upper waypoint

California Lifts Stay-at-Home Orders for All Regions

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

California lifted regional stay-at-home orders across the state Monday in response to improving coronavirus conditions, returning the state to a system of county-by-county restrictions, state health officials announced.

The order had been in place in the San Francisco Bay Area, San Joaquin Valley and Southern California regions, covering the majority of the state's counties. The change will allow businesses such as restaurants to resume outdoor operations in many areas, though local officials could choose to continue stricter rules. The state is also lifting a 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew.

"Together, we changed our activities knowing our short-term sacrifices would lead to longer-term gains. COVID-19 is still here and still deadly, so our work is not over, but it's important to recognize our collective actions saved lives and we are turning a critical corner," said Dr. Tomás J. Aragón, director of the California Department of Public Health, in a statement.

Gov. Gavin Newsom is expected to address the public later Monday.

After the order was lifted Monday, San Francisco Mayor London Breed tweeted the following:

Marin said in a press release that it along with the rest of the counties in the region are going into the purple tier, also known as Tier 1, indicating "widespread" coronavirus transmission. The redesignation means hair salons, nail salons, barbershops and tattoo parlors, among other personal services, can reopen. Retail stores, including those in malls, as well as libraries can jump to allowing 25% capacity.

Outdoor dining and religious services can resume. Gyms can also reopen, but only outdoors.

The state's decision comes with improving trends in the rate of infections, hospitalizations and intensive care unit capacity as well as vaccinations.

Newsom imposed the stay-at-home order in December as coronavirus cases worsened. Under the system, a multi-county region had to shut down most businesses and order people to stay home if ICU capacity dropped below 15%.

An 11-county Northern California region was never under the order. The Greater Sacramento region exited the order last week. The state makes the decisions based on four-week projections showing ICU capacity improving, but officials have not disclosed the data behind the forecasts.

During the weekend, San Francisco Bay Area ICU capacity surged to 23% while the San Joaquin Valley increased to 1.3%, its first time above zero in more than a month. The huge Southern California region, the most populous, remains at zero ICU capacity.

Early last year, the state developed a system of color-coded tiers that dictated the level of restrictions on businesses and individuals based on virus conditions in each of California's 58 counties. Most counties will now go back to the most restrictive purple tier, which allows for outdoor dining, hair and nail salons to be open, and outdoor church services. Bars that only serve beverages cannot be open.

The county-by-county tier system uses various metrics to determine the risk of community transmission and apply a color code — purple, red, orange or yellow — which correspond to widespread, substantial, moderate and minimal, respectively.

As of the weekend, California has had more than 3.1 million confirmed COVID-19 cases and 36,790 deaths, according to the state's public health website.

Kathleen Ronayne and John Antczak, Associated Press, and Jon Brooks, KQED

lower waypoint
next waypoint