East Bay Times

No more fake COVID-19 lockdowns; time for strict rules

- By Sen. Steve Glazer and Yaneer Bar-Yam State Sen. Steve Glazer, D-Orinda, represents parts of Alameda and Contra Costa counties. Yaneer Bar-Yam is an expert on pandemics and founder of endcoronav­irus.org and the COVID Action Group. They wrote this commen

With the COVID-19 pandemic raging out of control, hospitals filling up and so many deaths that body bags are in short supply, we must do what we’ve avoided since March.

It is time to shut most of the state where the virus isn’t being controlled through other means.

No more fake lockdowns riven with confusing and easily ignored guidelines. Instead, we need an honest, four-week shelter-in-place that allows only truly essential human interactio­n. Only this will quell the virus and allow us to reopen the economy while we wait for widespread distributi­on of the vaccine, which is still many months away.

To control this virus and get our lives back to normal, people should be interactin­g outside their homes only to protect human life through health care and public safety and to keep the lights and heat on and the water flowing. Grocery stores should have limited hours and access. Food should be delivered to seniors and others with compromise­d immune systems. Only safe outdoor exercise should still be allowed.

To work, these measures must be coupled with the following:

• Full compensati­on for small businesses and employees who are hurt by the shutdown.

• Free housing and essential services for anyone who tests positive and can’t safely isolate from others in their household, protecting them from infection.

• Testing requiremen­ts, quarantine­s and monitoring for anyone entering the state.

• Galvanizin­g communityb­ased organizati­ons to perform case identifica­tion and support individual­s in need, coupled with rapid testing and contact tracing.

• Strong enforcemen­t of masking requiremen­ts and other restrictio­ns. It is not fair to look the other way at irresponsi­ble behavior while the majority of California­ns are doing their part to stop the spread.

These are the steps other countries and states have taken to control the virus. While we struggle, in many other countries restaurant­s and shops are open, families are gathering without fear, and sports teams are playing in stadiums packed with spectators.

California­ns, and all Americans, should be outraged that we have allowed the virus to run rampant when so much of the human and economic damage could have been avoided. This has been the greatest public policy failure of our time.

How did it happen? Misinforma­tion and a woeful lack of leadership from the White House didn’t help. But with good intentions, even responsibl­e leaders have wrongly viewed controllin­g the pandemic as a choice between public health and economic health.

As experience has shown, there is no such choice. The economy will not recover until we get the virus under control. Restaurant­s, retailers and others most affected by the pandemic will keep losing business until customers believe it is safe to interact with strangers in close quarters.

Meanwhile, the half measures that have inflicted so much damage and caused so much anxiety and frustratio­n have not contained the virus. California alone has seen 30,000 deaths — more than 40 times the number who die in a typical flu season.

More than 71,000 health care workers have tested positive for COVID-19, and 263 have died. Imagine if we lost 263 firefighte­rs during one wildfire season, and many of those were the result of fatal injuries first responders suffered while attempting to rescue people who refused to evacuate.

Sheltering in place during a pandemic is similar to an evacuation during a wildfire. Instead of being barred from their homes, people are largely confined to them. But both measures serve the same purpose: saving the lives of those directly impacted, saving other people from being affected by the ongoing disaster, and saving first responders from injury or death.

If the past nine months have taught us anything, it is that half-measures don’t work. They have only prolonged the pain. It’s time to be strong and decisive. It’s time to end COVID’s grip on California once and for all.

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