Los Angeles Times

State is set to free inmates early to slow virus spread

As cases top 8,000, officials also extend stay-at-home orders and say schools are likely to stay closed.

- By Paige St. John, Rong-Gong Lin II, Richard Winton and Howard Blume

SACRAMENTO — With coronaviru­s cases and deaths spreading across California, officials were moving urgently Tuesday to slow the spread by releasing inmates from prisons, extending stay-at-home orders and confirming schools are not likely to reopen before the end of the academic year.

The number of confirmed cases in the state topped 8,500, with more than 180 deaths. Los Angeles County officials Tuesday confirmed 10 new coronaviru­s-linked deaths and reported the first such fatality of a healthcare worker. The number of deaths in the county is at least 54. In Santa Rosa, police announced that a wellrespec­ted detective had died of the virus.

Although there are some early signs that the extreme social distancing rules across the state might be helping, officials said they will probably have to be in place for weeks to come, which will continue to take a devastatin­g toll on the economy.

Across California, there were signs of how COVID-19 was upending life.

California is granting early release to 3,500 inmates in an effort to reduce crowding as coronaviru­s infections begin spreading through the state prison system.

Lawyers for Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday told a panel of federal judges the state is taking “extraordin­ary and unpreceden­ted protective measures” to slow the spread of the virus and protect those who live and work within California’s 35 prisons. The accelerate­d

prison discharges come in the face of pressure to do much more.

In court filings, state lawyers said California intends to accelerate release and parole dates for 3,500 inmates serving terms for nonviolent crimes and already due to be released within 60 days.

The releases are to be conducted “within the next several weeks.”

Documents provided to The Times show state prisons have been locking down cell blocks where inmates exhibit flu-like symptoms.

That has heightened fears among family members, especially of those inmates who are older or at risk of severe illness from COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronaviru­s.

As cases continue to rise, six San Francisco Bay Area jurisdicti­ons announced Tuesday that they would extend their stay-at-home orders through the beginning of May and put new restrictio­ns on such things as residentia­l constructi­on projects and the number of people who can attend funerals.

The counties extending the order are San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Alameda, Contra Costa and Marin.

Dr. Sara Cody, Santa Clara County’s public health officer, said the Bay Area’s strict stay-at-home order was working, but it needs more time.

“I want to say that: The incredible sacrifice that everyone has made, I believe it is starting to bend the curve. But it’s not enough and it hasn’t been in place long enough, so we need to keep at it, we just need to keep at it,” Cody said at a briefing. “I believe it’s beginning to make a difference, and it’s giving our hospitals more time.”

Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore said L.A. may also extend its stay-at-home order.

Still, experts warn the epidemic could get dramatical­ly worse. Several nursing homes and skilled-nursing facilities across the state, including one in San Francisco with more than 700 beds, are being monitored as potential hot spots of the virus.

In San Bernardino County, nearly 60 patients and staff members at a Yucaipa nursing home have tested positive for the coronaviru­s and two residents have died in what may be the state’s largest outbreak at a single facility, authoritie­s said Tuesday.

While testing continues, Cedar Mountain Post Acute Rehabilita­tion has been told to assume that all of its patients have the COVID-19 virus, San Bernardino County Department of Public Health Director Trudy Raymundo said at a briefing.

The nursing home, which has about 90 beds, isn’t accepting new residents or dischargin­g any, and the facility has been closed to visitors under Newsom’s 2-week-old stay-at-home order, Raymundo said.

An elected official in the Bay Area pleaded for help Tuesday, appalled by the shortage of personal protective equipment at a hospital leased by the state of California to care for coronaviru­s patients.

“Here’s what I see: I see a disaster on the brink of happening,” San Mateo County Supervisor David Canepa said at a meeting of the Board of Supervisor­s about the shortage of personal protective equipment, a category that includes masks, gowns and gloves, at Seton Medical Center in Daly City.

There’s also a staffing shortage at hospitals in San Mateo County, and there were just five empty intensive care unit beds as of Tuesday, out of a total of 66 available across the county, said Louise Rogers, chief of San Mateo County Health.

On the schools front, Supt. of Public Instructio­n Tony Thurmond said Tuesday in a letter to school district officials that campuses would probably not reopen before summer.

“Due to the current safety concerns and needs for ongoing social distancing, it currently appears that our students will not be able to return to school campuses before the end of the school year,” Thurmond wrote. “This is in no way to suggest that school is over for the year, but rather we should put all efforts into strengthen­ing our delivery of education through distance learning.”

Los Angeles Unified, the state’s largest school system, shut down its schools March 16. L.A. schools Supt. Austin Beutner recently extended that campus closure to May 1.

In a new recommenda­tion, Riverside County health officials urged residents to cover their noses and mouths when out in public for such essential tasks as grocery shopping and medical visits.

Up to now, federal officials have urged the healthy not wear masks. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s official advice, at least so far: Healthy people who do not work in the healthcare sector and are not taking care of an infected person at home do not need to wear masks.

St. John and Lin reported from Northern California, Winton and Blume from Los Angeles. Times staff writers Susanne Rust, Colleen Shalby, Luke Money, Hannah Fry, Sonali Kohli, Phil Willon and Cindy Chang contribute­d to this report. The Associated Press also contribute­d.

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