The Norwalk Hour

Calif. shuts bars, indoor dining, gyms, churches

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday extended the closure of bars and indoor dining statewide and ordered gyms, churches and hair salons closed in most places as coronaviru­s cases keep rising in the nation’s most populated state.

On July 1, Newsom ordered 19 counties with a surging number of confirmed infections to close bars and indoor operations at restaurant­s, wineries, zoos and family entertainm­ent centers like bowling alleys and miniature golf.

The Democratic governor extended that order statewide Monday. He also imposed additional restrictio­ns on the 30 counties now with rising numbers, including the most populated of Los Angeles and San Diego, by ordering worship services to stop and gyms, hair salons, indoor malls and offices for noncritica­l industries to shut down.

“The data suggests not everybody is practicing common sense,” said Newsom, whose order takes effect immediatel­y.

He didn’t include schools, which are scheduled to resume in a few weeks in much of the state. But Monday, the state’s two largest school districts, San Diego and Los Angeles, announced their students would start the school year with online learning only. LA Unified is the second-largest public school district in the country.

In March, California was the first state to issue a mandatory, statewide stay-athome order to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s. The order appeared to work as cases stabilized in the ensuing weeks while other states grappled with huge increases.

But the order devastated the world’s fifth-largest economy, with more than 7.5 million people filing for unemployme­nt benefits. Newsom moved quickly to let most businesses reopen in May. Like other states that took similar steps, a subsequent rise in cases and hospitaliz­ations led him to impose new restrictio­ns this month.

Newsom has compared his strategy of opening and closing businesses as a “dimmer switch,” highlighti­ng the flexibilit­y needed as public health officials monitor the virus’s progress

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