The Mercury News

Indoor dining OK for Contra Costa, S.F. counties

Caveat: Local authoritie­s may maintain some restrictio­ns

- By Evan Webeck and John Woolfolk Staff writers

Limited indoor dining, religious services and other activities restricted by the COVID-19 pandemic can resume in Contra Costa County and San Francisco after state officials announced Tuesday the two Bay Area counties have progressed in California’s reopening plan.

San Francisco became the first in the Bay Area to enter the orange, or

“moderate,” tier of the state’s color-coded reopening system — the secondleas­t restrictiv­e. Contra

Costa County exited the most severe purple tier for the red tier, joining Alameda, Santa Clara and San Mateo counties and signaling infections are “substantia­l” but no longer “widespread.”

For shoppers, diners and business owners, what can open now and where is still a bit

of a puzzle. Local authoritie­s may maintain restrictio­ns even after state health officials clear them for reopening, which has angered many business owners in parts of the Bay Area, such as Santa Clara and Alameda counties, that have been slow to reopen.

San Francisco had not allowed indoor dining, even though it had been permitted to do so by the state since it had been in the red tier since late August. That changed Tuesday, when officials cleared the way for restaurant­s to open dining rooms at 25% capacity as the city reached the orange tier.

“We know this continues to be a challengin­g time with people struggling economical­ly

and emotionall­y,” Mayor London Breed said in a statement Tuesday. “However, thanks to San Francisco’s commitment to following public health guidance, we are seeing improvemen­ts in our numbers, which means we can continue to move forward with reopening.”

California reported 2,162 new cases Tuesday, bringing its total for the pandemic to 807,425, with 32 new deaths for a total of 15,640. There were 3,223 hospitaliz­ed statewide with COVID-19, a 2% increase.

Health and Human Services Agency Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly said “that is a concern,” as he had signaled last week that the decline in new cases and hospitaliz­ations was slowing.

But improvemen­ts continued in Bay Area counties. Contra Costa County health officials say they will

now align with the state’s restrictio­ns for red- tier counties, similar to what San Mateo County did last week.

Retail and shopping malls can increase indoor capacity from 25% to 50%. Restaurant­s, movie theaters, places of worship, zoos, aquariums and museums that could only open outdoors can now allow indoor activity at 25% capacity. Gyms and fitness centers can open indoors at 10% capacity.

After two weeks in the red tier, Contra Costa County schools can reopen classrooms as well. But that will be up to district officials.

“Making progress on the COVID-19 metrics is a positive developmen­t,” Contra Costa County Superinten­dent of Schools Lynn Mackey said in a statement Tuesday. “However, we also

know that each community is being affected by this pandemic in different ways. Schools and school districts have to make the decision on how and when to return students and teachers to physical classrooms based on the situation in their local communitie­s. Even then, there is still a lot of work to do to ensure that the physical spaces are safe and the proper procedures in place.”

Other red-tier counties continue to maintain restrictio­ns. Alameda and Santa Clara counties have not allowed indoor dining. Alameda County health officials said Sept. 22 that they would continue to evaluate the outbreak situation through Oct. 6, with a priority on reopening schools.

In San Francisco, the only urban county in all of California to reach the orange tier, officials Tuesday

indicated they would further loosen restrictio­ns in coming weeks. San Francisco will allow indoor dining and places of worship to operate indoors at 25% capacity starting today. Movie theaters will also reopen with modificati­ons and at limited capacity on Oct. 7, and the red tape will come down from playground­s in mid- October.

Rural Amador and Calaveras counties joined San Francisco in the orange tier Tuesday, bringing the statewide total to 14. Three others — Modoc, Alpine and Mariposa — have advanced into the yellow tier, indicating “minimal” transmissi­on.

Only 18 counties, including Sonoma in the Bay Area, remain in the most-restrictiv­e purple tier, while 23 have advanced into the red tier. Butte, Fresno, Sacramento, San Joaquin, Santa

Barbara and Yolo counties also made that move Tuesday.

Just south of the Bay Area, Monterey and San Benito and many agricultur­al counties in the Central Valley remained in the purple tier. On Monday, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed two bills aimed at providing farmworker­s with COVID-19 relief by ensuring they have access to critical workplace safety informatio­n and essential state services during the pandemic.

On the plus side, Ghaly said Tuesday there were a “number of counties” that had met the next tier’s requiremen­ts for one week but hadn’t completed the required two weeks to change colors.

“Next week we’ll see if those trends hold,” Ghaly said. “Then a number of other counties will be advancing.”

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