[Updated] The city of Pasadena will align with newly-issued state guidelines that will allow people vaccinated for COVID-19 to go without masks in most situations beginning next Tuesday.
Masks will still be required:
• On public transit (examples: airplanes, ships, ferries, trains, subways, buses, taxis, and ride-shares) and in transportation hubs (examples: airport, bus terminal, marina, train station, seaport or other port, subway station, or any other area that provides transportation)
• Indoors in K-12 schools, childcare and other youth settings.
– Note: This may change as updated K-12 schools guidance is forthcoming, pending updates for K-12 operational guidance from the CDC.
• Healthcare settings (including long term care facilities)
• State and local correctional facilities and detention centers
• Homeless shelters, emergency shelters and cooling centers
The city is expected to provide additional details in a press release later today.
Masks will be required for unvaccinated individuals in indoor public settings and businesses (examples: retail, restaurants, theaters, family entertainment centers, meetings, state and local government offices serving the public).
Additionally, employers and workplaces must continue to comply with Cal/OSHA COVID-19 Prevention Emergency Temporary Standards.
“COVID-19 continues to easily spread among those who are unvaccinated,” said Dr. Ying-Ying Goh, Public Health Director and Health Officer. “As we prepare for the State’s full reopening on June 15 and the retiring of most distancing and capacity restrictions, we urge everyone to get vaccinated. We have 3 very safe and effective vaccines, which are our most powerful tools to protect our community. The continued public health safety measure of appropriate masking is critically important to protect those who are unvaccinated and not yet eligible to receive the vaccine.”
The state guidance on mask-wearing largely mirrors rules announced last month by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
According to state Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly, people who are not vaccinated will still be required to wear masks in indoor public settings, including retail stores, movie theaters and government offices.
On Wednesday the state announced that fully vaccinated Californians will be able to stop wearing face masks in most situations beginning Tuesday when the bulk of
COVID-19 restrictions are lifted.
But how the mask-wearing rules will be enforced will vary from place to place, with Ghaly laying out three options for business owners and event-venue operators:
• businesses and venues can publicly post rules regarding mask-wearing and allow visitors to self-attest that they are vaccinated;
• they can “implement a vaccine-verification system to determine whether individuals are required to wear a mask”; or
• they can simply require all patrons to wear a mask.
“This is the choice of the venue and the operators,” Ghaly said.
“… We at the state level are giving all three options to private and independent operators to choose which is best suited for their community and their businesses.”
The guidance, being formally released Wednesday afternoon, will also state that nobody can be prevented from wearing a mask as a condition of taking part in an activity or patronizing a business.
Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Tuesday that the county will also continue requiring masks at indoor “mega events,” defined by the state as involving more than 5,000 people — a rule that would affect major indoor sporting events.
Still undetermined, however, are the masking rules that will apply to California workplaces and office settings. The board of the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Cal-OSHA, is scheduled to meet Wednesday night to again discuss its regulations.
The board last week recommended worksite rules that would require all workers in indoor settings to continue wearing masks regardless of vaccination status, unless one person is working alone in a room or if all people in a room are fully vaccinated and not showing any symptoms of COVID-19.
The rules would also allow physical distancing requirements to be scrapped indoors and outdoors if employers make N-95 respirator masks available to non-vaccinated workers.
Cal-OSHA’s proposed rules also won’t require masks for workers in outdoor settings, except at outdoor “mega events” with 10,000 or more people.
At those events, workers would have to wear face masks regardless of their vaccination status.
The Cal-OSHA proposal has met with pushback because it conflicts with the CDC and now the state’s masking regulations. That pushback, including from top state health officials, prompted the scheduling of Wednesday night’s meeting.