Sign up for our special edition newsletter to get a daily update on the coronavirus pandemic.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday outlined a roadmap for easing stay-at-home restrictions put in place to curb the coronavirus outbreak.

While there is no set timeline for when the Golden State will reopen, Newsom said he’ll be using “science to guide our decision-making and not political pressure.”

“As we contemplate reopening parts of our state, we must be guided by science and data, and we must understand that things will look different than before,” he told reporters.

He unveiled a six-point framework to determine when to relax the mitigation measures.

They include:

The state’s ability to monitor and protect our communities through testing, contact tracing, isolating and supporting those who are positive or exposed.

The ability to prevent infections in people at-risk for severe illness.

The ability of hospitals to handle surges in patients.

The ability to develop treatments.

The ability of businesses, schools and daycares to support physical distancing.

The ability to determine whether stay-at-home measures would need to be reinstituted.

His roadmap also notes that things won’t look the same when the state reopens. For example, waiters at restaurants will likely be wearing masks and gloves, he said.

Public schools may also stagger the times when students arrive to maintain social distancing.

Newsom on Monday announced he was working with state leaders in Washington and Oregon on a framework for reopening the regional economy, similar to the six-state task-force formed on the East Coast.

As of Tuesday afternoon, there were at at least 24,400 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in California, with 733 deaths.