On Tuesday afternoon, the California Department of Public Health, or CDPH, confirmed Lake County has been moved from the purple or “widespread” tier, the most restrictive, to the red tier, which signifies “substantial” virus in the community.
The changes in tier rankings go into effect on Wednesday, officials said.
CDPH said Lake was among 11 counties to be moved from the purple tier.
The other counties seeing their status changed to red on Tuesday are Monterey, Riverside, Sacramento, San Diego, Santa Barbara, Sutter, Tehama, Tulare and Ventura.
San Mateo moved from the red tier to the orange, or “moderate,” tier, the state said.
The state said no counties moved to a more restrictive tier.
With Tuesday’s tier adjustments, 11 counties are in the purple tier, 42 in red, four in orange and one in the yellow, or “minimal,” tier.
The state said the counties now in the purple tier represent 4.1 million, or 10.3 percent of California’s population, while the red tier accounts for 35.1 million or 87.7 percent, orange covers 817,908 or 2 percent and yellow covers 1,117 people, and doesn’t show up as a percentage of population on the state’s metrics.
Additional tier changes won’t be immediate
The state moved Lake County into the purple tier at the end of November, as Lake County News has reported. Since then, activities like indoor dining have been prohibited.
Last week, state and local officials had announced that they anticipated Lake County would drop into the red tier this week.
As of Tuesday, Lake County Public Health reported that the county had 3,224 confirmed cases – of which 3,148 have recovered – and 43 deaths.
CDPH said Tuesday that Lake County’s new case rate was 5.1 per 100,000, and a seven-day positivity rate of 3 percent.
While Lake’s COVID-19 case rate is down to the lowest rates it has seen since the first half of October, what hastened the tier rating changes was CDPH’s adjustment of tier thresholds due to the state meeting a goal of vaccinating two million people in the communities across the state hardest hit by COVID-19.
Based on the current version of the state’s framework, county officials said Lake County won’t be eligible to move down to the orange tier until at least Tuesday, April 6.
That’s because counties can move only one tier at a time, and Lake County must be in the red tier for three weeks prior to advancing to orange.
To stay in the red tier, the county must have no more than 45 cases per week, and would need to have less than 18 per week to go into orange and four per week to go into the yellow tier, according to Sarah Marikos, Lake County’s epidemiologist.
In related news, the county’s movement into the red tier triggered the Board of Supervisors’ return to “hybrid” board meetings which allow for both Zoom and in-person participation. The board had closed meetings to in-person participation by the public in January after a surge in COVID-19 cases.
County officials said the hybrid board meetings will resume on Tuesday, March 23.
The capacity of the board chambers, as modified to accommodate social distancing, is 23 people. To encourage broad and safe participation, electronic options – phone, Zoom, Facebook, YouTube, written Granicus eComment and Lake County PEG TV – will continue for the foreseeable future, the county reported.
Information on the tier assignments and the changes in restrictions can be found here.
A rundown of Tuesday’s updates is here.
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