California eases lockdowns as U.S. COVID-19 crisis ebbs
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[January 26, 2021]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - California eased
strict COVID-19 stay-at-home orders on Monday, allowing restaurants to
reopen for outdoor dining and greater social mixing, as public health
authorities reported slower infection rates and hospitalizations.
The announcement marked the most tangible sign yet that California,
which emerged in recent months as a leading U.S. coronavirus hotspot,
has moved beyond the worst days of a crisis that pushed much of its
healthcare system to breaking point.
Across the country, New York Governor Mario Cuomo said he planned to
relax a number of unspecified restrictions in the days ahead, as long as
transmission rates there remained low.
The United States as a whole has also seen declines in newly reported
COVID-19 cases and hospital admissions over the past two weeks,
following an alarming year-end spike of infections.
In parts of California, Texas and other states, that surge filled
hospital intensive care units, emergency rooms, ambulance bays and
morgues to overflowing.
The newly improved outlook nevertheless came as the country surpassed
the ominous milestone of 25 million known infections, with nearly
419,000 American lives lost from the pandemic.
Scientists have warned that another wave of contagion could loom on the
horizon with the emergence of several coronavirus variants found to be
more transmissible than the original.
One such variant first detected in Britain, and associated with higher
mortality, has been documented in at least 20 U.S. states in recent
weeks.
On Monday, the Minnesota Department of Health announced it had confirmed
the first U.S. case of a variant from Brazil that medical experts have
said might prove resistant to antibody therapeutic treatments.
'NOT OUT OF THE WOODS'
California's stay-at-home restrictions, among the most stringent
constraints on business and social life imposed anywhere in the country,
were triggered in early December when available space in hospital ICUs
reached maximum capacity.
Governor Gavin Newsom said infection rates and hospital admissions in
California, the most populous U.S. state with 40 million residents, have
since declined dramatically, and projections show available ICU capacity
climbing well above minimum thresholds over the next month.
"But we are not out of the woods," Newsom added, urging continued
adherence to mask-wearing requirements and social distancing until
collective immunity can be achieved through vaccinations.
The stay-at-home rules lifted on Monday had required residents to remain
largely indoors and avoid travel around the clock, except as necessary
for permitted activities such as grocery shopping, medical appointments,
individual outdoor exercise and dog walks.
Those constraints were lifted on Monday for Southern California, the San
Francisco Bay area and the state's largely agricultural San Joaquin
Valley. The greater Sacramento area was excused from the order two weeks
ago, and the extreme northern California region was never under it.
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People wear masks as they walk along a side walk after California
lifted its regional stay-at-home orders across the state during the
outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in California, U.S.,
January 25, 2021. REUTERS/Mike Blake
The governor stressed that lesser restrictions imposed in November
remained in effect for most of the state - a nightly curfew on all
indoor social gatherings and non-essential activities outside the
home from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m.
He said 54 of California's 58 counties remain under that curfew for
now as part of the state's color-coded purple tier of the strictest
COVID-19 public health measures.
MIXED FEELINGS
One of the most immediate practical effects of Monday's action is
that restaurants, which had been restricted to carryout and delivery
service only, can return to offering outdoor dining.
Some in the restaurant industry, which has been largely critical of
Newsom's clampdown on eateries, remained ambivalent about easing the
rules.
"I hope we're not rushing into things and I hope everyone that is
going to partake in outdoor dining is going to respect the rules and
is going to do their best to ensure a safe environment for
everyone," Cara Devereaux, assistant manager at Cato's Ale House in
Oakland, told Reuters.
Nail and hair salons may also reopen on a limited basis, with masks
required of staff and customers, while some youth sporting events
are permitted to resume as well.
Newsom said California has tripled its pace of administering
vaccines, giving more than 2.4 million doses out of 4.5 million
doses shipped to the state as of Monday. He set a goal of
administering 1 million more shots over the next 10 days.
As previously announced, Californians aged 65 and older are now
eligible for vaccines along with healthcare workers,
first-responders, food and agricultural workers, teachers and school
staff. After that, immunization eligibility will be prioritized
among the general public on the basis of age, Newsom said.
(Reporting and writing by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Additional
reporting by Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento, Calif., Nathan Frandino
in Oakland, Calif., Lisa Shumaker in Chicago; Editing by David
Gregorio and Himani Sarkar)
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