Los Angeles Times

Ready for next step to normal

As cases drop, region prepares for more reopenings while keeping tabs on virus.

- BY LUKE MONEY, RONG-GONG LIN II AND HOWARD BLUME

Southern California is set to take giant steps toward something more closely resembling pre-pandemic life as some economic restrictio­ns that have been in place for months are close to being lifted, with some major changes possible in a matter of days.

This newest normal will still be a considerab­ly different world, however — one marked by continued strict capacity limits for businesses, required masks and social distancing, and reduced or modified operations at public sites of all stripes, including schools, restaurant dining rooms, gyms and Disneyland.

With coronaviru­s cases down dramatical­ly from the

harrowing heights of the fal-land-winter surge, Los Angeles, Orange and San Bernardino counties are now on the precipice of exiting California’s purple tier, the most proscripti­ve of the state’s four color-coded reopening categories.

That trio of large, urban counties could move into the more lenient red tier in a matter of days. Ventura, Riverside and San Diego counties are a bit further away, but are poised to potentiall­y do likewise as soon as next week.

The shift in categorica­l hue carries significan­t ramificati­ons for local economies that have long been crushed by COVID-19 closures and interrupti­ons.

In the red tier, counties can allow indoor restaurant dining and movie theaters to reopen at 25% capacity or up to 100 people, whichever is less. In-person classes also would be allowed to resume for students in grades seven through 12. Indoor gyms and dance and yoga studios can open at 10% capacity. Museums, zoos and aquariums can open indoor activities at 25% capacity, and nonessenti­al stores and libraries can open at 50% capacity, up from 25%.

Although the shift alone will not spark a radical economic recovery, it will allow some of the hardest-hit industries — tourism and dining among them — to begin the long journey out of the pit the pandemic plunged them into.

Southern California’s renowned theme parks — centerpiec­es of the region’s normally robust tourist economy such as Disneyland,

Universal Studios, Knott’s Berry Farm and Six Flags Magic Mountain — have been closed for almost a year. Entering the red tier will allow them to finally open their doors to visitors, albeit with capacity initially limited to 15%.

That means theme parks will be much less crowded, but operators are still jumping at the chance to reopen.

Disney Chief Executive Bob Chapek told shareholde­rs Tuesday that he hopes the theme parks at the Disneyland Resort in Anaheim will open “by late April.”

In another sign of momentum, a tentative agreement reached Tuesday between the teachers union and the L.A. Unified School District brought schools a crucial step closer to a return to campus beginning in mid-April.

The agreement, which must be ratified by members, establishe­s safety parameters for a return to campus and lays out a schedule that still relies heavily on online learning.

The school day would unfold under a so-called hybrid format — meaning that students would conduct their studies on campus during part of the week and continue with their schooling online at other times. Families would retain the option of keeping students in distance learning full time.

The new optimism is being fueled by two related developmen­ts: sustained drops in coronaviru­s cases and COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations, and the increase in vaccinatio­ns.

And state officials are now tying California’s economic fate to those two trends in a way they haven’t before.

In a bid to tackle the inequities that have dogged the state’s vaccine rollout, California is now dedicating 40% of its available supplies for residents in the most disadvanta­ged areas.

The other magic number, at least as far as reopenings are concerned, is 2 million. Once California has administer­ed that many doses in targeted lower-income communitie­s — as identified by the California Healthy Places index, a socioecono­mic measuremen­t tool — the state will relax the criteria for counties to move from the purple to red tiers.

Currently, counties must have an adjusted rate at or below seven new coronaviru­s cases per day per 100,000 people to move into the red tier. After the state hits its 2-million dose goal, probably this week, counties with a case rate of up to 10 would become eligible for the red tier.

According to new state data released Tuesday, L.A., Orange and San Bernardino counties recorded rates low enough to enable them to escape the purple tier once this new criteria takes hold.

Because all three have logged adjusted case rates of less than 10 for the last two weeks, it appears they will be allowed to move soon after the state clears its vaccinatio­n hurdle. Without the change, none of them would be in position to advance this week.

California is currently about 103,000 doses short of meeting its goal, according to the latest available state data.

The counties’ case rates illustrate just how rapidly California has emerged from the darkest days of the surge.

The most recently released rates, which are adjusted based on the number of tests performed, per 100,000 residents, were 5.2 in L.A., 6.0 in Orange County and 6.7 in San Bernardino.

A month ago, the calculated case rates were 31.7 in Los Angeles County, 29.7 in Orange County and 32.7 in San Bernardino County.

Other areas of Southern California have seen similarly sharp declines and are also closing in on a potential move to the red tier. The latest state-tabulated adjusted case rates were, per 100,000 residents, 8.3 for Riverside County, 8.8 for San Diego County, 9.7 for Santa Barbara County and 9.1 for Ventura County.

However, all of those counties would need to record case rates below 10 for another week to be eligible to advance under the state’s relaxed criteria.

Although officials are generally bullish about reopening, they said there are some cautionary notes in the data. Daily coronaviru­s cases continue to decline in L.A. County and California, albeit at a slower place than the last few weeks. COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations are also down.

But nationwide, there are worries about a plateauing of the decline in new daily coronaviru­s cases. There’s increasing­ly concern of a coming worldwide fourth wave of the pandemic; officials are concerned about cases starting to rise in Europe in the last week of February after six weeks of declines, said Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer.

The hyperconta­gious British variant of the coronaviru­s has spread quickly across the U.S., and now accounts for at least 10% of circulatin­g cases of the coronaviru­s in L.A. County.

The worrisome New York strain of the virus has been identified in an outbreak of 11 people at a university in L.A. County, “and we’ll likely see more of these cases in the weeks ahead,” Ferrer said. “We will run the risk of delaying the pandemic if we don’t continue to reduce transmissi­on while our vaccinatio­n numbers pick up.”

Officials said this is a delicate moment, with businesses reopening even as vaccine supply is still limited. Following the rules will be essential to preventing another wave, they said.

In general, counties have been mostly following state guidance for reopening, but they have the ability to add restrictio­ns if they consider them necessary.

L.A. County supervisor­s were expected to discuss reopening rules privately this week, with some supervisor­s urging the county to allow businesses to reopen with rules as permissive as the state allows.

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? OUTDOOR dining, like this at the Hook & Plow in Hermosa Beach, resumed last month, and limited indoor dining may soon be allowed as virus cases drop.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times OUTDOOR dining, like this at the Hook & Plow in Hermosa Beach, resumed last month, and limited indoor dining may soon be allowed as virus cases drop.

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