The Mercury News

County first in Bay Area to orange tier

Restrictio­ns will be eased even more starting today

- By Nico Savidge and Aldo Toledo

San Mateo County became the first in the Bay Area since the winter surge in coronaviru­s cases to reach the orange tier of California’s coronaviru­s reopening system on Tuesday, meaning residents will be guided by the second-loosest level of restrictio­ns on businesses and activities.

Santa Clara County and San Francisco are on track to take the same step next week, according

“Things look like they have stabilized. We’re secure that we don’t have to send all our people back to unemployme­nt.” — Susan Smith, museum bookkeeper

to data posted by state officials.

The progress comes as the number of new coronaviru­s cases continues its dramatic decline across California, and despite what Gov. Gavin Newsom described as a slowerthan-expected ramping up of vaccine supplies.

State officials have talked for weeks about their hopes to vaccinate significan­tly more residents after federal regulators authorized Johnson & Johnson’s single-shot vaccine last month. But so far, Newsom said California has received only 341,000 doses from Johnson & Johnson.

“We were anticipati­ng a lot more than that by now,” Newsom said during a visit to an Alameda elementary school Tuesday morning.

California’s vaccine supply overall has been rising only modestly. The state is set to receive about 1.75 million doses this week and 1.8 million next week, compared to 1.6 million in the first week of March and 1.3 million in mid-February.

Newsom said significan­t increases are still on the way. California expects to get far more doses and build out its vaccine distributi­on network so that it can deliver 4 million shots per week by the beginning of May, when President Joe Biden last week pledged to open eligibilit­y to all adults.

“We are going to be in a completely different place in six or so weeks,” Newsom said, “as we see the significan­t increase in manufactur­ed supply.”

Entering the orange, or “moderate,” tier allows bowling alleys and indoor cardrooms in San Mateo County to reopen within certain capacity limits starting today, and the same with outdoor service at bars that don’t offer food service.

Indoor operations at restaurant­s, museums, churches and movie theaters in most cases will be allowed to increase their capacities to half of pre-pandemic levels — up from the tighter restrictio­ns mandated in the red, or “substantia­l risk,” tier. Wineries, breweries and distilleri­es will be allowed to start indoor service.

The rules continue to discourage indoor gatherings, where the virus has a particular­ly easy time spreading, but allow them with members of up to three households.

Mike Leong, owner of Bel Mateo Bowl in San Mateo, said he will open his bowling alley at noon today.

Leong has spent the past several months working to get his business ready for reopening. It now “looks like a hospital,” he said, with Plexiglas separating every bowling lane, air purifiers every six lanes, a fog sanitizer unit and other precaution­s.

In the year since the bowling alley closed, Leong lost his brother to COVID-19 and has been on unemployme­nt along with about 20 staff members.

“I can’t begin to tell you the amount of anguish and mental health issues I went though not being able to do what we normally do here,” Leong said. “I had to make sure we were ready to go for our community.”

With more than 750,000 residents, San Mateo is by far the most populous county yet to reach the the orange stage. Just three others, which combined are home to about 40,000 people, had reached that level or the least-restrictiv­e yellow tier before Tuesday.

Several large counties where COVID-19 rates have been far higher also left the state’s most-restrictiv­e purple tier on Tuesday, including Monterey, Sacramento, San Diego and Riverside.

Along with Marin County, San Mateo was the first in the Bay Area to graduate out of the purple stage on Feb. 23. Since then every other Bay Area county has entered the the red tier, and some of the largest in Southern California did the same after state officials hit a goal of distributi­ng 2 million vaccine doses in vulnerable ZIP codes, which triggered relaxed rules for entering that stage.

Data posted by the state Tuesday showed Santa Clara and San Francisco counties now have low enough case and test positivity rates to advance to the orange tier. State rules require counties to maintain those rates for two weeks before they can advance, meaning both counties could do so next Tuesday barring an increase in cases.

Newsom and other state officials hinted last week they would soon announce the creation of a fifth “green tier” that would remove even more limits on businesses and gatherings. But they have not detailed what it would take for counties to reach that stage.

“Moving to the orange tier marks that we are making a true comeback,” San Mateo County Board President David J. Canepa said in a statement Tuesday. “It means that there is no longer a substantia­l risk of catching COVID in this county. Now we must minimize the risk if we want to move to yellow and then green to complete this historic comeback.”

At the San Mateo County History Museum inside Redwood City’s old county courthouse, officials were bringing back staff and gearing up for a planned reopening next Wednesday, March 24. Indoor museums had been allowed to reopen with up to 25% of their usual capacity since county entered the red tier, and the move to orange ups that to 50%.

Museum Bookkeeper Susan Smith said this time feels different, unlike previous reopenings, when waves of the virus forced businesses to shutter again.

“Things look like they have stabilized,” Smith said. “We’re secure that we don’t have to send all our people back to unemployme­nt.”

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