Masks will still be required indoors for unvaccinated people and for all people in higher risk areas like public transit or congregate living facilities.
The state is also immediately ending its for long-term care facilities that took effect Jan. 7. The state is also increasing the threshold for indoors and outdoor 鈥渕ega events鈥 from 500 to 1,000 and 5,000 to 10,000, respectively. Those events are subject to additional testing and vaccination guidelines.
When the mandate was , the state had seen 14 new cases per 100,000 residents, a 2.2% seven-day average test positivity rate, and hospitalizations were up 14% since Thanksgiving, according to the state department of public health.
But despite the mandates, COVID-19 cases spread.
During the peak of the omicron surge in January, California was averaging more than 110,000 new COVID-19 cases a day, around 270 per 100,000 people. That's dropped to around 45,000, and has fallen by half in just the past two weeks.
Still, the surge has taxed hospitals through the region and the state. Sacramento County set new records for COVID-19 hospitalizations in January, and California has now recorded more than 80,000 deaths since the start of the pandemic.
While the statewide rules relax after Feb. 15, several counties still have their own indoor mask mandates.
Janna Haynes, spokesperson for Sacramento County, said the county 鈥渁nticipates following the state's lead in lifting the mask mandate.鈥
Yolo County spokesperson John Fout said county health officials "continue to evaluate our local situation and plan to announce a decision before February 15."
Over the past few weeks, some counties have moved to reduce their own vaccination and mask requirements. has allowed people to enter gyms, offices and other public spaces without masks if everyone present is vaccinated and boosted. Los Angeles County has not yet relaxed its mask rules but for eventually lifting the indoor mask mandate.
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