Los Angeles Times

Will new mask rules be enforced?

L.A. County officials seem to still favor educating residents over writing tickets.

- By Luke Money

Los Angeles County’s indoor mask mandate is now the law of the land.

But how — or whether — it will be enforced remains an open question.

Technicall­y, those who violate the new mask rules, or any other provisions included in the county’s latest health officer order, can be cited or fined.

But practicall­y speaking, many health and law enforcemen­t officials throughout the COVID-19 pandemic have favored educating resi- dents about the rules and

urging adherence rather than writing a flurry of tickets.

That appears to still be the name of the game.

Sheriff Alex Villanueva said his department “will not expend our limited resources and instead ask for voluntary compliance” with the new rules.

County officials also have indicated they won’t take a punitive approach to facecoveri­ng scofflaws, with health officer Dr. Muntu Davis saying, “We will continue to go out and educate. It’s not something we really want to have to do in terms of giving citations.”

Though the Department of Public Health “utilizes education and informatio­n sharing as the primary step in gaining compliance,” officials said Monday that “when compliance is not achieved at worksites and businesses, enforcemen­t may include issuance of a notice of violation or a citation.”

“By wearing masks indoors at public places and worksites, we can get back to slowing the spread of the virus,” county Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said in a statement. “Many businesses and worksites are doing their part by posting signs and asking employees and customers to mask up while indoors. Please do you part and cooperate.”

The Los Angeles Police Department is urging residents to adhere to the new order, which went into effect at 11:59 p.m. Saturday after a drastic increase in the number of coronaviru­s cases in the last few weeks.

“The department continues to ask all Angelenos to abide by the mask mandate, recognizin­g that the recent resurgence is troubling,” LAPD Chief Michel Moore said Monday. “These hospitaliz­ations and this loss of life are real. Our personnel will wear masks in all public settings, as well as in office settings, and I’m asking all Angelenos to comply with it.”

Whether an education-over-enforcemen­t strategy will have the desired effect remains to be seen. But given how rapidly the countywide COVID-19 landscape has deteriorat­ed, officials say things need to change — and fast.

Over the weeklong period ending Sunday, L.A. County averaged more than 1,400 new coronaviru­s cases a day, up from about 170 cases a day for the week that ended June 15.

Health officials reported 1,233 new cases Monday.

The number of people hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 countywide has more than doubled in the last month, from 219 on June 18 to 544 on Sunday.

Daily infections and hospitaliz­ations, both in L.A. County and statewide, remain only a fraction of those seen during the height of the fall and winter surge. However, officials say the trend lines are troubling as millions of unvaccinat­ed residents remain vulnerable to the coronaviru­s, especially its highly infectious Delta variant.

“We really do need to get these numbers down,” Davis said. “Otherwise, we’re going to end up in a situation where more strict measures have to be put in place. It’s not a place that we want to be.”

The county’s order requires everyone — including those who are fully vaccinated — to wear a mask in all indoor public settings, such as theaters, stores, gyms, offices and workplaces, and in restaurant­s when not eating and drinking — with limited exemptions, including children younger than 2.

L.A. County’s mandate is unique in California at this point, though some counties — including most of the Bay Area — now recommend people wear masks indoors as a precaution.

Both the California Department of Public Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, however, continue to maintain that fully vaccinated people can go without masks in most situations.

Although similar facecoveri­ng requiremen­ts were in place in the weeks leading up to California’s June 15 reopening, L.A. County’s walk-back has come under some fire. Critics decry the move as unnecessar­y — given the wealth of data demonstrat­ing the high level of protection vaccines provide — and some fully inoculated individual­s have expressed frustratio­n at being asked to surrender one of their recently realized freedoms to protect those who have chosen not to roll up their sleeves.

Villanueva is among those who have blasted the order, saying in a statement that “forcing the vaccinated and those who already contracted COVID-19 to wear masks indoors is not backed by science” and contradict­s CDC guidelines.

County health officials, though, have characteri­zed the mask mandate as one of the most effective and least intrusive tools available to blunt increasing coronaviru­s transmissi­on.

“From what we’ve heard from businesses, it’s easier and better for us to do this, and it’s much easier for people to understand in terms of where they need to mask,” Davis said.

L.A. County isn’t alone in seeing a resurgence of the coronaviru­s.

Over the last week, California has reported an average of 3,671 new cases per day — more than quadruple the number seen a month ago.

There are more than 2,000 coronaviru­s-positive patients hospitaliz­ed statewide, the most since early April.

Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday that the state is “committed to addressing this latest increase in the number of new cases” but also “committed not to imposing new restrictio­ns.”

The surest way to turn the tide, he said, is for residents to get inoculated. Roughly 60% of all California­ns have gotten at least one vaccine dose, but only about 52% are fully vaccinated.

“We have the opportunit­y to turn this around and not have to deal with these recommenda­tions, these mandates across the spectrum,” Newsom told reporters during an event in Sonoma County. “And that opportunit­y resides in each and every one of us to make the individual decision that will change the course of history of this pandemic and this disease once and for all. Please get vaccinated.”

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? L.A. COUNTY once again began requiring people to wear masks in indoor public places. Above, Ava Dorny works at Charlie’s Coffee House in South Pasadena.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times L.A. COUNTY once again began requiring people to wear masks in indoor public places. Above, Ava Dorny works at Charlie’s Coffee House in South Pasadena.
 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? COUNTY OFFICIALS have characteri­zed the mask mandate as one of the most effective tools to slow the spread of the virus. Above, a shop in Chinatown.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times COUNTY OFFICIALS have characteri­zed the mask mandate as one of the most effective tools to slow the spread of the virus. Above, a shop in Chinatown.

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