Some Entertainment Venues To Be Allowed To Reopen In LA County

LOS ANGELES, CA — Despite a recent uptick in coronavirus case numbers, Los Angeles County will begin lifting more business and school restrictions this week, health officials announced Wednesday.

The county will allow family entertainment centers to reopen outdoors, and wineries will no longer have to serve food. Both wineries and breweries will no longer have to require advanced reservations either. The reservation and food requirements were conditions of the recent reopenings of breweries and wineries, but they lasted less than a month. Schools currently open for high-need students will be able to bring back 25 percent instead of just 10 percent.

The county remains in the state's most restrictive color-coded tier. In recent months, the spread of the coronavirus slowed dramatically in Los Angeles, but over the last two weeks officials have seen concerning signs that the virus is spreading more quickly.

"I hope this provides much-needed relief and respite for residents who are looking for activities outside their homes," County Supervisor Kathryn Barger said. "These updates will also bring more employees back to work."

That county's schools program currently allows schools to bring its most vulnerable 10 percent of students back to campuses, but that is being increased to 25 percent, "so more students and youth can have access to their teachers and the on-site support systems that are so critical for their growth and for their education," Barger said.

Public health director Barbara Ferrer said that as of this week, 986 schools are taking part in that program, with nearly 35,000 students now receiving in-person instruction and nearly 20,000 teachers and staff back on campuses.

Four school campuses this week also were approved for waivers allowing them to resume in-person instruction for students in pre-kindergarten through second grade. Ferrer said a total of 110 schools have applied for those waivers so far, and more applications are being processed by the county and state.

Barger said the changes in the county's health order will likely be finalized by Friday. The county is still reviewing a recent adjustment by the state allowing all personal-care businesses — such as tattoo parlors and massage therapy operations — to reopen, and it was unclear if those businesses will be included in the Friday revision.

As she has throughout the pandemic, Ferrer noted that more business reopenings means more interaction among residents, potentially leading to more spread of COVID-19. She implored businesses and residents to adhere to all health protocols to limit such transmission.

"We have made a great deal of progress in L.A. County since we experienced the large surge in cases, hospitalizations and deaths in mid- July," Ferrer said. "But the last couple of weeks we've seen some small increases in cases and test positivity rates, which are concerning as we continue to make progress on reopening schools and businesses. With more interactions between people there's an increased risk of transmission that can result in people becoming seriously ill and, tragically for some, passing away."

She noted that from August through the start of September, the county was averaging fewer than 800 new cases per day.

"However, since the middle of September, we started to see the daily number of cases creep up, and this is a cause for some worry," she said. "Last week, the average number of cases was about 1,000 cases per day."

She also said the county's seven-day average positivity rate among those tested for the virus had crept slightly upward, ranging between 3.4% and 3.7% over the past month.

"Similar to our case data, this is a slight increase we will need to carefully watch," Ferrer said.

The county on Wednesday reported 510 new cases, but Ferrer again said the number is artificially low due to continued technical problems with the reporting systems the county uses to compile testing results. Ferrer said the county hopes to have those issues resolved by the end of the week to provide more accurate data on this week's case numbers.

The new cases lifted the cumulative total in the county since the start of the pandemic to 290,486.

The county also announced 33 new coronavirus-related deaths, pushing the overall total to 6,944.

As of Wednesday, there were 758 people hospitalized due to the virus, up from 730 people on Tuesday, 722 on Monday and 752 on Sunday.

Ferrer said she understood that residents may be feeling frustrated at continued health restrictions and the inability of the county to do more widespread reopenings, despite what have appeared to be positive progress in reducing spread of the virus. But she said people dramatic increases in case numbers being seen in many states across the country are a strong reminder of the continuing threat of COVID-19.

"You just have to look around the county to note how hard we all have to work to just not get ourselves into a lot of trouble," she said. "Because the more things are opened up, the more we interact with each other, and that means the more protections we have to take with every single one of those interactions. So I like to applaud us, because you look around and you see how many other places are getting into a lot of trouble with their reopenings. Because the reality is you level off, people feel better, we feel like we're making progress. But then we have more interactions and if we're not super careful when we have more interactions, we end up with those spikes that we all want to avoid."

She noted that the county is "getting very close to a horrible threshold" of 7,000 deaths, while thousands of people are still testing positive every week.

"I do think it is hard to be months into a pandemic that we all hoped would be over by now and still reminding all of us everyday about the fact that in order to continue to make progress we have to double down and use the tools that we have (to slow the virus)," Ferrer said.

City News Service and Patch Staffer Paige Austin contributed to this report.

This article originally appeared on the Los Angeles Patch