Public Health doing their best to crack down on social restriction violations

Public Health inspectors are doing their best to crack down on businesses and individuals in the community violating the governor's executive orders. Division of Environmental Health's Leilani Navarro says just this weekend they received reports and videos where individuals were seen violating mask mandates no violations were found.
"But when our inspectors came in some of the bars they've even went twice on a Friday night a Saturday night, so everyone was wearing their masks so the complaints the videos were not substantiated during the inspection," she explained.
As for self-attestation forms, as long as covered business have the forms, that's really all that needs to be done.
Asked if the agency collects the forms and verifies whether people are lying on the self-attestation, Navarro replied, "Right now...we do not have the capacity and the manpower to do that."
Navarro does say however that covered establishments are supposed to keep the self attestation forms for a period of 60 days. Additionally, anyone caught lying on the form could be subject to criminal prosecution.
Under the governor's executive order, only individuals who are vaccinated are allowed inside covered establishments such as restaurants and bars. The only exception is if the individual has a medical or religious exemption.