LOS ANGELES (NewsNation Now) — Most of California’s 40 million residents will be able to enjoy limited indoor activities such as dining inside or watching a movie at a theater by mid-week as coronavirus case rates continue to stay low, state officials said Friday.
Officials said that 13 counties, including Los Angeles, would be able to open restaurants, gyms and museums at limited capacity on Sunday, the result of the state hitting a 2 million equity metric aimed at getting more vaccines into low-income communities. Another 13 counties are expected to reopen Wednesday under a different metric.
Also next week, the state expands eligibility for the still-scarce vaccine.
Business owners are gearing up for the long-awaited reopening. While some fear it’s happening too soon, others say it can’t happen soon enough.
“We’ve been waiting for everything to clear up. It feels like forever. Normal life is finally coming back,” said Max Cain.
The manager of Brittania Pub in Santa Monica is thrilled to have employees rearranging furniture again for the return of indoor dining, though it will be far from normal. The county requires tables eight feet apart, and seating capacity will be limited to 25%.
Indoor dining has been banned for over eight-months, but with more than 80% of Californians still unvaccinated, many are wary.
“We’ve been going through this for a year, and I see people without masks, and I see people still have the virus. So, until I get vaccinated, I won’t change my behavior,” said LA resident Paul Dunn.
“I don’t think it’s right, I think we should stay not open for a little while longer, but everybody needs to get out and do stuff. Nobody likes staying at home,” said Raquel Quintanilla, an LA resident.
Gov. Gavin Newsom announced last week that he would set aside 40% of vaccine for residents of about 400 ZIP codes the state deems most vulnerable based on metrics such as household income, access to health care and education levels.
The point is to tie reopening standards to ensuring that the people most affected by the pandemic are protected against the virus, he said. Once the state reaches 2 million doses administered in those ZIP codes, which it did Friday, the threshold for moving out of the most restrictive tier in a color-coded, four-tier system the state adopted in August relaxes.
Previously, counties could move from the purple tier to the lower red tier based on metrics that include the number of new COVID-19 cases per 100,000 people per day over a period of several weeks. The threshold for entering the red tier now moves from 7 cases per 100,000 residents to 10 cases.
The counties eligible to reopen within 48 hours — Sunday — include Contra Costa and Sonoma in the San Francisco Bay Area and Los Angeles. San Bernardino and Orange said it would do so Sunday, although LA County officials said they would wait until Monday.
San Diego, Sacramento, Riverside and Ventura are among 13 additional counties expected to reopen Wednesday via the normal reassignment process that occurs every Tuesday.
San Joaquin and Santa Barbara are in this category. The hard-hit counties of Kern and Fresno in the central valley remain in the most restrictive tier.
The state is opening up vaccinations to an estimated 4.4 million people ages 16-64 with disabilities and certain health conditions, including severe obesity, type 2 diabetes, chronic kidney disease at stage four or above and Down syndrome.
California’s guidelines do not call for medical documentation; instead, people will have to attest that they are eligible. This reduces barriers to access, but it also opens up a loophole for determined line jumpers.
San Francisco is going a step further than the state, broadening the allowed categories and adding people who are deaf, HIV positive or who have behavioral health disabilities, including severe mental health or substance use disorders, to get vaccinated.
Dr. Paul Simon, LA County’s chief science officer, said people will be asked to sign an attestation if they can’t provide documentation. “We certainly hope people won’t try to take advantage of the situation and will be honest,” Simon said.
The state is also expanding eligibility to transit workers and residents and workers of homeless shelters, jails and detention centers. They join teachers, food and agriculture workers, health care employees and seniors 65 and older in being eligible for vaccine.
In late January, Newsom announced insurer Blue Shield would set up and administer a new vaccine tracking and delivery system. The state’s 58 counties and three cities with public health departments would be required to use the state’s My Turn system to make appointments.
Blue Shield is expected to take control by March 31. But Santa Clara County has refused to sign a contract with the insurer, saying it can better vaccinate its residents with an appointment system that is superior to the state’s system.
Blue Shield CEO Paul Markovich said Friday that more than half of local health jurisdictions have switched to My Turn or will switch soon, he said.
My Turn is great for scheduling appointments at mass vaccination sites, but it is not so good at carving out slots for vulnerable populations at smaller clinics, said Joe Prado, Fresno County’s community health division manager. He expects the state online portal to improve.
“We’re going to live with these two systems a little while longer,” he said.