31 new COVID-19 cases overnight. Ages 18-49 most likely to catch the virus.
Solano County reported 31 new COVID cases overnight, down from 51 last Thursday and 61 on Friday. Solano reported a total of 292 new cases last week, averaging 42 per day, keeping us from joining all other Bay Area counties in the State’s orange tier. >> The virus is still on the move here. Stay safe, get vaccinated, wear a mask and social distance!
Case rates/Hospitalization rates/Death rates by age group
Note that those of us age 18-49 are most likely to catch the virus. The chart shows the rate of cases in Solano County (per 100,000 population, as of today). Click the image for better detail.
FOR THE RECORD: Screenshots from Solano County COVID Dashboard on Tuesday, April 6:COMPARE: Screenshots from Solano County COVID Dashboard on Monday, April 5:
The screenshots above are from today’s and last Friday’s Solano County COVID-19 Dashboard. The Dashboard is full of much more information and updated weekdays around 4pm. On the County’s dashboard, you can hover a mouse or click on an item for more information. Note the tabs at top for Summary, Demographics and Vaccines. Click here to go to today’s Solano County Dashboard.
Contra Costa, Napa and Sonoma are out of the red tier
Mercury News, by Bay Area News Group, PUBLISHED: April 6, 2021 at 12:11 p.m. | UPDATED: April 6, 2021 at 12:31 p.m.
Eighty percent of California’s population is in the orange COVID tier after Tuesday’s reassignment.
Moving from red to orange were 15 counties: Contra Costa, Napa, Sonoma, Siskiyou, Humboldt, Mendocino, El Dorado, San Benito, Monterey, Tulare, Ventura, San Bernardino, Riverside, San Diego and Imperial.
Moving from purple to red was San Joaquin County.
The looser regulations in those counties will take effect Wednesday.
Only two counties — Merced and Inyo — remain in the purple tier, indicating “widespread” risk. They account for less than 1% of the state’s population.
Thirty-two of the 58 counties, with 80.5% of the population, are in the orange tier (“moderate” risk). Of the Bay Area counties, only Solano hasn’t advanced to that tier.
At a press conference Tuesday morning, state Health and Human Services Secretary Mark Ghaly said the tier-based system of COVID-19 restrictions is likely to be discontinued on June 15. The mask mandate is expected to remain in effect after that date, but businesses will probably be allowed to open at full capacity, he said.
Click here for the state’s official COVID website, including details of what activities are allowed in the various tiers.
After 31 weeks, an end to the tier system is in sight: Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Tuesday that the state plans to remove most of coronavirus restrictions on June 15 if vaccinations remain widely available and hospitalization of Covid-19 patients remains low.
At that point California would allow restaurants, bars, stores, movie theaters, museums and practically all other businesses statewide to resume operations without capacity limits both indoors and outside, state Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly told officials on Tuesday morning. Not everything would return to normal immediately — after June 15 California’s mask mandate will remain in place for the foreseeable future, officials said.
“We’re seeing bright light at the end of the tunnel,” Newsom said at the press conference, cautioning that the state will move “soberly and thoughtfully, guided by the data” to the next stage. “Everything being equal on June 15, we’ll be opening up business as usual.”
“The entire state will move into this phase as a whole. This will not be county-by-county,” Ghaly said in a briefing call with reporters Tuesday, reports the Los Angeles Times.
It’s unclear yet how much power local counties will have at their discretion to impose effective modifications to the “full reopening,” such as caps on capacity at event sizes, as San Francisco in particular has used to enforce a more conservative approach to reopening throughout the pandemic.
Newsom also shared that the state has reached its goal of administering 4 million vaccines to residents of low-income-designated areas throughout the state, activating looser criteria for counties to advance to the next tier.
On top of that news, the state included three Bay Area counties — Napa, Sonoma and Contra Costa — among the 16 across the state moving into less restrictive tiers. In the case of those Bay Area counties, they’re moving from the red “substantial” tier to the orange “moderate” tier, opening nonessential offices, indoor bars, and host limited live entertainment events, among other activities, effective Wednesday.
Solano County is the only county in the Bay Area still on the red tier. Eight of nine Bay Area counties have now reached the orange tier.
If their case numbers continue to improve, San Francisco, San Mateo and Santa Clara counties would be on pace to become eligible for the yellow tier next week.
