Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Gov. Newsom’s child in home quarantine

Classmate at private school tested positive for the coronaviru­s, but no one in the governor’s family has.

- By John Myers

SACRAMENTO — One of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s four children is quarantini­ng at home after a Sacramento private school classmate tested positive for the novel coronaviru­s, the governor’s office said Friday.

No one in the Newsom family has tested positive for the virus, said the governor’s communicat­ions director, Nathan Click. All six family members, he said, are observing quarantine procedures and have been for several days.

“The family has taken the potential exposure seriously and is following all state protocols,” Click said in an emailed statement.

The governor and his wife have two girls and two boys, ranging in age from 4 to 11 years old.

The child who was potentiall­y exposed to the virus was not identified for security reasons.

Newsom took a rapid test last week that came back negative, Click said, though he did not specify what day. The other five family members, including First Partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom and the four children, all received negative results after taking the nasal swab polymerase chain reaction, or PCR, test.

Click said the governor plans to have a PCR test this weekend.

The brush with the virus, first reported Friday by Politico, comes after the first family’s Sacramento elementary school resumed inperson instructio­n earlier this month.

Three of the children are in elementary school, where full-day classes have been held this month Mondays through Thursdays, with early dismissal on Fridays.

The youngest child is in prekinderg­arten.

Informatio­n published by the school states that all students and personnel are to wear masks and are subject to mandatory coronaviru­s testing, along with other public health protocols while on campus.

The governor’s child who shared the classroom with the infected student has been tested twice, according to Newsom’s office, on the fifth and seventh day after the last contact with the classmate.

Newsom’s personal experience­s with pandemic precaution­s have dominated the headlines this week, after he apologized for attending a longtime advisor’s birthday party at a Napa Valley restaurant earlier this month — one where members of as many as a halfdozen different households sat close to one another and did not follow the mask protocols the governor’s administra­tion has recommende­d to California­ns.

Sacramento County was listed as having evidence of “substantia­l” spread — the red tier in the state’s coronaviru­s reopening system — when the private school returned to a full-day schedule.

Newsom told a reporter last month that his kids were transition­ing to a “phasedin approach” to in-person learning at the time.

But the region’s largest public schools did not open under those conditions, which were downgraded last week to the “widespread” purple tier of the state system.

Those schools now cannot open, although campuses that opened before the status change are not required to return to full-time remote learning.

“The governor has made the safety of students and staff a priority during the COVID-19 pandemic and has fought to ensure that every child — whether in a classroom or at home — is learning,” Click said in the Friday night statement.

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