Daily News (Los Angeles)

Newsom picks Dodger Stadium for State of State address

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO » California Gov. Gavin Newsom will deliver his third State of the State address from Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, the home field of the World Series champions that has been transforme­d into one of the nation’s largest COVID-19 vaccinatio­n sites.

“Dodger Stadium represents California’s spirit of service. Once filled with dedicated fans, it is now filled with dedicated health care providers,” Newsom spokespers­on Sahar Robertson said in a statement Monday.

The stadium also provides a more somber reminder of the pandemic: It seats 56,000 people, nearly the number of people who have died from COVID-19 in California.

Newsom’s address Tuesday comes at a crucial time for the Democratic governor, who faces a likely recall election later this year fueled by anger over his handling of the pandemic.

Newsom has been crisscross­ing the state in recent weeks, highlighti­ng his administra­tion’s efforts to administer vaccinatio­ns while trumpeting the declining numbers of new coronaviru­s cases in the nation’s most populous state.

Speaking Monday at a vaccinatio­n site in the small Central Valley community of Earlimart, Newsom said not to expect lots of policy announceme­nts during his speech, scheduled for 6 p.m.

“I want to highlight this heroic work that’s being done every single day with people that aren’t getting attention or being celebrated but are the quiet heroes in this pandemic,” Newsom said. “It’s a different kind of State of the State.”

In recent weeks, Newsom and the Democratic­controlled state Legislatur­e teamed up to approve a $7.6 billion stimulus package and $6.6 billion in funding aimed at convincing public school districts to return students to classrooms.

Newsom also has loosened some coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, allowing indoor youth sports with testing, announcing a limited number of fans can attend Major League Baseball games and saying theme parks like Disneyland can reopen on April 1 with limited capacity.

But the state is still struggling to vaccinate people. The Los Angeles Times reported that none of California’s 58 counties have signed on to the state’s centralize­d vaccinatio­n program being run by insurance giant Blue Shield. That has complicate­d the vaccine rollout.

Newsom said more than 200,000 education workers have been vaccinated since March 1, when the state began setting aside 10% of its supply for teachers. And he said the state is likely to loosen coronaviru­s restrictio­ns for a dozen more counties on Tuesday.

“We are very close to turning the proverbial page” on the pandemic, the governor said.

In another sign of decreasing coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ations, state officials announced they are moving surge facilities in a former NBA arena and other locations back to “warm” status, meaning they could be reopened if there is another wave of the pandemic despite the increase in vaccinatio­ns.

Sleep Train Arena in Sacramento, former home of the NBA’s Sacramento Kings, moved to inactive this month, as did beds in the Portervill­e Developmen­tal Center and at Imperial Valley College.

Federal medical stations in five counties also are now inactive: at the Riverside County Fairground­s; the vacant Sears Building, also in Riverside County; the Los Angeles Convention Center; the San Mateo County Event Center; The Craneway Pavilion in Contra Costa County; and the Fresno Convention and Entertainm­ent Center.

Sites at the Fairview Developmen­tal Center in Costa Mesa and the Palomar Medical Center in San Diego will move to warm status on Monday.

Officials could not immediatel­y say how much the temporary facilities cost to operate, or how many patients they treated.

 ??  ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom
Gov. Gavin Newsom

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