Covid-19
DAILY REPUBLIC — Wednesday, January 27, 2021 B9
Newsom’s abrupt reopening brings high risks, potential economic rewards Los Angeles Times Gov. Gavin Newsom’s abrupt move to lift stay-at-home orders – allowing outdoor dining and other business activities to resume – represents a gamble that California can avoid another deadly coronavirus surge in the coming months despite a slow, frustrating rollout of the vaccine and the looming threat of more contagious strains of the virus taking hold across the state. After a catastrophic falland-winter surge left about 20,000 dead, California is rapidly Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times/TNS bending the curve as new cases fall and hospitalizations decline. Makeshift outdoor dining areas were empty in downtown Covina a few Covid-19 hospitalizations began days before Los Angeles County lifted outdoor dining restrictions. to fall about 2½ weeks ago, and the governor has in place are lower baseline. much of this progress can be He noted that after last year’s enforced, I think there’s a possibilattributed to residents changing ity for us to resume some of these spring and summer surges, Caltheir behavior by avoiding travel, activities,” Bibbins-Domingo said. ifornia failed to bring its case staying at home more and follow“It’s not an outrageous idea. This numbers to a low level before ing the new rules. reopening. That meant that is not an outrageous policy.” The question now is whether Newsom, in announcing the when the next surge hit, it California can keep cases down changes Monday, also struck a became even bigger than the one even as activities such as dining, cautious note but said he believed before it, he said. cosmetology and travel pick up. “It’s like we’re climbing this the conditions had improved Lifting the stay-at-home order enough to try it out. mountain. We go two steps up and should be a boost to some restau“We’re seeing a flattening of the we just take one step back, and rant owners and other merchants curve. Everything that should be we take two steps up from there whose businesses have been bat- up is up; everything that should be and one step back and we keep tered by cycles of closure since down is down — case rates, posi- just having more cases,” he said. the pandemic began and who tivity rates, hospitalizations, ICUs. “We’re doing a lot better than we placed enormous pressure on the Testing is starting to go back up, were doing 2½ weeks ago, but governor to ease restrictions as as well as vaccination rates in this we’re doing terrible compared campaigns gather signatures to state,” he said. to three months ago. We need recall him from office. The shift took some officials to knock these cases down so as But experts said it would not and others by surprise, coming we get more and more people take a lot for the situation to spiral just a few weeks after California vaccinated, we’ll get to a safer out of control again. found itself the American epi- environment much more quickly.” UC San Francisco epidemiolo- center of the coronavirus with The autumn-and-winter staygist Dr. Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo hospitals overflowing, ambu- at-home order was unpopular in said lifting the order can work lance patients facing as much as many corners, with some polif the public – and businesses – a 17-hour wait to get into emer- iticians saying it went too far follow the rules and show intense gency rooms, hospital morgues and restaurant owners suing in caution. This is more essen- overwhelmed and funeral homes an effort to bring back outdoor tial than ever, she said, because forced to turn families away. dining. Critics questioned whether so much is still unknown about UC Berkeley epidemiologist Dr. there was enough evidence to these new strains, which adds a John Swartzberg said he feared show outdoor dining was a signifnew level of uncertainty to fight- lifting the stay-at-home order was icant spreader of the coronavirus. ing the virus. “premature” because the cases, But there is evidence the order “Everything hinges on the while declining, remain very changed behavior and helped behaviors we adopt. If we adopt high. He said it might make more slow the spread. behaviors where everyone is sense to wait a few weeks until A calculation by the L.A. masking, everyone is keeping to cases go down further and Cali- County Department of Health Serdistancing, that all of the rules fornia can begin reopening with a vices found that the transmission
Saving school year depends on shots for teachers, lower infection rates Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES — Saving the Los Angeles school year has become a race against the clock – as campuses are unlikely to reopen until teachers are vaccinated against Covid-19 and infection rates decline at least threefold, officials said Monday. The urgency to salvage the semester in L.A. and throughout the state was underscored by new research showing the depth of student learning loss and by frustrated parents who organized statewide to pressure officials to bring back inperson instruction. A rapid series of developments Monday – involving the governor, L.A. Unified School District, the teachers union and the county health department – foreshadowed the uncertainties that will play out in the high-stakes weeks ahead for millions of California students. “We’re never going to get back if teachers can’t get vaccinated,” said Assemblyman Patrick O’Donnell, D -L ong Beach, who chairs the state’s Assembly Education Committee and has two high schoolers learning from home. He expressed frustration that educators are not being prioritized by the L.A. County Health Department even as teachers in Long Beach are scheduled for vaccines this week. Although Long Beach is part of L.A. County, it operates its own independent health agency. L.A. health officials said Monday that there are simply too many people in high-priority categories who need vaccines and too few doses. Hea lt h Director
