The Mercury News

Plan to move patients to Costa Mesa is blocked

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COSTA MESA » A court temporaril­y blocked the U.S. government from sending up to 50 people infected with a new virus from China to Costa Mesa for quarantine after local officials argued that the plan lacked details about how the community would be protected from the outbreak.

A federal judge issued a temporary restrainin­g order late Friday to halt the transporta­tion of anyone who has tested positive for the new coronaviru­s to Costa Mesa, a city of 110,000 in the heart of Orange County. U.S. District Judge Josephine L. Stanton scheduled a hearing on the issue for Monday.

City officials quickly sought court interventi­on after learning from the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services that U.S. officials planned to start moving patients to a state-owned facility in Costa Mesa as early as today.

They said in court documents that local officials were not included in the planning effort and wanted to know why the Fairview Developmen­tal Center was considered a suitable quarantine site and what kind of safeguards were in place to prevent the possible transmissi­on of the virus that has spread worldwide.

“The city has not been part of any of the process that led to the considerat­ion of the site, and it would be unfair to not include us in this kind of significan­t decision that has great impact on our community,” Mayor Katrina Foley told The Orange County Register.

The California Health and Human Services Agency said in a statement Saturday that it was working with federal authoritie­s to find a place for people who were evacuated from a quarantine­d cruise ship in Japan and taken to Travis Air Force Base just east of Fairfield.

Anyone who tested positive for the virus cannot stay at the base and must be sent either to the hospital or if he’s not sick enough, isolated until the infection has cleared.

The Fairview center in Costa Mesa is being considered as a place to send them.

 ?? MINDY SCHAUER — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? A group of Orange County officials stages a news conference Saturday to voice its concerns about moving people infected with a new virus from China to Costa Mesa.
MINDY SCHAUER — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER A group of Orange County officials stages a news conference Saturday to voice its concerns about moving people infected with a new virus from China to Costa Mesa.

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