Here’s what the orange tier counties can expect under the new tier changes, which would become effective Wednesday morning:
Bars that don’t serve food can reopen, but can only seat patrons outdoors. Wineries, distilleries and breweries that don’t serve meals can resume hosting customers indoors.
Restaurants and movie theaters can increase their indoor capacity to 50% or 200 people, whichever is fewer. Previously, both establishments were limited to 25% capacity or 100 people, whichever was fewer.
Retail stores can open to full indoor capacity as long as social distancing is enforced, up from 50% capacity previously.
Indoor gyms can expand from 10% to 25% capacity.
Museums and places of worship can move from 25% to 50% indoor capacity.
Nonessential offices can reopen, but the state is still encouraging remote work.
Amusement parks can open outdoors to 25% capacity for counties in the orange zone, or a maximum 500 people, but only in-state visitors are allowed and tickets must be purchased in advance.
On Friday state officials also loosened restrictions on holding indoor events such as conferences and performances for the first time since early 2020. They introduced a sliding scale for the number of visitors that can attend, and venues can increase capacity if visitors are vaccinated or have recent negative tests for coronavirus.
On the orange tier, indoor venues can host up to 15% capacity, and 35% if guests are vaccinated. For events with over 1,500 people, the orange tier allows 10% capacity and 35% if guests are vaccinated.
FAIRFIELD — Solano County health officials are expecting the state to soon release its plan for after its current Blueprint for a Safer Economy.
The post-Covid guidelines could go into effect in just a couple of months, Dr. Bela Matyas, the county public health officer, said in a phone interview Monday.
“They were sounding pretty reasonable for what they were saying at the time,” Matyas said about the guidelines.
However, the details of the plan, and its exact rollout date, have not been specified.
In the meantime, the county is not expecting any changes to its red-tier status.
That is both good news and bad, Matyas suggested. He said he was concerned the county could regress into the more restrictive purple tier, while other indicators suggested the orange tier was possible.
“The problem is it is pretty volatile. One day we are talking about going back into purple, and the next day we are talking about getting into the orange,” Matyas said. “That’s how volatile it’s been.”
The weekend numbers helped to settle that a bit.
The county reported 100 new cases since Friday’s update, an average of 33.33 cases per day through Monday – taking the overall total to 31,401.
The daily average is a significant improvement over the 51 new cases Thursday and 61 new cases Friday, with a seven-day average of 41.7.
There were six new Covid-related deaths reported, all men over 65 with underlying health issues, and all from the holiday surge.
Matyas said he believed five died in December, the other in January. Four were from the state prison, the other two were from the community.
It brings the pandemic death total in Solano County to 203.
Matyas also reported that the makeup of the recent increases in confirmed cases was as the Public Health Division suspected, largely younger people. That helped explain why hospital-related numbers were not seeing the same rise.
Matyas also noted that 68.8% of the county’s population over 65 have received their vaccinations, which he described as “encouraging” for the protection of the most vulnerable population in the county.
Overall, about 39% of the county’s population of 16 and older residents have been inoculated, Matyas said.
Monday’s number of individuals hospitalized with the disease was 15, part of the downward trend experienced despite the daily cases climbing during the same period.
The seven-day positivity testing rate did not improve over the weekend, holding at 6.5%. However, active cases dropped for the first time in more than a week, falling by 35 to 297.
“I was hoping it would be below 6,” Matyas said of the testing rate.
Vallejo added 39 new cases over the three days, bringing its total to 9,333. Fairfield added 20 for a new count of 8,559. Vacaville’s tally is at 8,206 after 23 new cases, the county reported.
Suisun City (2,146) added 10 cases; Dixon (1,805) added two; Benicia (898) added four; Rio Vista (353) added one; and there was one new case to take the total in the unincorporated area of the county to 101, the county reported.
The number of individuals who have been tested climbed by 832 since Friday and was reported at 192,973.
The state’s color-coded Covid-19 monitoring system designates the purple tier for counties where transmission of the novel coronavirus is considered to be widespread. Shutdown orders for counties in the purple tier are the most severe. The red tier – where Solano sits – is for counties with a substantial spread of the virus. The orange tier designates moderate virus transmission, while the yellow tier is reserved for counties where the spread of the virus is deemed to be minimal.
Restrictions to slow the spread of the virus are eased as counties move from purple to red, red to orange and orange to yellow. The state has previously reported that it is developing criteria for a new green tier with even fewer restrictions than the yellow tier.
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