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NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
Volume 20 - No. 1 • 14 Pages
T H E F I L I P I N O A M E R I CA N C O M M U N I T Y N E WS PA P E R
Volume 18 - No. 17 • 2 Sections – 16 Pages
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PH bans entry from US, 6 more countries due to new COVID-19 variant by RITCHEL
MENDIOLA AJPress
FOLLOWING a recent ban on foreign travelers from the United States, the Philippines has expanded the restrictions to six more countries to prevent the transmission of a new, more infectious COVID-19 variant. Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte on Wednesday, January 6, approved the recommendation of the country’s Departments of Health and Foreign Af-
DATELINE
fairs to include Portugal, India, Finland, Norway, Jordan, and Brazil on the travel ban list. Foreign passengers who have been in any of the aforementioned countries within 14 days prior to their arrival in the Philippines cannot enter the country from January 8 to 15, 2021. However, foreign diplomats and officials from international organizations are exempt from the restriction. “Local/accredited foreign diplomats and international or-
ganizations such as the World Health Organization and the United Nations shall be exempted from quarantine protocols provided they will undergo RT-PCR test upon arrival at the airport, execute an undertaking, and observe strict 14-day quarantine,” the country’s Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) said Wednesday. Foreign dignitaries who
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PH Senate to probe govt’s vaccine campaign
USA
by RITCHEL
MENDIOLA AJPress
FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
California issues new health order to ease ICU levels
AS California continues to record coronavirus infections, the state’s Department of Public Health (CDPH) on Tuesday, January 5 issued a new public health order to reduce pressure on strained hospital systems and redistribute the responsibility of medical care across the state so patients can continue to receive lifesaving care. “If we continue to see an alarming increase of COVID-19 patient admissions at hospitals statewide, some facilities may not be able to provide the critical and necessary care Californians need, whether those patients have COVID-19 or another medical condition,” said Dr. Tomás J. Aragón, CDPH Director and State Public Health Officer. “This order helps ensure that patients continue to
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte
Malacañang photo by Simeon Celi
COVID-19 protections, minimum wage raise and criminal justice reform NEW year, new laws. On Jan. 1, a flurry of new laws came into effect in California. Some of these laws were set in motion years ago and were simply on the docket, but many of these new laws reflect the unique trials and tragedies brought forth the previous year: especially, the coronavirus pandemic, the economic fallout of the pandemic, wildfires and criminal justice. The pandemic has especially influenced the new set of laws, which seek to quell outbreak surges in places like Los Angeles County, which has experienced increases of in-person gatherings and record-shattering increases in infection, hospital capacity and death due to COVID-19. Hundreds of bills were signed into law and scheduled to take effect in 2021 — such as new protections for student loan borrowers
THE Philippine Senate will continue with its inquiry into the government’s vaccination program, despite President Rodrigo Duterte’s threat of a “little crisis” should the senators insist on investigating the unauthorized inoculation of his security detail with an unregistered COVID-19 vaccine. However, Philippine Senate President Vicente Sotto III clarified that the Committee of
Whole’s probe would not focus on the early vaccination of members of the Presidential Security Group (PSG). He also said that the PSG members would not be invited into the hearing. “The topic of my hearing is the roadmap for the P72.5 billion for vaccines. Who in heaven’s name told (Duterte) I’m calling for the PSG? I think the president is being misled,” Sotto said Tuesday, January 5. Meanwhile, Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon pointed out that while Duterte can invoke
executive privilege to prevent the PSG from appearing in a hearing, he has no power to stop Congress from eliciting information in aid of legislation from other resource persons. “The president, in effect, is invoking executive privilege. It is a recognized power of the president. It is a valid exercise of the power of the President under EO 464, as affirmed by the Supreme Court in the case of Senate of the Philippines vs Ermita,” Drilon told Senate reporters.
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DFA sees new spike in infections among overseas Filipinos by AJPRESS
THE Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) on Wednesday, January 6 recorded five new confirmed COVID-19 cases u PAGE A4 among Filipinos abroad. The day before, the agency reported observed another spike as it logged 67 additional infections. The two-day numbers bring the total tally to 13,001, of which 3,631 are currently undergoing treatment. The agency also reported 56 new recoveries on Tuesday, January 5 and Wednesday, workplace raising the official number of recovered and
New year brings five new laws in California
BACLARAN DAY. Police officers remind churchgoers to observe safe physical distancing outside the National Shrine of Our Mother of Perpetual Help in Parañaque City on Wednesday, January 6 as devotees attend the year’s first Wednesday Mass. Devotees visit the church every Wednesday to attend Mass and pray the novena to Our Mother of Perpetual Help. PNA photo by Avito C. Dalan
discharged patients to 8,446. Meanwhile, the death toll remained at 934 as no new fatalities were recorded by the DFA. “The DFA, together with its Foreign Service Posts, remains fully committed to monitoring and assisting our nationals abroad amidst this ongoing battle against the COVID-19 pandemic,” the agency said. Overall by region, Europe – which comprises 20 countries – has recorded 1,794 Filipino cases, including 339 undergoing treatment, 1,337 recoveries and 118 deaths. The Middle East and Africa, covering 33
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Vilma Santos-Recto to refile bill seeking new ABS-CBN franchise by RITCHEL
MENDIOLA AJPress
PHILIPPINE Deputy Speaker Vilma Santos-Recto on Monday, January 4, said that she will refile a bill seeking to give broadcast giant ABS-CBN a fresh 25-year franchise. “I am refiling the bill seeking for the renewal for another 25 years of the ABS-CBN franchise. I filed it the last time and I continue to believe that it is the right thing to do,” she told Inquirer.net in a text message. Santos-Recto’s statement came after Philippine Senate President Vicente Sotto III filed Senate Bill No. 1967, which seeks to give ABS-CBN a fresh legislative franchise, citing the importance of television as the main source of information for most Filipinos. Philippine Deputy Speaker Vilma Santos-Recto u PAGE A3 Inquirer.net photo u PAGE A3
90 Filipino healthcare workers in US succumb to COVID-19 by CRISTINA
ELOISA Inquirer.net
BACLIG
A STUDY by The Guardian and Kaiser Health News showed that over a third of the number of healthcare workers who died in the United States due to COVID-
19 are immigrants. Most of them were from the Philippines. Market and consumer data company Statista cited the study in a report published on Tuesday. According to data cited by
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