Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Health

State Eases Restrictions, Judge Grants Request To Resume Youth Sports

Soccer ball at Mance Buchanon Park in Oceanside where the Oceanside Breakers soccer team practice with COVID-19 restrictions. Nov. 12, 2020.
Nicholas McVicker
Soccer ball at Mance Buchanon Park in Oceanside where the Oceanside Breakers soccer team practice with COVID-19 restrictions. Nov. 12, 2020.

A judge Friday cleared the way for youth sporting activities including football and basketball to resume in San Diego County, hours after the state revised its guidelines to allow the activities in counties with relatively low rates of new COVID-19 cases.

The state's new standard allows for a resumption of "outdoor high- contact sports" in counties that reach an adjusted daily average of 14 new cases per 100,000 residents. San Diego County currently has a rate of 22.2 cases per 100,000 residents.

However, through a lawsuit recently filed by two San Diego-area high school athletes, a judge on Friday granted a temporary restraining order allowing high school and youth sports to resume in San Diego County "as long as the(y) follow the same or similar COVID-19 protocols imposed for competition in professional and/or collegiate sports within the county."

Advertisement

San Diego Superior Court Judge Earl H. Maas III, who heard arguments Friday afternoon from attorneys representing the state, county and the two student athletes, agreed with the plaintiffs in his written ruling that young athletes were not at greater risk of contracting or transmitting COVID-19 than their professional or collegiate counterparts.

Gardinera vs County of San Diego
Superior Court of California, County of San Diego
To view PDF files, download Acrobat Reader.

Maas wrote that he was not persuaded by arguments from the state and county that professional and collegiate teams represented a lower risk of spreading the virus due to their being far fewer pro and college teams.

"The game is the same, the risk of spread is similar, the youth are already practicing and with school closures or limitations on attendance, youth are isolated," Maas wrote.

Maas briefly referenced the new guidelines issued by the state, but wrote that "competent evidence was not provided to the court in this regard" at Friday's hearing and thus he declined "to anticipate what the (state) `may' do in the coming week."

Another hearing is slated for early next month on a preliminary injunction in the case, which was filed on behalf of Nicholas Gardinera, a senior at Scripps Ranch High School, and Cameron Woolsey, a senior at Mission Hills High School.

Advertisement

The ruling came hours after state leaders announced the new state guidance, which allows counties that reach the 14-case threshold to resume basketball, football, ice hockey, lacrosse, rugby, rowing/crew, soccer and water polo.

Under the state guidelines, resuming football, rugby and water polo will also require weekly COVID testing of players — aged 13 and above — and coaches, with test results made available within 24 hours of a competition. Gov. Gavin Newsom said the state would absorb the cost of the required testing.

The guidance applies to all forms of organized youth sports, including school and community programs, and private clubs and leagues.

Gardinera vs County of San Diego Minute Order
Superior Court of California, County of San Diego
To view PDF files, download Acrobat Reader.

Newsom said the combination of school closures and the inability for youth to participate in sports has had both a physical and mental health impact, "in profound and significant and in many cases deleterious ways." He said the downward trends in COVID cases in California prompted the state to move forward with a resumption of youth sports.

"We are now confident ... that we can get youth sports moving again in the state of California, get competition moving again in the state of California with, as always, caveats," he said. "None of us are naïve. ... Despite those very encouraging trends, we still need to be cautious until we reach herd immunity."

San Diego County Supervisor Nathan Fletcher said the county was ready and waiting to resume youth sports safely.

"We have seen considerable progress on vaccines and lower cases, and this is a positive step forward in our recovery," he said. "I applaud Governor Newsom, and commend Ron Gladnick who has been a great partner in working with my office, the governor and our public health experts to see progress in the effort to let our kids play."

Gladnick is the head football coach of Torrey Pines High School and has been a vocal advocate for letting youth sports resume. He sent a tweet thanking Fletcher, Supervisor Jim Desmond and former Republican candidate for governor John Cox for working across ideological lines on the issue.

"It's awesome when people can put small differences aside to serve a higher purpose like kids," he wrote.

The guidance encourages, but does not mandate, vaccinations for athletes, coaches and staff.

It also maintains previous guidance limiting spectators to immediate household members, with limits on overall numbers to ensure physical distancing.