Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

Federal Immigration Crackdown Threatens California’s Historic Housing Reforms

20 minutes ago

US House Clears Procedural Hurdle on Cryptocurrency Legislation

43 minutes ago

Fresno County Lifts Evacuation Order for Max Fire Near Pine Flat Lake

2 hours ago

Trump Indicated to Republican Lawmakers He Will Fire Fed’s Powell, CBS Reports

3 hours ago

Wall Street Steadies as Investors Assess Inflation Data, Earnings

4 hours ago

Trump Administration Sued by US States for Cutting Disaster Prevention Grants

4 hours ago

PBS and NPR Mount Last-Ditch Fight to Save Federal Funding

1 day ago
Reopen California? That’s Toughest Phase Yet, Newsom says
gvw_calmatters
By CalMatters
Published 5 years ago on
April 15, 2020

Share

By Ben Christopher and Rachel Becker, CalMatters

When will Californians emerge from house confinement? What will life look like?

In a roadmap unveiled Tuesday with top public health officials, Gov. Gavin Newsom said he will not lift his shelter-in-place order until adequate suppression and mitigation measures are in place to prevent future flare-ups. That means tracking down the sick and isolating clusters of new infections, arming hospitals with adequate equipment and setting new guidelines for schools and businesses to reopen.

(GV Wire/Alexis DeSha)

In short, it might be a while. The governor told reporters not to even ask him about the timeline until hospitalizations and intensive care caseloads begin to drop. To his point, Monday marked California’s deadliest day so far with 71 deaths for a total of 758 lives lost.

“In two weeks, if we see a continued decline, not just flattening, but a decline … ask me then,” Newsom said.

Nearly four weeks in with signs that a state lockdown was slowing the spread of the coronavirus, the governor offered a glimpse of post-pandemic life where restaurants check temperatures at the door, servers in masks offer disposable menus and diners sit at tables spaced 6 feet apart. And until most of the population is immune to the virus and a vaccine is available, Newsom said, mass gatherings such as music festivals and sporting events are “not in the cards.”

California is not alone in taking a conditional approach. Despite President Trump’s enthusiasm for opening the economy as quickly as possible, Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said that the country was “not there yet.”

What it suggests is that this is not the end of the pandemic, but only the end of its chaotic and deadly beginning.

Calls to Reopen the Economy Have Been Growing Louder

“This time period we are entering is not about going back to where we were before,” said Department of Public Health Director Sonia Angell. “It won’t look the same.”

With the number of new cases each day appearing to fall in some pandemic hotspots, calls to reopen the economy have been growing louder.

But the economy isn’t likely to rebound by executive edict alone. A recent Ipsos poll estimates that 70% of Americans view going to the grocery store as a highly or moderately risky activity. People can only be expected to resume business-as-nearly-usual when they are convinced it is safe to do so.

California’s economic prognosis is already grim. Forecasters at the University of the Pacific project an 18.8% unemployment rate for California in May — up from a 2019 average of just 4%. One third of the expected job losses are concentrated in the typically low-wage food service sector.

And the state is forecasting a 61% drop in tax collections between April and June, which includes the busy tax filing season.

Before lifting the lockdown, there is plenty of work to do — and plenty of details to fill in.

The Newsom administration outlined criteria to modify the shelter-in-place order: the state will need to develop the ability to test, track and isolate those who are sick; to make sure that hospitals are ready to handle any potential fresh outbreaks; to ensure that businesses are able to operate with new social distancing guidelines; and to monitor new cases.

How do we defrost the economy while keeping the virus in check?

For weeks, public health officials, epidemiologists and economists have been mulling that question. And though specific plans vary, a consensus has emerged: a massive new public health surveillance system has to be built that will allow public health officials in every county of every state to track down, isolate and quash new infections before they flare out of control again.

Parts of California Remain Desperately Short of Testing Supplies

“We have to have the logistics in place to be able to identify small brush fires in the community and extinguish them before they become raging wildfires,” said Jeffrey Martin, a professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of California, San Francisco.

Photo of Gov. Gavin Newsom
California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced California saw its first daily decrease in intensive care hospitalizations during the coronavirus outbreak, during his daily news briefing at the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services in Rancho Cordova, Calif. Thursday, April 9, 2020. (AP/Rich Pedroncelli)

In practice that means, at the very least, there has to be much more testing.

But even as California’s test count climbed to 215,400 tests as of April 13, another 13,200 people were still waiting on results. On April 4, Newsom announced a new partnership with UC Davis and UC San Diego to create “a minimum of five to seven hubs where we have high-throughput.”

