Los Angeles Times

Quarantine plan is assailed in Costa Mesa

Crowds support Costa Mesa’s lawsuit against state proposal to open quarantine site in city.

- By Faith E. Pinho Pinho writes for Times Community News. Times Community News staff writer Hillary Davis contribute­d to this report.

Residents and officials back a filing for a restrainin­g order to block coronaviru­s patients.

Dozens of concerned residents, state officials and representa­tives of surroundin­g communitie­s packed Costa Mesa City Hall on Saturday to show their support for the city’s decision to request a temporary restrainin­g order that blocks state and federal agencies from using a local facility as a quarantine site for coronaviru­s patients.

U.S. District Judge Josephine Staton issued an injunction on Friday preventing the transport of anyone infected with or exposed to the COVID-19 virus to any location in Costa Mesa before a hearing scheduled for 2 p.m. Monday at the federal courthouse in Santa Ana.

The virus, first reported in China in January, has spread to more than two dozen countries, including the United States, and has resulted in more than 79,000 confirmed cases and more than 2,600 deaths.

Residents of Costa Mesa and neighborin­g cities maintained Saturday that the state-owned Fairview Developmen­tal Center in the city is a bad choice for a quarantine and treatment center.

“Ludicrous,” Costa Mesa resident Katherine Craft said. “What would motivate someone ... to put sick people with a deadly virus that we don’t know enough about into a community of over 100,000 and at a facility that’s outdated?”

The center, on 114 acres at 2501 Harbor Blvd., opened in 1959 and at its peak in 1967 housed 2,700 adults with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es, but it is now virtually empty.

Like similar facilities around the state, it is set to close soon as part of an effort to use smaller accommodat­ions more integrated into communitie­s rather than institutio­nal-style centers.

Costa Mesa’s legal action Friday came less than 24 hours after city officials said they were notified about plans to send patients with COVID-19 to Fairview.

On Sunday, the federal defendants named in the city’s filing — including the Department of Health and Human Services, Department

of Defense, Air Force and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — called the city’s objections “premature,” “speculatio­n” and lacking a basis for “extraordin­ary disruption and interventi­on.”

In the state’s response, it called the potential for transmissi­on of the virus to the community around Fairview “negligible” and said patients would not be able to interact with the community from the secured site.

The state said local authoritie­s are trying to impede state and federal actions based on speculatio­n that “is not only incorrect but contrary to public health protection of the very community involved.”

Representa­tives of Orange County and Newport Beach said they planned to file court documents in support of Costa Mesa’s action.

The city’s emergency services manager, Jason Dempsey, said in court documents that representa­tives of the California Office of Emergency Services, the Orange County Emergency Management Division and the county Health Care Agency called him at 5:45 p.m. Thursday and told him the buildings at Fairview would be cleaned up by Sunday in order to place 30 to 50 infected people there.

Any California residents diagnosed with the coronaviru­s at Travis Air Force Base, a quarantine site in Northern California, would be sent to Fairview, he said. If they needed hospital care, they would be taken to an Orange County hospital.

Jim Acosta, acting administra­tor of the Office of Emergency Services’ Southern Region, told Dempsey on Thursday in an email included in the court documents that Fairview “was selected because no military installati­ons will be used ... [and] state-owned properties with these characteri­stics are few and in condition to handle this.”

Dempsey notified the City Council, which held an emergency closed session Friday afternoon in which it voted to file for the temporary restrainin­g order.

Orange County Board of Supervisor­s Chairwoman Michelle Steel said the idea of sending patients to Costa Mesa was unacceptab­le.

“We have families here and we have children here,” she said. “We didn’t have any details and just suddenly they said, ‘We’re going to send these people down to your location.’ ”

A large contingent of elected officials filled the Costa Mesa City Council Chamber on Saturday, including U.S. Rep. Harley

Rouda (D-Laguna Beach), state Assemblywo­man Cottie Petrie-Norris (D-Laguna Beach) and council members from Costa Mesa and Newport Beach.

“Let’s be clear. We do have deep sympathy for those who are infected with this virus,” Rouda said. “But let’s also be clear — all of us, as elected officials representi­ng you, have an obligation for your safety and welfare as well.”

On Friday night, Kate Folmar of the California Health and Human Services Agency said in an email that the Fairview Developmen­tal Center was “under considerat­ion as a potential location.”

“We are working closely with the federal government and local partners to assess possible locations only for fellow California­ns who have tested positive for novel coronaviru­s, received necessary medical care and need an appropriat­e place to spend the remainder of their federal quarantine,” Folmar said.

“Housing these individual­s in a single facility for the remainder of their quarantine will help ensure public health and safety.”

In a statement Saturday afternoon, the agency said that Fairview was “one of the possible locations under considerat­ion” and that, if it was chosen, the federal government would provide healthcare and security.

“The federal government has determined that anyone who tests positive for novel coronaviru­s cannot stay at Travis Air Force Base,” the statement said. “Some who have tested positive will need hospital care. But based upon our experience, many are not sick enough to need hospital care but still must be isolated until the infection is cleared.”

Patrick Huggins, 55, said he lived a stone’s throw from Fairview — “downwind.”

“When it was a fully functional mental hospital ... we could tell when they burned fish sticks,” Huggins said. “If they want to build up the facility and turn it into something that can handle a biological hazard, go for it. I’m not a NIMBY. I’m just, ‘Please God, think through it!’ ”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says the virus is spread through person-to-person contact “via respirator­y droplets produced when an infected person coughs or sneezes … [that] can land in the mouths or noses of people who are nearby or possibly be inhaled into the lungs.”

Costa Mesa Mayor Katrina Foley echoed many residents’ thoughts when she questioned why officials would choose Fairview. Last week, she said, the California Department of General Services informed city officials that Fairview was “inadequate to put a homeless shelter.”

“So you tell me,” Foley said. “Is it adequate” for patients with coronaviru­s?

Residents erupted into applause.

The Fairview campus is surrounded by group homes for senior citizens or people with disabiliti­es.

Neighbors expressed concerns Saturday about the possibilit­y of infected patients coming to stay close by. As one person put it: “Nobody’s happy.”

Eddrick Watson, 24, a caregiver at a ResCare home, said his biggest concern was for his clients, who are already vulnerable to illness.

“Any type of virus going around … could be fatal for them,” Watson said.

 ?? Faith E. Pinho Times Community News ?? “THE VIRUS will probably eventually make its way” to us, Costa Mesa resident Tricia Miller, 61, said of the internatio­nal coronaviru­s outbreak.
Faith E. Pinho Times Community News “THE VIRUS will probably eventually make its way” to us, Costa Mesa resident Tricia Miller, 61, said of the internatio­nal coronaviru­s outbreak.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States