Silvia Quintero rings up a customer at the Hicklebee's store in Downtown Willow Glen, in Santa Clara County, Calif., on June 15, 2021. The children's bookstore plans to continue a mask mandate for the foreseeable future. (Harika Maddala/Bay City News)

Health officials across nine Bay Area jurisdictions announced their criteria Thursday to eventually lift the region’s requirement to wear a mask indoors regardless of vaccination status.

The health officers in Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Napa, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara and Sonoma counties and the city of Berkeley initially issued the mandate Aug. 3 amid a wave of new Covid-19 cases and hospitalizations due to the highly contagious delta variant.

On Oct. 7, the health officers argued that the wave is now receding, and a plan to transition away from the mandate in the coming weeks is necessary.

Each county as well as Berkeley will lift the mandate respectively when it has reached the moderate or yellow tier of Covid-19 transmission as defined by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for at least three weeks; when its Covid-19 hospitalizations are “low and stable,” as determined by local health officials; and when 80% of each jurisdiction’s total population is fully vaccinated or eight weeks have passed since federal authorization of the Covid-19 vaccine for children ages 5 to 11.

As of Thursday, none of the eight counties are in the moderate transmission tier. 

In addition, none have reached 80% vaccination among their full populations, although Marin, San Francisco and Santa Clara counties have crested 70 percent.

“Indoor masking has helped to lower case counts, hospitalizations and Covid-19 deaths, so we don’t want to remove this important layer of Covid prevention too hastily,” Santa Clara County Health Officer Dr. Sara Cody said in a statement. “These regional metrics will help keep our community safe, and ensure that our case rates are low and stable, our hospitals are in good shape and vaccination rates are robust.”

San Francisco Mayor London Breed said Thursday that the city will forge ahead next week in easing its indoor mask requirements for some settings while also easing its masking order more broadly under the criteria the health officials jointly announced. 

Beginning Oct. 15, San Francisco will allow those in indoor settings with fewer than 100 people like offices, gyms and indoor college classes to forgo a face covering if everyone can verify that they are fully vaccinated.

“San Francisco’s health orders and shared mitigation efforts have been successful in keeping us safer as a community, and a relaxation of masking orders is warranted,” San Francisco Department of Public Health Director Dr. Grant Colfax said. “We’ll continue to follow the data and science where it leads us.”

Health officers in Santa Clara and Contra Costa counties both noted that their Covid-19 hospitalizations have receded enough to be considered “low and stable,” but said their respective transmission and vaccination rates will likely keep mask requirements in place through most of the year, if not into early 2022.

Federal health regulators are also not expected to consider emergency use authorization data for children ages 5-11 until the end of October, at the earliest.

“We are seeing 900-to-1,000 new first-dose vaccinations in our county every single day,” Contra Costa County Health Officer Dr. Chris Farnitano said Thursday.

“So if we continue at that pace, we could reach that 80% mark within two or three months,” he said. “And then if we have a significant number of children also get vaccinated once they are authorized, that could speed up that timeline as well.”

Farnitano also acknowledged that Contra Costa County officials have had internal discussions about an indoor mask policy similar to San Francisco’s, but plan to keep the county’s current mask requirements intact for now. 

Cody said Santa Clara County has no plans to follow San Francisco’s lead for relatively small indoor gatherings, noting that the county has not even mandated proof of vaccination for certain activities like indoor dining.

“We have always sought to have rules that are as simple as possible, as easy as possible for the public to understand,” Cody said. “So here in Santa Clara County as well as most jurisdictions in the Bay Area, we will keep our requirement for indoor masking, regardless of vaccination status, until we meet these metrics that we’ve adopted across the Bay Area.”

Some indoor masking requirements will remain in place under state and federal guidance even after the regional masking orders are fully lifted, including in K-12 schools, health care settings and while using public transit.

Copyright © 2021 Bay City News, Inc.  

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