection epicenter and its hospitals were so overloaded with patients that ambulances idled outside with people struggling to breathe, waiting for beds to open up.

So many people died in Los Angeles that morgues reached capacity and refrigerat­ed trucks were brought in to handle the overflow. That stark scene was playing out as coronaviru­s vaccines finally arrived and California and Los Angeles moved aggressive­ly to inoculate people.

Among Los Angeles County’s roughly 10 million people, 80% of eligible residents have now received at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose and 71% of those eligible are fully vaccinated, according to public health officials.

To guard against anything resembling the January carnage, the Los Angeles City Council voted 11-2 last month to approve the ordinance requiring people 12 and older to be fully vaccinated to enter indoor public spaces including sports arenas, museums, spas, indoor city facilities and other locations.

Negative coronaviru­s tests within 72 hours of entry to those establishm­ents are required for people with religious or medical exemptions for vaccinatio­ns. Customers without proof can still use outdoor facilities and can briefly enter a businesses to use restrooms or pick up food orders.

Business trade groups say the mandate will create confusion because Los Angeles County’s own vaccine rules – which apply to dozens of surroundin­g communitie­s – are less sweeping. Cities are allowed to pass rules more stringent than the county’s.

“There’s a tremendous lack of clarity,” said Sarah Wiltfong, senior policy manager at the Los Angeles County Business Federation. For example, most retail shops are exempt. “But shopping malls and shopping centers are included, which of course includes retail shops,” she said.

Harassment of workers who must verify vaccinatio­ns is the top concern of the business federation’s members, Wiltfong said.

“This puts employees in a potential position of conflict, when they’re not necessaril­y trained to handle situations like that,” she said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/DAMIAN DOVARGANES ?? Erica Adamson (left) verifies a mobile digital COVID-19 Vaccine Record on Tony Lai’s iPhone at the Highland Park Yoga in Los Angeles on Saturday.
AP PHOTO/DAMIAN DOVARGANES Erica Adamson (left) verifies a mobile digital COVID-19 Vaccine Record on Tony Lai’s iPhone at the Highland Park Yoga in Los Angeles on Saturday.

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