One of the hubs is at UC Davis but the state Department of Public Health would not identify other hubs or how many tests they’re running.

Parts of California remain desperately short of testing supplies — such as Placer County, home to the first person to die of the novel coronavirus in the state. The county has only about 40 kits for collecting specimens left.

While the vast majority of Placer County’s testing goes through commercial and hospital labs, people living in the county’s jails or homeless shelter are prioritized for testing by Sacramento County’s public health lab, Aimee Sisson, Placer County’s public health officer and public health director, told CalMatters Monday.

“They have been essentially impossible to find,” Sisson said. “It means that I don’t get to test everybody who I would like to test.”

There Are Different Ways to Accomplish All of This

Even if adequate testing shows the rate of new cases slowing, the task of limiting new infections will continue. That requires gathering, analyzing and sharing vast quantities of testing data. It will also mean identifying new infections as soon as they occur, figuring out a way to isolate the new patient, and identifying and quarantining their recent contacts, too.

There are different ways to accomplish all of this, and none are easy. Madera County, for instance, typically has two to three people to investigate potential exposures to infectious diseases like tuberculosis and sexually transmitted infections. But with the coronavirus pandemic, the county has leaned on sheriff’s deputies and probation investigators to bolster their team.

In South Korea, citizens who have been infected have been required to download an app that tracks where they’ve been and who they might have infected. In their pandemic recovery report, researchers at the Center for American Progress recommend that the United States develop some version of the app. But they acknowledge that a more “civil-liberties-sensitive solution” would have to be adopted.

Google and Apple recently announced plans to develop a similar contact tracing system that uses the Bluetooth on people’s phones to track when people get close to one another. The idea is that public health officials could use this data to track potential contacts via their own apps.

But between the potential for false positives and concerns about privacy, it seems unlikely an app can replace the people needed to do the work.

“App or no app, the vital work needs to be done by trained public health professionals at the local level who are trained in privacy concerns and conduct thorough and confidential contact investigations,” said Kat DeBurgh, executive director of the Health Officers Association of California.

Newsom agreed. While the state is vetting apps, he said, “we have to supplement that technology with the workforce.”

Prior to the Pandemic, an Allusion to Building Walls Would Have Been an Obvious Dig at President Trump

To that end, Newsom said the state is training “thousands of individuals” working with AmeriCorps and California Volunteers as well as existing state staff to bolster California’s capacity to identify people infected with the novel coronavirus, and trace their potential contacts.

President Trump said Monday that the decision to reopen each state’s economy was his to make, asserting “when someone is president of the United States, their authority is total.” Tuesday, he modified his response amid a report that federal officials drafted a national plan for getting back out.

California’s roadmap is part of a regional partnership with Oregon and Washington. The Western States Pact is meant to provide a shared framework for relaxing social distancing mandates and to start reviving each state’s economy.

The governors of New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Massachusetts and Rhode Island announced a similar collaborative confederation on the East Coast.

“This virus knows no boundaries, knows no borders. You can’t build walls around it,” Newsom said Monday.

Prior to the pandemic, an allusion to building walls would have been an obvious dig at President Trump, Newsom’s chief ideological foe and a frequent Twitter sparring partner. Since the beginning of the crisis, the two have been remarkably cordial, regularly swapping praise.

But the formation of these pacts is itself an acknowledgment that the federal government has yet to offer an overarching lockdown policy or guidance.

President Trump said Monday that the decision to reopen each state’s economy was his to make, asserting “when someone is president of the United States, their authority is total.” Tuesday, he modified his response amid a report that federal officials drafted a national plan for getting back out.

“They know when it’s time to open and we don’t want to put pressure on anybody,” Trump said. “I’m not going to put any pressure on any governor to open.”

CalMatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Federal Immigration Crackdown Threatens California’s Historic Housing Reforms

DON'T MISS

Fresno Fire Destroys Vacant Building on Blackstone Avenue

DON'T MISS

US House Clears Procedural Hurdle on Cryptocurrency Legislation

DON'T MISS

Madera County Launches New Team to Tackle Homelessness, Mental Health Crises

DON'T MISS

US Senate Pushes Toward Aid, Public Broadcasting Cuts Sought by Trump

DON'T MISS

Authorities Seek Answers After Man Found Dead Near Rural Fresno County Road

DON'T MISS

Fresno County Lifts Evacuation Order for Max Fire Near Pine Flat Lake

DON'T MISS

Newsom Calls Trump a ‘Son of a B***h’ Over ICE Raids and Guard Deployment

DON'T MISS

Governors Should Be the Face of the Democratic Party

DON'T MISS

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Ryan Joseph Enos

UP NEXT

A New Invader Threatens California Water Supplies. Can State Stop Its Spread? 

