Marin Independent Journal

How did California lose control of fight against COVID-19?

- Dan Walters CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters. org/commentary.

With the COVID-19 pandemic surging to critical levels in California, we naturally wonder how it happened.

How did California go from exemplifyi­ng success in taming the coronaviru­s last spring to an epicenter of disease, with 2.5 million COVID-19 cases, nearly 28,000 deaths and the second highest infection rate of any state?

Gov. Gavin Newsom describes it as a “surge on top of a surge” and “more deadly today than any time in this pandemic’s history.”

As infection rates soared, state and national media outlets almost immediatel­y began exploring underlying causes and a consensus of sorts emerged.

California­ns, we were told, let down their guard and began ignoring pleas from Newsom and health officials to wear masks, stay home as much as possible and avoid gatherings.

“If there’s no sort of enforcemen­t, people are going to do what they want to do,” Dr. Lee Riley, a professor and head of the division of infectious disease and vaccinolog­y at the UC Berkeley School of Public Health, told the San Francisco Chronicle in one of his many media interviews. “That was clearly demonstrat­ed just looking at the airports during the holidays — Thanksgivi­ng, Christmas, we had more travelers. People are definitely not following the recommenda­tions and so that’s going to have an impact, two weeks from now, for sure.”

Riley and others also cited the disproport­ionate impact in Southern California, particular­ly in Los Angeles, where poverty, overcrowde­d housing and work outside the home are infection catalysts.

Los Angeles County has a quarter of the state’s population but has a third of the state’s COVID-19 cases and 40% of the state’s pandemic deaths.

The county’s socioecono­mic situation is “like the kindling,” Paula Cannon, a microbiolo­gist at the University of Southern California, told the Associated Press. “And now we got to the stage where there was enough COVID out in the community that it lit the fire.”

These factors no doubt contribute­d heavily to the surge, but erratic decrees from Newsom and other officials that left California­ns bewildered at what they could and could not do also played a role.

Newsom assumed one-man management of the pandemic in the spring and over the ensuing 10 months has repeatedly imposed and relaxed restrictio­ns on personal and business activity, always asserting that he was following scientific advice.

However, some of his orders defied logic, creating widespread cynicism about underlying motives.

Why, for instance, were restaurant­s forbidden to serve customers outside while film production continued unabated, complete with catering tables for casts and crews?

One restaurant owner cited that exact anomaly in a lawsuit challengin­g Newsom’s directive. And in fact, film production had gained an exemption from restrictio­ns on business activities by being designated “critical infrastruc­ture” — another example of how the industry gets special treatment from California politician­s.

Ultimately, industry leaders voluntaril­y suspended production as infection rates reached crisis levels.

Popular cynicism peaked when it was revealed that Newsom and his wife had attended a maskless birthday party in a posh Napa restaurant for his long time friend and advisor, Jason Kinney, who counts a major Hollywood studio as one lobbying client.

Initially, California­ns responded positively to Newsom’s pleas to “bend the curve” by altering their behavior. But eventually, the more he beseeched them, the less they listened.

California has gone from nearly first to nearly worst in controllin­g COVID-19 and now is trying to recoup with a massive vaccinatio­n program.

However, so far that’s not proceeding very well either, with Newsom conceding that the pace of immunizati­ons has “gone too slowly for many of us.”

California has gone from nearly first to nearly worst in controllin­g COVID-19 and now is trying to recoup with a massive vaccinatio­n program.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States