Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Survey: California­ns support COVID-19 restrictio­ns, remain worried about outbreak

- Sacramento Bee (TNS)

SACRAMENTO – California­ns still support efforts to contain the coronaviru­s outbreak through restrictio­ns on public spaces and their worries about COVID-19 have not diminished since the spring, a new poll shows.

The survey by the

Public Policy Institute of California showed 74% of respondent­s favor restrictio­ns on public activity to mange the pandemic, or want more aggressive limitation­s.

Just 26% of respondent­s want looser restrictio­ns on public activity during the pandemic.

Researcher­s also found a majority, 61%, of state residents say they are either very or somewhat concerned about contractin­g the coronaviru­s and needing to be hospitaliz­ed. The figure is similar to the results of a May survey, which found 58% respondent­s felt the same way.

“California­ns continue to express concerns about getting sick from the coronaviru­s, and a slim majority say the worst is behind us,” PPIC president Mark Baldassare said.

The poll of 1,704 California­ns comes as officials say the state is starting to see lowered rates of COVID-19 transmissi­on. Gov.

Gavin Newsom said the state reported 2,950 new coronaviru­s cases on Tuesday, bringing the pandemic total to more than 762,000 cases.

California has reported nearly 14,500 deaths as a result of the coronaviru­s.

The numbers are grim, but better than recent weeks when the state averaged 4,000 new cases per day.

“We are turning the corner in suppressin­g this latest increase,” Newsom said.

A slim majority of California­ns said the worst of the pandemic is behind us, while 42% said they believe the worst is yet to come. The response in California is similar to national figures, which show about 43% of American adults feel the worst is yet to come, according to a September CNN survey.

After a short phase of limited reopening at the start of the summer, California in recent months tightened restrictio­ns on social gatherings and business operations.

The Newsom administra­tion’s latest system to track the virus categorize­s counties into different colored tiers based on their levels of risk. Most California counties are in the two highest-restricted tiers, purple and red, meaning the virus remains prevalent at worrisome levels in those communitie­s. Only 11 counties, mostly small and rural, were in the two lower-risk tiers when the survey was administer­ed.

Viewpoints on the coronaviru­s pandemic tend to vary across social and economic strata, the report found.

Notably, 61% of Republican­s reported wanting fewer restrictio­ns, compared to 32% of independen­ts and 9% of Democrats. Men are also more likely than women to think there should be fewer restrictio­ns.

California­ns with annual household incomes under $40,000 are twice as likely to be very concerned about being hospitaliz­ed with the coronaviru­s as those with incomes of $80,000 or more. Black and Latino California­ns are more likely to be concerned than Asian and white residents.

 ?? Getty Images/tns ?? A nurse screens patients before sending them to a tent to be tested at a COVID-19 testing site at St. John’s Well Child and Family Center, amid the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, July 24 in Los Angeles.
Getty Images/tns A nurse screens patients before sending them to a tent to be tested at a COVID-19 testing site at St. John’s Well Child and Family Center, amid the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, July 24 in Los Angeles.

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