California passed 150,000 novel coronavirus cases and 5,059 deaths in new information compiled at the end of Saturdy, according to county public health agencies and data compiled by this news organization.

The case total climbed by 3,258 from the total announced Friday and deaths rose by 74, with four more fatalities recorded on Sunday. Three of those deaths were reported in Alameda County.

Los Angeles County, which has nearly half the cases in California, recorded more new cases (1,003) and deaths (17) than anywhere in the state for a total of 73,018 cases and 2,907 deaths.

In the Bay Area, COVID-19 continued to hit Alameda County the hardest. The county saw 50 new cases for a total of 4,320 and a total number of fatalities reached 112.

Santa Clara County, which has the second-highest Bay Area total number of cases after Alameda County, reported 43 new cases for a total of 3,197. It also reported two new deaths, bringing the total to 151 fatalities. San Francisco was the only other Bay Area county to report a fatality — one death and 22 new cases to bring its totals to 45 deaths and 2,928 cases.

San Mateo County, which recorded six deaths Friday, did not update its database by early Sunday evening.

No other deaths were reported Sunday in the Bay Area. In Contra Costa County, the number of cases rose by 38 to 1,959.

Many of the state’s counties did not update databases over the weekend, making it impossible to identify trends while more businesses and recreational areas were opened to the public after three months of closures.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this week posted guidelines for how Americans should conduct themselves in light of the reopenings.

“In general,” the CDC statement said, “the more closely you interact with others and the longer that interaction, the higher the risk of COVID-19 spread.”