Santa Cruz County To Regress Into Most-Restrictive Tier

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Watsonville CA

16 November, 2020

4:58 PM

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SANTA CRUZ COUNTY, CA — Santa Cruz County will return Tuesday into the most-restrictive tier of California's COVID-19 risk system. Santa Cruz County regressed last week into the red "substantial risk" tier of California's four-tiered color-coded COVID-19 risk system. But as Gov. Gavin Newsom proclaimed Monday the need to pull "an emergency brake" amid a sharp spike in COVID-19 cases, Santa Cruz and nearly 30 other counties were moved back into the purple tier, which indicates widespread risk. "We are sounding the alarm," Newsom said Monday in a news release. "California is experiencing the fastest increase in cases we have seen yet –faster than what we experienced at the outset of the pandemic or even this summer. The spread of COVID-19, if left unchecked, could quickly overwhelm our health care system and lead to catastrophic outcomes." Read: CA Pulls 'Emergency Brake,' Considers Curfew In Coronavirus Surge Santa Cruz County is now seeing nearly 13 new COVID-19 cases per day, per 100,000 residents, according to state data. The purple tier standard is 7 cases per day, per 100,000 residents. Case rate data lags by a week. The county's COVID-19 testing positivity rate, however, is 3.9% — below the purple tier standard of 8%. Counties may enact stricter restrictions, but here's what the state allows under the purple tier, with safety modifications: Outdoor gatherings only; up to three householdsOutdoor dining onlyOutdoor playgrounds/recreational facilitiesIndoor hair salons/barbershopsIndoor retail; 25% capacityOutdoor gyms/fitness centersOutdoor worship servicesIndoor shopping malls; 25% capacity, closed common areas and food courtsIndoor personal care servicesOutdoor movie theatersOutdoor museums, zoos, aquariums Bars, breweries and distilleries that do not sell food must remain closed. People who work in offices should instead work remotely, according to state guidelines. See the full state guidelines for each tier here. County public health officials have called on residents to stay home when sick, wear masks, maintain six feet from others not in your household, frequently wash hands, get a flu shot and review guidelines on Thanksgiving and holiday travel. Last week, the state issued a travel advisory. All visitors to California and Californians returning to their home state are asked to quarantine for 14 days upon their arrival in the Golden State. The advisory only applies to recreational travelers, not those who are traveling for work, medical, study or other essential purposes. Read: County Issues Thanksgiving Guidance Public health officials expect cases to continue to climb as the weather cools and holidays loom. "We're moving from a marathon to a sprint," Newsom said. There have been 3,530 COVID-19 cases reported in Santa Cruz County as of Monday afternoon, including 594 active known cases, county data show. There have been 26 deaths linked to the coronavirus. Here's the total COVID-19 case count by community: Aptos: 150Ben Lomond: 28Boulder Creek: 30Capitola: 82Felton: 33Freedom: 199Santa Cruz: 739Scotts Valley: 91Soquel: 75Watsonville: 1,980Unincorporated: 85Under investigation: 38 Get more detailed information on the county's COVID-19 statistics here.

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