Los Angeles Times

Tesla fought to keep Fremont plant open

Company’s lone U.S. assembly site posed ‘a public health risk’ by staying open for days despite county order.

- By Dana Hull and Josh Eidelson Hull and Eidelson write for Bloomberg.

Tesla Inc.’s lone U.S. assembly plant posed a risk to public health by staying open for days despite San Francisco Bay Area shelterin-place orders amid the coronaviru­s outbreak, according to documents obtained through a California public records request.

City officials in Fremont, Calif., told Tesla in a series of conversati­ons over several days that its factory was not considered an essential business, and that it therefore needed to comply with an Alameda County order issued March 16. The electricca­r maker announced March 19 that it would suspend production four days later.

The documents provide a more detailed glimpse of what was a contentiou­s days-long debate between local authoritie­s and Tesla, which sought to stay open based on how the federal government defines crucial infrastruc­ture sectors. Fremont’s police chief, the deputy city manager, the county’s health officer and its assistant counsel were among the officials who got involved in the dispute before Tesla backed down.

Representa­tives for Tesla didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the documents.

The Bay Area was the first region in the U.S. to enact shelter-in-place orders, a massive effort affecting more than 7 million people. Since then, the coronaviru­s has wreaked havoc on communitie­s across the country and put immense strain on the global economy. Alameda

County had 294 confirmed cases of COVID-19 — the disease caused by the coronaviru­s — as of Tuesday, the health department said. Seven have died.

Hours before Tesla announced plans to suspend production, Kimberly Petersen, Fremont’s police chief, and other city officials held a virtual meeting March 19 to follow up on a determinat­ion reached the day before: The company had to cease all activities except for minimum basic operations.

In a March 21 letter to Tesla, she recounted the city’s efforts to seek clarificat­ion as to whether the carmaker was an essential business by consulting with Scott Dickey, the assistant counsel for the county.

Tesla’s plant has about 10,000 workers, but many commute from elsewhere, including California’s Central Valley. Video recorded by The Times on March 17 showed workers standing shoulder-to-shoulder to pack onto buses in the Tesla parking lot. One day later, Dickey relayed a determinat­ion from Erica Pan, Alameda County’s health officer. “Mr. Dickey informed city staff that Dr. Pan does not consider Tesla to be an essential business, but rather, considers Tesla’s manufactur­ing plant to be a public health risk,” Petersen wrote in the letter.

The company told employees last week that two staffers at unspecifie­d offices were confirmed to have COVID-19. A Nevada television station reported Sunday that a Tesla worker at its battery factory near Reno had tested positive, citing an email that cell supplier Panasonic Corp. sent to employees. Tesla had more than 48,000 employees worldwide at the end of 2019.

When Tesla representa­tives, including Rohan Patel, a senior director of policy and business developmen­t who used to work in the Obama administra­tion, met with Fremont officials March 19, they said the company intended to comply with the order, though it needed to conduct a “staged shutdown” of the plant.

The two sides agreed that all vehicle manufactur­ing would cease March 23. Employees who remained on site would complete work at the end of assembly lines to protect the value of vehicles and batteries, while others would perform basic operations such as security, maintenanc­e and cleaning, all while following social-distancing requiremen­ts.

“You explicitly agreed to that understand­ing,” the police chief later wrote. “If you were to transition to manufactur­ing ventilator­s, or other equipment intended to aid in the fight against Covid-19, these activities would be permitted.”

Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk tweeted March 18, the day before the meeting with Fremont officials, that the company would make ventilator­s “if there is a shortage.” The company has since held discussion­s with Medtronic, a leading ventilator maker in Dublin, Ireland, but there’s no indication yet that Tesla will play a role in manufactur­ing the medical devices.

During another virtual meeting March 22, Tesla briefly reversed its decision to close its plant. Alan Prescott, Tesla’s acting general counsel, argued that the county’s health order had been superseded by a new statewide order issued by California Gov. Gavin Newsom. The order included an exception for “critical infrastruc­ture sectors,” a category Tesla said included its plant and thus meant the company could continue conducting full operations.

After Petersen, the police chief, told Tesla during the meeting that the city was rejecting that argument, Prescott said the company would wind down operations because it was “the right thing to do.”

A tweet Musk sent two days earlier suggested Tesla didn’t have a choice — the factory couldn’t stay open because Tesla’s parts suppliers weren’t going to keep running their plants, he wrote. Petersen told Tesla she would like to schedule an inspection of the company’s facilities March 24 to ensure compliance.

“In closing, I would like to reiterate that the city of Fremont highly values Tesla as a partner and appreciate­s what you do for our economy and community,” Petersen wrote in one of her emails to the company. “We are extremely grateful for your willingnes­s to collaborat­e in our fight against the spread of Covid-19 by placing public health ahead of all other priorities.”

 ?? Mason Trinca For the Washington Post ?? TESLA unsuccessf­ully argued that its Fremont plant was among those included in an exception for “critical infrastruc­ture sectors.” Above, robotic arms install seats in a Model 3 at the Tesla factory in 2018.
Mason Trinca For the Washington Post TESLA unsuccessf­ully argued that its Fremont plant was among those included in an exception for “critical infrastruc­ture sectors.” Above, robotic arms install seats in a Model 3 at the Tesla factory in 2018.

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