Barbara Ferrer said she hopes teachers in her jurisdiction could begin to be immunized in February or March, but that would depend on the vaccine supply. Last week, local officials estimated it may take until June for those 65 or older to be vaccinated. The last day of instruction for the current school year in Los Angeles is June 10. In remarks Monday, Gov. Gavin Newsom called vaccines “the light at the end of the tunnel,” and said he was “focused on taking the steps needed to get Californians safely vaccinated as quickly as possible.” With virus levels still dangerously high, but trending in a better direction, Newsom eased restrictions on businesses and highlighted progress on speeding up the pace of vaccinations, but provided less clarity about when teachers across the state would be immunized. When asked for clarification, staff in the governor’s office forwarded the inquiry to the California Department of Public Health. That department declined to answer questions, deferring to the governor. the Nonetheless, importance of teacher vaccinations as a precursor for reopening campuses emerged clearly in statements from L.A. schools Supt. Austin Beutner and in an update from the leadership of United Teachers Los Angeles, which represents more than 30,000 teachers, librarians, counselors and nurses in the nation’s second-largest school system. “Vaccinations are a critical piece of the puzzle, and we’re all frustrated at the pace of the rollout
despite everyone’s best efforts,” Beutner said in remarks broadcast Monday. The L.A. schools chief said immunizations would “not only protect the health and safety of staff but will provide enormous benefit to children and their families with a faster reopening of schools and of the economy.” Aside from vaccines, there’s uncertainty over how fast coronavirus infection rates can drop in Los Angeles County. Throughout the pandemic, rates have never been low enough to fully reopen campuses. Currently the infection rate in L.A. County is about three times higher than would allow for the reopening of elementary campuses under the latest state directives. The standards for secondary schools are even more out of reach. Beutner and other education leaders – who are critical of Newsom’s funding plan to get students back in classrooms – said school districts need additional state money to safely reopen and consistent rules on when campuses should do so. The fast-turning calendar and political pushback against Newsom’s proposal for reopening incentive grants likely mean the plan won’t be ratified in its current form. The Legislature will try to work out something with the governor over the next few weeks, O’Donnell said. Leaders of the teachers union, United Teachers Los Angeles, essentially agree with Beutner on two critical points for reopening: a significant drop in coronavirus infection rates in communities served by L.A. Unified and teacher vaccinations.
rate of the virus began to climb in the region in the weeks before Halloween and accelerated until late November, when it reached a peak of 1.2, meaning on average every person infected with the virus was infecting 1.2 other people – a recipe for a dramatic worsening of the pandemic. It was also in late November that L.A. County became the first in the state in the autumn to shut down outdoor restaurant dining, and a few days later became the first again in the state to issue a stay-at-home order that once again banned almost all private gatherings and instituted tighter capacity limits on stores. The county’s model suggests that was the time period when the transmission rate began to fall, and by late December fell below 1, meaning that every infected person on average was infecting fewer than one other person. “I think that the early action taken by L.A. County as cases began to rise has blunted the magnitude of this tsunami that we experienced. It would have been even worse had some of these measures not been taken early on,” said Dr. Robert Kim-Farley, medical epidemiologist and infectious diseases expert at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, and a former health official with L.A. County. It would end up taking roughly two months for the effects of L.A. County’s health orders to convincingly begin reducing hospitalizations and offering officials confidence to begin reopening businesses. That’s similar to the amount of time it took for the summer’s business restrictions to have a similar impact. “It takes time from when you initiate a control measure to when you actually see the effects of having that control measure in place” Kim-Farley said. Epidemiologists said it’s essential health officials keep focused on at least two mutant strains of the coronavirus in California.
Biden acts to expand rollout Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden announced Tuesday that his administration will rush additional vaccine doses to states, territories and tribal governments and purchase 200 million more, ramping up its effort to inoculate more A mericans, more quickly, as the death toll from Covid-19 continues to rise. Under the plan, 10 million doses would be distributed each week for the next three weeks, up from the current 8.6 million. Acknowledging that even the increased number of doses is unlikely to meet the vast demand for the vaccine, Biden urged patience and encouraged people to continue to wear masks. An average of 3,000 people have died of Covid-19 each day for the last week, and the total death toll could surpass 500,000 next month. New variants of the virus are also believed to be more contagious. Biden said the additional vaccine doses would be delivered this summer, bringing the total purchased to 600 million. Half would be from Pfizer and the other half from Moderna. Because each vaccination requires two doses to be fully effective, the additional supply would be enough to inoculate an additional 100 million Americans.