Adrian Wojnarowski reports that it will be a long time before we see NBA teams doing full practices together as selected facilities are scheduled to reopen May 8. (1:22)

The Lakers have been in contact with the Los Angeles mayor's office to discuss the possibility of opening their practice facility for players before the current shelter-at-home order for L.A. residents expires on May 15, sources close to the matter told ESPN.

The NBA announced Monday it will allow players to return to team facilities for voluntary workouts starting May 8. The Lakers, sources said, organized a conference call on Monday with their players to detail what the safety measures will be when the time comes for their doors to open -- be it May 15 or sooner.

Lakers vice president of basketball operations and general manager Rob Pelinka and coach Frank Vogel conducted the call, providing a basic outline of the protocol players will have to follow once the team gets the green light to host workouts at the UCLA Health Training Center in El Segundo.

The Lakers have not made recommendations to any of the handful of players who are out of town as to when they should return to L.A., sources said.

When the workouts begin, they will be voluntary. However, one source present for the conference call said players sounded "eager" to make the first step back since the NBA went on hiatus on March 11 and two Lakers players tested positive for COVID-19 shortly thereafter.

Some of the Lakers' planned precautionary measures include players having their temperatures taken while they are in their cars when they arrive at the facility and answering questions to a designated medical professional before being granted access to the building.

The Lakers' plan currently does not call for further testing for the coronavirus arranged by the team for players, sources told ESPN.

On a conference call with reporters on April 17, NBA commissioner Adam Silver said health care workers on the front lines have to be "taken care of before we begin talking about NBA players or sports" implementing large-scale testing.

Anyone the Lakers players will encounter at the practice facility will be required to wear a mask and gloves, and the designated rebounder for each player will wear gloves and sterilized sneakers, sources said.

The approach, sources said, is to err on the side of caution, even if it might seem like the rigid circumstances go a bit overboard.

The team will provide players with personal protective equipment, and should a player leave his mask at home, one will be provided upon arrival to the parking lot.

Hand-washing stations will be put in place. The weight room will be rearranged to allow for more space between equipment. Food service in the players' lounge will be revamped to provide meals in individual containers, rather than through a buffet presentation.

A priority in the planning for the Lakers will be the implementation of a strict schedule for players to follow, with slotted workout times to prevent overcrowding. Players will be scheduled in groups of up to four -- each getting their own half court -- for 90-minute workout periods, with ample time between sessions for cleaning and sterilization.

The Lakers solicited player feedback to fill out the schedule, sources said, and determine how many days per week the players would like access to the court.

The workouts will be aimed at individualized skill work and conditioning, with no contact involved.

Lisa Estrada, the Lakers' vice president of facility operations, will assume the role of facility hygiene officer -- a required position the league is asking all 30 of its teams to assign to a senior executive -- and be tasked with managing cleaning crews to scrub the workout areas before and after players put in their time.

The Lakers' plan for sterilization procedures and best safety practices is the result of a group effort from several top team executives over the past few weeks, involving sharing information with other teams, consulting with doctors through their sponsor relationship with UCLA Health and even monitoring baseball being played in South Korea, sources said.

The Lakers are considering conducting a dry run of every step a player would go through when he reports to the facility and undergoes a workout and recording it to provide video instructions that can be distributed to the team, sources said.

Beginning individual workouts is only the first step, of course. Besides the obvious health concerns stemming from the coronavirus, there also is the major challenge of determining the rate at which players should ramp up activity, with no target date known for when games could be resumed to finish the 2019-20 campaign.