Frustration with the unvaccinated mounts even as many Bay Area residents welcome new mask guidance

As the hypercontagious delta variant continues to sweep across the nation, Bay Area residents are bracing for a prolonged pandemic — and adjusting yet again to the ever-evolving roster of COVID rules.

The latest twist came Wednesday, when California recommended that everyone wear masks once again in indoor public spaces.

In the Bay Area, where universal masking recommendations have been in effect for all counties but Solano for nearly two weeks, many people interviewed by The Chronicle on Wednesday expressed near-unanimous support for masking up again for the sake of protecting others — especially younger children, who aren’t eligible to be vaccinated yet. But for some, the acceptance is mixed with disappointment and defeat.

At the Starbucks in San Francisco’s West Portal neighborhood, coffee drinker Daniel Escudero of San Francisco said he was “OK about doing my part to end this thing” by masking up once more. But he was also frustrated.

“If people refuse to get vaccinated, it’s going to be hard to end the pandemic,” he said. “I’m not really angry at these people. I just find them stupid. I understand everyone has freedom and all that, but I really don’t get this.”

Escudero was speaking before California’s announcement, but a day after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention made similar recommendations. California’s are more comprehensive, covering everyone in the state, whereas the federal advice applied only to areas where the virus is spreading rapidly — which is most, though not all, of California.

In San Francisco, meanwhile, Mayor London Breed said Wednesday the city is considering mandating masks for everyone indoors, regardless of vaccination status. She offered few details and said more information would be released later this week or early next week.

New evidence that even fully vaccinated people can transmit the delta variant more easily than previously believed has spurred health officials to act.

“I’m happy to wear this and I’m happy to stay alive,” said Maksim Grats, who along with his wife, Tatyana Grats, wore black fabric masks at the West Portal Starbucks, even while other customers were sitting inside bare faced.



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