Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Virus rages as new rules challenge California city’s mettle

- By Adam Beam

LODI » In San Joaquin County, part of California’s vast Central Valley that produces most of the country’s fruits and vegetables, the coronaviru­s is spreading like a weed and the hospitals are running out of beds for the sickest patients.

San Joaquin is part of a 12-county region that on Saturday had 100% of its intensive care unit beds filled, the highest rate anywhere in California. And with cases continuing at an unpreceden­ted rate, the death toll inevitably will grow, too.

A new stay-at-home order was imposed this week but it’s anybody’s guess whether it will have the intended consequenc­e of finally changing enough people’s behavior to slow infections as a vaccine is rolled out.

“It’s been frustratin­g,” said Chuck Davis, CEO of data science company Bayesiant that tracks virus numbers for the county. “It’s like we see the train coming down the track and we’re telling people, and some people listen and get off the track and other people get on the track and start dancing.”

The virus has found a foothold in Lodi, a city of 68,000 on the county’s northern rim. The birthplace of A&W Root Beer, Lodi is surrounded by vineyards that rely on Latino farmworker­s.

On School Street, the city’s picturesqu­e retail and restaurant hub, sycamore leaves as big as your hand littered the sidewalk. In normal times, volunteers clear the leaves. But that stopped during the pandemic, and the leaves piled up, a subtle reminder of how things have changed.

More stark reminders are at the local hospital, where a second intensive care unit was created to handle patients. A team of 17 nurses arrives Monday so the hospital can begin accepting patients from some of the county’s six other hospitals, all of which are at 100% capacity or more in ICU units.

Dr. Patricia Iris, medical officer for Adventist Health Lodi Memorial, said during the first surge of cases this year 75% of patients were Latino. The hospital interviewe­d 30 Latino families to find out why, discoverin­g they didn’t trust the hospital.

Things improved after Adventist partnered with Spanish-language TV and radio stations to educate people about wearing masks and social distancing.

But across the city, many residents still don’t follow the rules, Iris said.

“People can’t help themselves. They want to be near family,” she said. “We don’t have the same culture and the rigidity around following the guidance here than, for example, San Francisco. We need to educate, educate, as much as we can so we can get some relief.”

Last week, Gov. Gavin Newsom imposed a threeweek stay-at-home order for the San Joaquin Valley. The order forced restaurant­s to only offer takeout and delivery, shuttered hair and nail salons, movie theaters and other businesses, and limited retailers to 20% capacity.

Pat Patrick, president and CEO of the Lodi Chamber of Commerce, signed a letter to Newsom, urging him to let businesses stay open.

“There’s just no rhyme or reason to some of these things and certainly no data,” he said.

Lodi Junction, a sprawling thrift store, is following the rules, only allowing a maximum of 30 customers and requiring masks and distancing. More than a dozen people were sampling the wares on Wednesday — a box set of Anthony Robbins self-help books, a $150 flat screen TV with no remote — as Bruce Hornsby sang “that’s just the way it is” over the speakers.

Roman Winter was browsing some shirts while wearing a mask. He’s a doctor of internal medicine at a Southern California hospital, but once worked in San Joaquin County and still has a house in Lodi. He was visiting for the first time in six months and thinks not much has changed.

“It’s busier out there now than it was before the whole thing started,” he said. “It doesn’t seem that anybody cares.”

But some things have changed on School Street, where most of the restaurant­s have closed their seating. Unable to eat inside, Ryan Breakfield and his girlfriend Erica Everett ate takeout in the bed of a pickup truck, calling it a “COVID date.”

“It’s just really weird. That’s the best way to put it,” he said.

Tucked between four restaurant­s is the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory, where owner Jeanne Bria’s business model relies on diners walking past her temptation­s. But people aren’t thinking about dessert now when they walk to their cars with Styrofoam takeout containers. Bria said her business is down 60%.

She wears a mask and only allows one person or party in her store at a time. She said most people follow the rules, but added: “I would say 95% of the people that come in want to complain about it.”

“My problem is I don’t know who to believe,” she said. “You hear from different sources different informatio­n. And I almost think that the mental health and the frustratio­n damage that’s being done is almost worse.”

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Truffles, a large stuffed bear, sits outside the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory, next to a sign advising customers about social distancing in Lodi, Calif., Wednesday, Dec. 9. Jeanne Bria, the owner of the store, said she relies on foot traffic from nearby restaurant­s.
With a new stay-at-home order that bans in-person dining, Bria said she has seen business drop by 60%.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Truffles, a large stuffed bear, sits outside the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory, next to a sign advising customers about social distancing in Lodi, Calif., Wednesday, Dec. 9. Jeanne Bria, the owner of the store, said she relies on foot traffic from nearby restaurant­s. With a new stay-at-home order that bans in-person dining, Bria said she has seen business drop by 60%.
 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Diners eat at an outdoor dining area outside of Porter’s Pub on School Street in Lodi, Calif., on Wednesday, Dec. 9.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Diners eat at an outdoor dining area outside of Porter’s Pub on School Street in Lodi, Calif., on Wednesday, Dec. 9.

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