Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Supervisor urges easing of state mask regulation­s

Barger calls on Newsom to allow vaccinated to go without face covers after CDC guidance.

- By Esmeralda Bermudez

The announceme­nt by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggesting that vaccinated people can forgo masks outdoors and indoors caught many off guard this week and created plenty of debate, particular­ly at the local level.

In a letter sent to Gov. Gavin Newsom, Los Angeles County Supervisor Kathryn Barger spoke in support of dropping masks for vaccinated people, breaking ranks with county public health officials. She called on the governor to follow the eased guidelines set by federal officials.

“Los Angeles County has made tremendous progress vaccinatin­g residents, including those in our hard-hit communitie­s,” Barger said in a state men Ft `. ur `“thermo re, our positivity rate is less than 1% and our case rate remains low.”

This week’s guidance from the CDC was considered a milestone moment in the COVID-19 pandemic, but the final call on regulation­s and timelines for masks will largely be decided by state and local government­s.

That will include setting more specific rules in places such as businesses, schools and other settings where it may be hard to determine who is or is not vaccinated.

Barger said L.A. County cannot ease its restrictio­ns until the state does.

She said the county is committed “to implementi­ng safe, sensible directives that still protect our recovery and prevent regression to high positive case rates.”

Today, California maintains strict mask rules consistent with the CDC’s previous guidance, and officials said they will remain in effect at least while they study the new recommenda­tions.

The state and L.A. County will review the CDC’s recommenda­tions in order to “make sensible adjustment­s to the orders that are currently in place,” L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said.

It could be a week or more before substantiv­e changes to mask-wearing orders take effect locally. The California Division of Occupation­al Safety and Health board, which sets workplace safety standards, next meets on Thursday to discuss statewide guidance, and any county changes cannot be less restrictiv­e than the state’s mandates.

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