Business & Tech
These Businesses Are Reopening In Riverside County: See List
Now that Gov. Gavin Newsom has lifted the Stay-At-Home order, Riverside County reverts back to the "Purple Tier," allowing some reopenings.
RIVERSIDE COUNTY, CA — Due to improving hospital conditions, on Monday it was announced that Gov. Gavin Newsom lifted the Stay-At-Home order across the state, including in Riverside County.
What does that mean for county residents and businesses? What will now reopen?
Firstly, Riverside County is still subject to the "Widespread Purple Tier" of the state's economic reopening guidelines, but the tier is less restrictive than the Dec. 5 Stay-At-Home Order that mandated the following sectors closed:
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- Indoor and Outdoor Playgrounds
- Indoor Recreational Facilities
- Hair Salons and Barbershops
- Personal Care Services
- Museums, Zoos, and Aquariums
- Movie Theaters
- Wineries
- Bars, Breweries and Distilleries
- Family Entertainment Centers
- Cardrooms and Satellite Wagering
- Limited Services
- Live Audience Sports
- Amusement Parks
Under the Stay-At-Home order, salons and personal services were also closed; outdoor recreational facilities were not allowed to serve food, drink or alcohol, and overnight stays at campgrounds were not permitted; indoor retail and shopping centers could only operate at 20 percent capacity; hotels and lodging were limited to critical infrastructure support only; restaurants could only serve take-out or pick-up; office workers had to work remotely unless they were part of critical infrastructure sectors.
As of Monday morning, Riverside County remained in the "Widespread" Purple Tier. While restrictions are still in place under the tier, several activities can reopen, such as salons, outdoor dining can resume at restaurants, wineries can serve patrons outdoors, according to the tiering. See the complete list below:
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Lifting of the Stay-At-Home order came after state officials said Monday that with hospitalization numbers trending downward, four-week projections now indicate ICU capacity will rise above the 15 percent threshold.
"Californians heard the urgent message to stay home as much as possible and accepted that challenge to slow the surge and save lives," said Dr. Tomas Aragon, CDPH director and state public health officer. "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."
Newsom, who has come under fire from some business groups and political opponents for his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and imposition of economic restrictions, insisted Monday the lifting of regional stay-at-home orders was based on scientific projections of future hospital demand — not politics.
Critics were quick to lash out at the governor over the announcement.
"This governor's decisions have never been based on science," California Republican Party Chairwoman Jessica Millan Patterson tweeted. "Him re-opening our state is not an attempt to help working Californians, but rather an attempt to counter the Recall Movement. It's sad and pathetic."
Former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, a Republican who has established an exploratory committee for a possible gubernatorial campaign, responded with: "A new day, a new erratic COVID rule."
"Californians want to follow the science. Instead we're forced to follow a governor who decides on a whim the fate of millions of Californians while refusing to release the data behind his contradictory and arbitrary decisions. It's absurd," Faulconer said.
Newsom quickly dismissed suggestions he was playing politics with the announcement, saying, "That's just complete, utter nonsense, so let's just dispense with that fundamental and foundational nonsense."
The governor pointed to the state's current projections that estimate Southern California ICU capacity will reach 33.3 percent by Feb. 21, a four-week projection. The region's current capacity is still estimated at 0 percent, but Newsom said the future projection is based on current hospital capacity, transmission rates, case rates and the proportion of COVID patients who need to be admitted to the ICU.
He said that combination of factors "really is the forecast that gives us confidence on where we will land in a number of weeks."
"The goal of this announcement is to socialize our projections as well as illuminate and further advance an understanding, a deeper understanding of what today means and what it doesn't mean," Newsom said. "And it's in that respect I want to remind folks we're not out of the woods. We're seeing a flattening of the curve. Everything that should be up is up, everything that should be down is down — case rates, positivity rates, hospitalizations, ICUs, testing starting to go back up as well as vaccination rates in this state, but we are not out of the woods."
Newsom released updated statewide figures showing sharp drops over the past two weeks in average daily case numbers and a 20 percent drop in hospitalizations and 10 percent dip in ICU admissions. He said the 14-day average testing positivity rate fell from 13.6 percent to 9.4 percent, while the rate over the past seven days has dropped to 8 percent, ranking better than half the states in the nation.
"We are in a position — projecting four weeks forward with a significant decline in the case rates, positivity rates — we are anticipating still more decline in hospitalizations and more declines in ICUs, and that's why we're lifting that stay-at-home order effective immediately today," he said.
But he noted that people are still dying from the virus at high levels, saying the state was reporting 328 fatalities on Monday.
"Deaths continue to be significant, and this is a sober reminder about how deadly this pandemic remains, more so now than ever as we have battled our way through the most challenging surge," he said. "And now are seeing truly light at the end of that surge, at the end of the proverbial tunnel."
The California Nurses Association union released a statement criticizing the decision to lift the stay-at-home orders, saying hospitals remain overcrowded, leaving nurses to work "inside of a nightmare."
"Registered nurses across the state of California know that there is a human cost to lifting stay at home orders too soon," according to the union. "Let's be clear that even if numbers are `trending downward,' we are still in the midst of the most deadly surge of COVID-19 yet. RNs have seen more patient death in the past few weeks than we have seen at any other point in our careers, and as frontline workers, we know better than elected officials and business leaders that it is not time to let our guard down."
Although the state order has been lifted, individual counties are still able to impose stricter restrictions than the state. Riverside County, however, has maintained it will follow state protocols.
See the latest coronavirus figures for Riverside County here.
—City News Service contributed to this report.
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