East Bay Times

GETTING BEYOND 2020

WE GRAPPLED WITH FIRES, PROTESTS, A PANDEMIC AND AN ELECTION. A NEW YEAR BECKONS WITH NEW HOPE

- By Paul Rogers progers@bayareanew­sgroup.com

It was the kind of year that we read about in history books: Momentous. Traumatic. Worldchang­ing. Exhausting.

From the worst pandemic in a century to a historic election, devastatin­g wildfires, a civil rights reckoning and economic calamity, the biggest stories of 2020 have been the kinds of upheavals that defined prior years — like 1865, 1918, 1932 or 1968 — for generation­s to come. But rarely if ever have so many earth-shaking sagas unfolded at the same time.

“We can find parallels for each one of these things in past years,” said Bruce Cain, a professor of political science and director of the Bill Lane Center for the American West at Stanford University. “But the combinatio­n of all of them hitting at once makes this year a super event.”

In the Bay Area, like California and the rest of the nation, 2020 won’t expire and fade into the background after the calendar shifts. The year’s top stories will continue to reverberat­e, evolve and shape 2021. They are:

The pandemic

The first cases in the Bay Area appeared in early February, when a man who had visited Wuhan, China, returned home to Santa Clara County with the disease, visited doctors and isolated himself at home. People began dying by March. Schools shuttered classrooms. On March 16, realizing the potential for catastroph­e, seven Bay Area counties announced sweeping shelter-in-place restrictio­ns, the first

in the United States. “This is going to go on for quite some time,” said Dr. Sara Cody, Santa Clara County’s health officer. Autopsies later showed the first Bay Area death was Feb. 6, meaning the novel coronaviru­s had quietly spread for at least six weeks due to the lack of testing and awareness before health restrictio­ns were put in place.

Nine months later, the coronav irus has killed more than 315,000 Americans, more than World War II. At least 1.75 million California­ns have been infected — 1 in every 23 people. And 22,150 California­ns have died, including more than 1,500 in the past week, the equivalent death toll of three Loma Prieta earthquake­s every day. Vaccines began to arrive last week. Doctors, nurses and nursing home patients will get them first. By late spring or early summer, experts say, there should be enough doses for everyone, offering hope for a return to some normalcy if at least 70% of the population is vaccinated.

“The key will be getting people to take them,” said Dr. George Rutherford, an epidemiolo­gist with UCSF.

“This is a miracle to have a vaccine so fast. It’s incredible,” he said. “This is the moonshot of molecular biology. When the pandemic came we were able to respond. But it’s going to take a long time for this to be in our rearview mirror. We are going to be paying for this for quite a while.”

Massive wildfires

Wildfires are part of California’s landscape. But this year, freak August lightning storms, combined with a dry winter, dead trees from the 2012-2017 drought, overgrown forests and heat waves made worse by climate change combined for disaster. More than 4.1 million acres burned statewide — twice the previous record — sending choking smoke into the Bay Area for weeks. More than 10,000 structures and 33 lives were lost. Among the worst was the CZU Lightning Complex fire in Santa Cruz and San Mateo counties, which burned 97% of Big Basin Redwoods State Park, destroying the historic visitor center, campground­s and other buildings, as it also killed one person and destroyed 1,491 structures.

Amazingly, five of the six largest fires in recorded California history have all burned in the past four months.

The year ahead? Federal and state officials signed an agreement to double the rate of tree and brush thinning. But it will take years to make a serious dent. This winter is off to a slow start with rainfall at only 30% of normal. And 2020 is likely to go down as the hottest year in recorded history. In short: In years without major winter rains, 2020 may well be the new reality for 2021 and beyond.

Kamala Harris’ election

The 56-year-old Oakland native made history on Nov. 3, becoming not only the first woman, but the first African-American, to win the vice presidency. When President- elect Joe Biden speaks to Congress, both people sitting directly behind him will be Bay Area women: Harris and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco. Since Biden is 78, Harris is in a key position to become the first woman president if he only serves one term or less.

But what’s still to play out in 2021 are what issues she will champion, and how she will balance the activist left of the Democratic Party with its moderate middle following an election in which suburban votes played a key role in delivering the White House to the Democrats.

“Keeping the coalition together, it can be done,” Cain said. “Nancy Pelosi has done it in the House. Whether Joe and Kamala can do it, time will tell.”

Black Lives Matter

The death of George Floyd on May 25 in Minneapoli­s after police Officer Derek Chauvin kneeled on his neck for more than 8 minutes sparked protests throughout the nation, including the Bay Area. Thousands of demonstrat­ors in Oakland, San Jose and San Francisco marched against police brutality. The protests began peacefully but ended with some people setting fires, breaking windows and looting stores as police responded with rubber bullets and tear gas.

