Governor’s Stay Home Executive Order – What does it mean for construction?

Governor Gavin Newsom issued an Executive Order on Thursday, March 19, ordering Californians to stay home with a few exceptions, such as leaving home for food, medicine or groceries, or to exercise.

Several types of business are exempt from this order, meaning their employees are allowed to leave their homes to go to work.  These types of businesses include grocery stores, pharmacies, gas stations, banks, and laundromats.

Importantly, Governor Newsom includes construction as an exempt sector.

The California State Public Health Officer and Director of the California Department of Public Health is ordering all individuals living in the State of California to stay home or at their place of residence, except as needed to maintain continuity of operation of the federal critical infrastructure sectors, critical government services, schools, childcare, and construction, including housing construction. [emphasis added]

Source: https://covid19.ca.gov/stay-home-except-for-essential-needs/

However — and this is a big however — many local jurisdictions have issued their own Stay Home health directives that do not provide an exemption for construction.  Information available at this time suggests any stricter provisions in local orders need to be followed, even when they conflict with the state order; the governor and local leaders are trying to address those conflicts and new directives can be released at any time.

Additionally, while “construction workers” are explicitly exempt in the state order, it does not address architectural work, whether performed in the office or on the construction site.  Information released by the governor does suggest that work performed by architects, whether in the office or on the construction site, in support of construction is allowed (subject to any local order).  That information reads:

Construction Workers who support the construction, operation, inspection, and maintenance of construction sites and construction projects (including housing construction)

Workers such as plumbers, electricians, exterminators, and other service providers who provide services that are necessary to maintaining the safety, sanitation, construction material sources, and essential operation of construction sites and construction projects (including those that support such projects to ensure the availability of needed facilities, transportation, energy and communications; and support to ensure the effective removal, storage, and disposal of solid waste and hazardous waste)

Source: https://covid19.ca.gov/img/EssentialCriticalInfrastructureWorkers.pdf

AIA CA continues to monitor developments of how the state and local orders impact the architectural profession, and will provides updates when needed.