UP NEXT

Wall Street Steadies as Investors Assess Inflation Data, Earnings

UP NEXT

Open Mic Contest Offers Fans a Chance to Perform at Outside Lands 2025

UP NEXT

Age Is Just a Number: 80-Year-Old Conquers Death Valley to Mt. Whitney Ultramarathon

UP NEXT

US Military to Remove 2,000 National Guard Troops From Los Angeles

UP NEXT

Trump Says Democratic Rival Schiff Should Be ‘Brought to Justice’ for Alleged Fraud

UP NEXT

Is US Democracy Threatened? Majority of Californians, Including Republicans, Say Yes

UP NEXT

US Senator Seeks Safety Reforms After Fatal Collision Between Army Helicopter, Regional Jet

UP NEXT

US Consumer Prices Rise in June as Tariff Pass-Through Begins

UP NEXT

PBS and NPR Mount Last-Ditch Fight to Save Federal Funding

Madera County Launches New Team to Tackle Homelessness, Mental Health Crises

1 hour ago

US Senate Pushes Toward Aid, Public Broadcasting Cuts Sought by Trump

1 hour ago

Authorities Seek Answers After Man Found Dead Near Rural Fresno County Road

2 hours ago

Fresno County Lifts Evacuation Order for Max Fire Near Pine Flat Lake

2 hours ago

Newsom Calls Trump a ‘Son of a B***h’ Over ICE Raids and Guard Deployment

2 hours ago

Governors Should Be the Face of the Democratic Party

2 hours ago

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Ryan Joseph Enos

2 hours ago

A New Invader Threatens California Water Supplies. Can State Stop Its Spread? 

3 hours ago

Trump Indicated to Republican Lawmakers He Will Fire Fed’s Powell, CBS Reports

3 hours ago

Bahrain to Announce $17 Billion in US Deals During Trump Talks

3 hours ago

Federal Immigration Crackdown Threatens California’s Historic Housing Reforms

This commentary was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. California has finally made real progress on one of i...

20 minutes ago

Elk Grove California Housing Construction 2022
20 minutes ago

Federal Immigration Crackdown Threatens California’s Historic Housing Reforms

A vacant building on North Blackstone Avenue in Fresno was destroyed by fire Tuesday, July 15, 2025, night, though firefighters prevented it from spreading to nearby structures. (Fresno FD)
33 minutes ago

Fresno Fire Destroys Vacant Building on Blackstone Avenue

A general view of the U.S. Capitol dome in Washington, D.C., U.S., July 8, 2025. (Reuters/Jonathan Ernst)
43 minutes ago

US House Clears Procedural Hurdle on Cryptocurrency Legislation

Madera County has launched H.E.A.R.T Madera, a multi-agency team focused on compassionate outreach and crisis intervention for people experiencing homelessness and behavioral health challenges. (Shutterstock)
1 hour ago

Madera County Launches New Team to Tackle Homelessness, Mental Health Crises

U.S. Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) walks to the Senate floor as Republican lawmakers struggle to pass U.S. President Donald Trump's sweeping spending and tax bill, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., July 1, 2025. (Reuters File)
1 hour ago

US Senate Pushes Toward Aid, Public Broadcasting Cuts Sought by Trump

Billy Wayne Sinisgalli, a 54-year-old transient known locally as Wayne, was found dead along a rural Fresno road Wednesday in what authorities are investigating as a suspicious death. (Fresno County SO)
2 hours ago

Authorities Seek Answers After Man Found Dead Near Rural Fresno County Road

Fresno County officials have lifted the evacuation order for the Max Fire near Pine Flat Lake, though the 426-acre blaze remains just 20% contained. (CalFire)
2 hours ago

Fresno County Lifts Evacuation Order for Max Fire Near Pine Flat Lake

California Governor Gavin Newsom gestures while speaking, as he announces the Golden State Literacy Plan and deployment of literacy coaches statewide, at the Clinton Elementary School in Compton, California, U.S. June 5, 2025. REUTERS/Daniel Cole/File Photo
2 hours ago

Newsom Calls Trump a ‘Son of a B***h’ Over ICE Raids and Guard Deployment

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend