San Francisco is making progress on moving to the orange tier and there is data to prove it. This morning, Mayor @LondonBreed tweeted the latest details: bit.ly/2OWzLhv
According to @sfoewd, their approach is to “align with the state’s orange tier framework” as much as possible, but SF may have specific additional safeguards to limit the spread of the virus.
The final orange tier announcement is expected to made on Wednesday, but as a reminder here’s what could be allowed when it happens:
🥳Events: Singing or playing wind and/or brass instruments or other similar outdoor activities with a mask and 12 feet away from people from other households will be allowed. There is no cap on the number of performers, and events are allowed with 50 attendees max.
🛍️ Retail: This is allowed with a capacity of 50%. Indoor food courts must meet @sfdph approved ventilation requirements.
🍴Outdoor dining: This can operate at no limit, but tables must maintain a 6 ft distance, with 6 people allowed at each table. Bars and restaurants are also allowed to serve alcohol without a meal.
🍴Indoor dining: Restaurants are allowed to open at 50% capacity, but indoor services must end by 11 pm.
💪🏾 Indoor Gyms: These can open at 25% capacity with no more than 100 participants. Outdoor gyms can also operate with no capacity limits. Youth sports indoor recreation facilities are limited to 100 people.
💅 Personal services: Places like hair and nail salons can open indoors at 50%.
🦓 Zoos and museums: These places can operate indoors at 50%. Operators must provide a safety plan to @SF_DPH in order to open outdoor.
🍿 Movie theaters: Indoors can operate at 50% with a max of 200 people.
🏢 Non-essential offices: Businesses with fewer than 20 personnel will be allowed to open at 25%.
For more information on SF moving to the orange tier, check out @sfoewd 's video: bit.ly/3scYZ9M
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We're live-tweeting the San Francisco Board of Education meeting.
On tap today: the process for selecting a new superintendent & Commissioner Lam's fall reopening resolution.
Plus, will the board address Commissioner Collins' tweets?
Follow along 🧵⬇️
President Lopez begins the meeting with a statement:
"The rise in anti-Asian discrimination and hate that we've seen is unacceptable... We must recommit ourselves to creating safe communities for each and every person." 2/
Lopez does not explicitly name Commissioner Alison Collins or Collins' racist tweets in her statement.
However, she indicates that the board will open up space during this meeting for community members, parents, city leaders and students to voice their concerns. 2/
Yesterday morning in Golden Gate Park, dozens gathered at JFK/8th Avenue to rally to keep the roadway car-free.1/5 bit.ly/391ujAN
JFK closed a year ago to give residents space to socially distance. 2/5 bit.ly/3tDFvvl
While the plan is to end JFK’s closure once the city starts to reopen, advocates believe it should be permanent. Among them, Senator @Scott_Wiener . 3/5 bit.ly/3tFgnUW
In response to our analysis, @SF_DPH told us it’s been monitoring the situation since mid-February. “We are absolutely aware of Chinatown,” said Dr. Albert Yu, SFDPH’s chief health information officer. (2/x)
However, the department doesn’t have enough data yet to explain why Chinatown has slipped, including whether seniors are choosing to wait to be vaccinated, are being overlooked or some combination of the two.
“We don’t have that level of granularity in our data," Yu said. (3/x)
Conservatorship is a hot-button topic in #SF.
But for Supervisor @RafaelMandelman, the issue isn’t just about policy. It’s personal. We spoke with him about his experience conserving his mother & why he thinks conservatorship can help move SF forward.hrsy.media/6LW9qS (1/5)
.@RafaelMandelman’s mother battled mental illness and homelessness throughout her life.
“I'm a freshman at Yale, and I'm on a payphone in the library talking to her in a homeless shelter, which was this sort of crazy dichotomy," he said. (2/5)
This personal experience led @RafaelMandelman to become a major supporter of conservatorship in SF.
But he’s disappointed with its slow implementation so far.
In nearly two years, just one person has been placed in court-ordered treatment. (3/5) sfexaminer.com/news/conservat…