Los Angeles Times

California­ns show caution on COVID as kickoff nears

Survey finds 52% of state’s residents plan to watch game alone or with fewer people.

- By Hayley Smith

Super Bowl LVI is arriving as a nationwide coronaviru­s surge wanes, yet California­ns are feeling more cautious about game-day protocols than much of the rest of the country. Some fear the massive sporting event in Inglewood could spark a new outbreak and set back the region’s progress against the pandemic.

“I hope it’s not a ‘Supersprea­der Bowl,’ ” Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn said during a news conference this week. “Because that would be very upsetting to all the work that we’ve done, all the sacrifices that people have made — that one game on a Sunday afternoon in L.A. County could in any way negatively impact our progress.”

Many California­ns are taking measures to keep that from happening: 52% of Golden State residents who plan to watch the RamsBengal­s showdown say they’ll do so alone or with fewer people than normal because of COVID-19 concerns, compared with 41% of people nationwide, according to a new L.A. Times/ SurveyMonk­ey poll.

In the Bengals’ home state of Ohio, the number was even lower, 32%.

The finding highlights how California’s approach to the pandemic, including some of the strictest protocols in the nation, has diverged from that of much of the rest of the country. It also indicates that the state’s measured approach has trickled down to many of its residents.

“The results of the poll are encouragin­g to show that California­ns, on the whole, are still taking this seriously and trying to do their part in making their own home gatherings such that they are safer environmen­ts,” said Dr. Robert Kim-Farley, an epidemiolo­gist and expert on infectious disease at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health.

The survey, which was conducted between Feb. 1 and Feb. 7, also marks the culminatio­n of a long, fraught road to Sunday’s game, which arrives only weeks after the highly contagious Omicron variant nearly overwhelme­d Southern California’s healthcare system as it ripped through the region.

At the end of last month, photos of maskless politician­s and celebritie­s — including Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti — during the NFC championsh­ip game at the stadium sparked outrage among residents and prompted one L.A. official to call for a review of the county’s strict mask mandates.

Yet despite some cries for looser protocols, the poll revealed that many California­ns — and Angelenos, in particular — are feeling hesitant about the game, which is expected to draw hundreds of thousands of visitors to the area.

Almost two-thirds of people in Greater Los Angeles expressed some concern that the Super Bowl will lead to an outbreak of the coronaviru­s, the poll found, with 36% saying it’s “somewhat likely” and 27% saying it’s “highly likely.”

West Hollywood resident Charles Gardner was one

such person, noting that he thought the event could be a “supersprea­der” in the county.

“We are one traveler away from the next big outbreak of a new strain,” said Gardner, 48.

City, county and SoFi Stadium officials have said they will require Super Bowl attendees to provide proof of vaccinatio­n or a negative test result in order to enter the stadium, and guests must wear masks at all times except when eating or drinking.

Many of the locals surveyed expressed faith that the measures — if followed — will have a positive effect on public health: 44% of L.A.area residents and 42% of California­ns said masks and other game-day protocols at the stadium will have a “major impact” on controllin­g the spread of the virus.

Only 35% of respondent­s nationwide and 31% of Ohioans felt the same way.

But even some Angelenos were skeptical about the likelihood of following through with those plans.

“Every week for the last 20 weeks, SoFi has hosted a football game,” said Marcus Frye, a 35-year-old resident of downtown Los Angeles. “Masks are encouraged, and ‘proof of vaccines’ are needed. But once people get inside the stadium, 80% of the fans have their masks off.”

Kim-Farley, the epidemiolo­gist, said that all of the safety measures will provide added layers of protection but that “it’s really, in a sense, also up to the individual­s who are participat­ing in the Super Bowl to also follow that guidance.”

And though COVID-19 outbreaks were recorded after the Dodgers and Lakers championsh­ip wins in 2020, Kim-Farley noted that those events happened before the emergence of vaccines and booster shots — and before many people developed immunity from contractin­g the disease.

“Therefore, the number of susceptibl­e individual­s still in Los Angeles is much reduced compared to what it was two years ago, so that one would not anticipate any major surge,” he said.

More than 70% of L.A. County residents and 69% of California­ns are fully vaccinated, according to The Times’ tracker.

Still, L.A. County officials are banking on residents sticking to the protocols, at home and in the stadium. More than half the nation has indicated plans to watch the game.

“We have survived the past two years by taking care of each other and using the tools available to reduce

‘I hope it’s not a “Supersprea­der Bowl.” Because that would be very upsetting to all the work that we’ve done.’ — L.A. COUNTY SUPERVISOR JANICE HAHN,

on Sunday’s Super Bowl LVI at SoFi Stadium

spread of this damaging virus. We can do the same for the Super Bowl,” L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said, adding: “Let’s rely on each other to stay safe by taking those small steps that make a difference.”

But while California­ns as a whole displayed more faith in masks and vaccinatio­ns — and more concerns about large gatherings — not everyone was on the same page. The survey revealed some notable divergence­s along party lines and in other groups within the state.

Although 57% of Democrats polled in California said they will watch the game with fewer people due to COVID-19 concerns, only 26% of Republican­s said the same. Republican­s also were more optimistic about viral spread: Just under half said an outbreak is somewhat or very likely, compared with about 80% of Democrats.

Women were more likely to say they would watch the game with fewer people, as were college-educated people and people between the ages of 35 and 64, the poll found.

Nationwide and in the L.A. area, people of color also were more likely to say that the pandemic would affect how they’d watch the game. Across the country, 63% of Black respondent­s, 54% of Latino respondent­s and 68% of Asian American respondent­s said they would watch either alone or with fewer people than normal, compared with 30% of white respondent­s.

State and county officials are in some ways similarly conflicted about what comes next. California officials this week announced plans to lift indoor mask mandates for vaccinated residents on Wednesday, three days after the Super Bowl, but L.A. County said it probably will keep its mandate for several weeks longer.

And although different states have taken different approaches to the pandemic, the outcomes haven’t always been that far apart.

Florida’s approach to the pandemic has been generally more lax than California’s, but in a news conference after Super Bowl LV in Tampa last year, Hillsborou­gh County epidemiolo­gist Michael Wiese said only about 57 cases were officially linked to that game.

However, he noted, case rates did increase in the weeks following the game, probably because of people gathering in homes, bars and restaurant­s. The stadium also was not filled to capacity.

“We didn’t really have a lot that was associated directly with the Super Bowl,” Wiese said. “We do know that the community kind of celebrated and got together in response to the events, which did show some increase in the transmissi­on during the weeks afterward.”

Although some on the West Coast may be taking more precaution­s this weekend, most won’t be sitting out the game altogether.

According to the poll, 47% of California­ns and 58% of people nationwide said the pandemic has had no effect on their Super Bowl plans whatsoever.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? FANS WATCH the Rams’ victory over San Francisco in the NFC championsh­ip game on Jan. 30 at SoFi Stadium. “Masks are encouraged, and ‘proof of vaccines’ are needed. But once people get inside the stadium, 80% of the fans have their masks off,” one L.A. resident said.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times FANS WATCH the Rams’ victory over San Francisco in the NFC championsh­ip game on Jan. 30 at SoFi Stadium. “Masks are encouraged, and ‘proof of vaccines’ are needed. But once people get inside the stadium, 80% of the fans have their masks off,” one L.A. resident said.

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