As an employer and a service provider, the County of San Mateo requires all employees and visitors to County facilities to wear face coverings. The requirement took effect at the start of business today (July 26, 2021).
Visitors to all indoor County of San Mateo facilities will be required to wear a face covering as of Monday, July 26, due to a troubling rise in coronavirus cases.
With cases of COVID-19 rising locally and increased circulation of the highly transmissible Delta variant, the counties of San Mateo, Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco, Santa Clara, Sonoma, and the City of Berkeley recommend that everyone, regardless of vaccination status, wear masks indoors in public places to ensure easy verification that all unvaccinated people are masked in those settings and as an extra precautionary measure for all.
The County of San Mateo continues to work to protect public health and safety in response to the novel coronavirus known as COVID-19.
The County of San Mateo continues to work to protect public health and safety in response to the novel coronavirus known as COVID-19.
The County of San Mateo continues to work to protect public health and safety in response to the novel coronavirus known as COVID-19.
More San Mateo County Parks services and programs are now available, from special event reservations and group camping, to in-person events.
As California lifts most COVID-19 restrictions on Tuesday, June 15, County of San Mateo leaders today encouraged all eligible individuals to take advantage of free vaccination clinics.
The County of San Mateo continues to work to protect public health and safety in response to the novel coronavirus known as COVID-19.
Most County of San Mateo offices will be open to the public on Tuesday, June 15, 2021, in alignment with the state’s reopening plan.
Supervisors Dave Pine and Warren Slocum Sponsor Effort to Provide Relief to Local Businesses Impacted by the Covid-19 Pandemic
The County of San Mateo, led by the Office of Emergency Services, is in the process of developing the county’s updated Multijurisdictional Local Hazard Mitigation Plan (LHMP) to address natural hazards such as earthquake, fire, flooding, extreme heat, and landslide.