Supervisor Sue Novasel District V Newsletter - June 25, 2021

June 25, 2021                                                                                Edition #85

Supervisor Novasel

El Dorado County

District V Supervisor, Sue Novasel Updates and Input Newsletter

No Turn

Town Hall Scheduled Regarding Right Turn Restrictions

El Dorado County Department of Transportation (DOT) will hold a virtual town hall meeting Thursday, July 15, 2021 to discuss a pilot project initiated over the Memorial Day weekend to reduce the historical traffic congestion caused by holiday traffic exiting the Tahoe Basin.

The town hall meeting will take place at 6 p.m. via Zoom. To participate, visit www.zoom.us and enter the following ID 951 6742 5157.

The project included installing turn restriction signage prohibiting right-hand turns from North Upper Truckee Road to Westbound U.S. Highway 50, and from Sawmill Road to Westbound U.S Highway 50 on Sundays and holidays. It is set to terminate on October 31, 2021.

DOT took turn movement counts before, during and after the Sunday and Monday of the Memorial Day holiday. That information will be shared at the town hall.

COVID-19

Below is the case update for Thursday, June 24, 2021:

  • 8 cases (10,423)
    0 in Pollock Pines/Camino/Kyburz;
    0 in El Dorado Hills;
    0 Diamond Springs/El Dorado;
    1 in North County;
    2 in Greater Placerville;
    4 in Cameron Park/Shingle Springs/Rescue;
    0 South County;
    0 in Lake Tahoe region;
    1 awaiting address confirmation (total awaiting address confirmation is 80)
  • 2 aged 0-17,
    5 aged 18-49,
    1 aged 50-64,
    0 aged 65+;
    (0) date of birth unknown (total date of birth unknown is 12)
  • 0 additional negative test results – Unchanged from 6/23/21 as updated data was not available at the time of this report
  • 7 assumed recoveries (10,155)
  • 1 hospitalizations/1 ICU
  • No additional deaths (117)
  • Rates:
    Adjusted case rate: 2.1
    Positivity rate: 1.3%
    Health equity quartile positivity rate: 2.2%
  • Vaccine measures*:
    Cumulative fully vaccinated: 83,979 (43.5%)
    – 0.1% decrease
    Cumulative with at least one dose: 96,149 (49.8%) – 0.2% decrease

*Please note: The estimated percentages of fully vaccinated individuals and individuals with at least one dose are based on counts provided by the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) here. CDPH is routinely conducting data quality control checks including deduplicating and correcting address information, which may ultimately reassign an individual to a different county of residence. For this reason, these counts may decrease as the vaccine data is updated.

CDCaquatic

Frequently Asked Questions from Operators or Managers of Pools, Beaches, Waterparks, and other Aquatic Venues

How Can I reduce the risk of staff and visitors getting and spreading COVID-19 at my aquatic venue when not everyone is vaccinated?

Follow any federalstate, local, tribal, or territorial laws, in collaboration with local health officials.

  • Promote vaccination for those eligible and partner with vaccine providers (such as pharmacies; healthcare providers; or the state, local, tribal, or territorial health departments).
    • Lifeguards who are fully vaccinated have the best available protection against COVID-19 when performing rescues, cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), or first aid during which physical distancing cannot be maintained.
  • Communicate about COVID-19 prevention steps through signage around the venue and on flyers, emails, etc.
    • Encourage those who are not fully vaccinated to wear masks consistently and correctly and stay at least 6 feet apart.
    • Discourage people who are not fully vaccinated from sharing items that are meant to come in contact with the face (such as goggles, nose clips, and snorkels).
    • Everyone should cover coughs and sneezes and wash hands.
  • Support case investigations and contact tracing.
  • Clean and disinfect.
  • Improve ventilation.
  • Follow Guidance on Mitigating and Preventing the Spread of COVID-19 in the Workplace

How can I encourage safe mask use and physical distancing at my aquatic venue?

Encourage people who are not fully vaccinated to use masks indoors, except in the water.

  • Discourage staff and visitors from wearing masks in the water.
  • Encourage people who are not fully vaccinated to bring extra masks in case the ones they are wearing get wet.
  • Consider having additional masks on hand in case people forget their masks or need to replace wet masks.
  • Remind staff and visitors that goggles, SCUBA masks, and other such masks should not be used to protect against COVID-19. Choose a mask that helps protect you and others from getting and spreading COVID-19.

Encourage people who are not fully vaccinated to maintain physical distancing. Physical distancing means staying at least 6 feet apart from people you do not live with, and applies both in and out of the water. Six feet is a few more inches than a typical pool noodle.

  • Provide physical barriers and guides (such as tables, chairs, and umbrellas in the sand or on the deck) and visual cues (such as posted signs or tape or decals on floors or sidewalks) to encourage people who are not fully vaccinated to maintain physical distancing—in and out of the water. For pools, lane lines can be used in the water.
  • Stagger use of shared spaces (such as limiting the number of people in the water and potentially enclosed spaces such as bathrooms, locker rooms, and breakrooms).
  • Review federal, state, local, tribal, or territorial limits on gathering size and ensure compliance when hosting an event (such as swim meets and other sports competitions or beach or pool parties).

Exceptions to physical distancing include the need to:

  • Rescue a distressed swimmer, perform CPR, or provide first aid.
  • Evacuate the water or the entire beach or facility because of an emergency.

How can I improve ventilation at my aquatic venue?

Follow these steps for improving ventilation of indoor spaces. Along with other prevention steps, proper ventilation can reduce the concentration of virus particles in the air.

  • Increase the percent of outdoor air as high as possible while maintaining acceptable temperature and humidity control.
  • Consider other steps to increase the introduction and circulation of outdoor air as much as possible, including changing the air handling system’s time clock to introduce code ventilation 24 hours per day (no off cycle).
  • Improve central air filtration to as high as possible without substantially reducing airflow.
  • When events (such as swim meets and other sports competitions or pool parties) are scheduled to occur and if the air handling system has a purge mode, consider running a purge sequence starting 3 hours before the event. Turn the system back to normal ventilation 1 hour before the event to allow environmental stabilization. Run the purge mode again for 2 hours after the event.
happy
catfish day

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IN THIS ISSUE

~Town Hall Regarding Right Turn Restrictions

~EDC COVID-19 Update

~FAQs From Operators or Managers of Pools, Beaches, Waterparks, and other  Aquatic Venues

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be happy

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happy

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