Polls showed a majority of California­ns and Americans were sympatheti­c to police reforms. State lawmakers banned chokeholds and required the state attorney general to investigat­e when police kill unarmed civilians. But broader reforms to decertify officers who break the law or to release more police personnel records failed in Sacramento amid opposition from powerful police unions and disorder from COVID-19. The rallying cry of some activists to “defund the police” backfired politicall­y, Biden said, helping Republican­s win House races in suburban areas, a sentiment even liberal Oakland Democratic Rep. Barbara Lee said was “absolutely correct.”

In 2021, Democrats are likely to push for more reforms in Bay Area cities and the state Capitol, this time with different framing.

Economic upheaval

COVID-19 devastated the economy. California’s unemployme­nt rate soared to 16.4% by April and May, an all-time high since modern records began in 1976. More than 4 million California­ns lost jobs in the first two months of the pandemic. Nationally, 20 million lost jobs in April, the biggest economic collapse since the Great Depression. In the Bay Area, 1 of 7 people was short on food, causing massive lines at food banks. Although the economy has slowly improved over the fall, with the unemployme­nt rate at 9.3% in October, the pandemic widened the gap between white-collar workers who could work at home and blue-collar workers who could not.

Economists say the vaccine could lead to a sharp rebound in 2021. But many businesses in particular­ly hard- hit industries, like restaurant­s, bars, hotels, movie theaters and airlines, may be gone for good.

Tech companies leave

Cracks appeared in the Silicon Valley mystique this year. Oracle announced it was moving its headquarte­rs from Redwood City to Austin, Texas. HP Enterprise said it would move to Houston. More traditiona­l companies like Charles Schwab, McKesson, Bechtel and Parsons Engineerin­g also said goodbye.

The Bay Area’s high housing prices, long commutes and social problems like growing homeless encampment­s caused some leaders to look for greener pastures, including Denver, Seattle, Nashville and Boise, Idaho. High taxes and regulation­s also are a factor, said Jim Wunderman, CEO of the Bay Area Council, a business group.

“These places are cheaper to live, cheaper to establish a business,” he said. “They welcome you with open arms. We need to become more like that.”

That said, innovation isn’t dead here. California generated more patents than any other state in 2020 — nearly four times as many as the next state, Texas. The Bay Area is still home to many of America’s largest Fortune 500 companies, including Apple, Google, Chevron, Wells Fargo, Intel, Facebook, HP, Netflix, PayPal, Salesforce, the Gap, Applied Materials, Adobe, eBay and Levi Strauss. And it remains the nation’s center of venture capital.

But if the trend continues in 2021 that the Golden Goose is threatened, look for more business-friendly measures, experts say.

“The strategy used to be ‘I have to go to Silicon Valley to be successful,'” Wunderman said. “A lot of people in the future, maybe they don’t have to come here. We’re experienci­ng the world from our laptops and phones now. There’s change taking place. We’ll see.”

BART to Silicon Valley

After more than 30 years of planning and dreaming, on June 12, the Bay Area Rapid Transit system finally came to Santa Clara County. BART stations opened in Milpitas and San Jose’s Berryessa neighborho­ods as part of a $2.3 billion project to extend BART south from Fremont into the Bay Area’s most populous county. But COVID-19 left the gleaming stations nearly empty, with ridership at only 5% of expected levels by December.

Big plans are on the drawing board for a $6 billion BART extension through downtown San Jose to Santa Clara. That is scheduled to open by 2030. But a big infrastruc­ture bill from the Biden-Harris administra­tion next year could provide a new infusion of cash to help speed it down the tracks.

 ?? DAI SUGANO — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Lakeside Fire Protection District firefighte­rs wait to be dispatched to the CZU Lightning Complex fire in August in Boulder Creek.
DAI SUGANO — STAFF ARCHIVES Lakeside Fire Protection District firefighte­rs wait to be dispatched to the CZU Lightning Complex fire in August in Boulder Creek.
 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? A volunteer tests a resident of San Francisco’s Mission District for the coronaviru­s in April during the pandemic’s first surge.
KARL MONDON — STAFF ARCHIVES A volunteer tests a resident of San Francisco’s Mission District for the coronaviru­s in April during the pandemic’s first surge.
 ?? NHAT V. MEYER — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? An onlooker watches as August CZU’s Lightning Complex fire burns near Pescadero in San Mateo County.
NHAT V. MEYER — STAFF ARCHIVES An onlooker watches as August CZU’s Lightning Complex fire burns near Pescadero in San Mateo County.

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