Los Angeles Times

Quarantine plan halted

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an Times staff writer Alex Wiggleswor­th contribute­d to this report.

A federal judge late Friday temporaril­y blocked the U.S. government from quarantini­ng coronaviru­s patients in Costa Mesa after city officials argued that the surprise proposal came with no informatio­n about how surroundin­g neighborho­ods would be protected from the deadly virus.

The city filed a request Friday afternoon to halt the plan to house 30 to 50 people who tested positive for the COVID-19 strain of coronaviru­s at the stateowned Fairview Developmen­tal Center until the 109-acre center — which sits next to several residentia­l neighborho­ods — is determined suitable for the quarantine and safeguards are put in place to protect the neighborin­g community.

“It is certainly not an isolated location,” Costa Mesa Mayor Katrina Foley told The Times. “It would certainly be important for us as the lead city to know what the plan is.”

Late Friday, U.S. District Judge Josephine L. Staton issued a temporary restrainin­g order to halt the transporta­tion of anyone infected with the coronaviru­s to Costa Mesa and set a hearing for Monday at 2 p.m. to evaluate the request.

Foley said a city staffer received a call about 5:20 p.m. Thursday from the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, saying that federal officials planned to start moving patients in as early as Sunday.

She and other city officials spent the next 24 hours trying to get more details. They found that the answers to their questions were different depending on who they spoke with, she said.

“We just couldn’t get any answers in any timely fashion,” Foley said. “We just want to minimize the impact on our residents and businesses.”

The City Council decided unanimousl­y to file a request for a legal injunction to halt the plan for the Fairview center, which houses a handful of residents and employs a few dozen staff members.

It’s unclear where the coronaviru­s patients are currently being quarantine­d.

The Orange County Health Care Agency said in a statement Saturday that it was notified late Thursday evening of the state’s intent to transfer coronaviru­s patients from Travis Air Force Base in Fairfield to Fairview in Costa Mesa, “and told the transporta­tion, monitoring, and care of these individual­s would be entirely managed by state and federal representa­tives.”

“Since then, we have not been provided crucial details such as an operationa­l plan or proposed scope of services,” it said.

“As the local health department, it is our hope that we can engage in a more thoughtful and robust collaborat­ion with our colleagues at the state and federal level to ensure the health and safety of Orange County residents is protected and next steps are clearly communicat­ed to the public,” Dr. Nichole Quick, Orange County health officer, said in the statement.

The California Health and Human Services Agency said Saturday that the quarantine of evacuees at Travis “remains a federal operation” but that the state has been working hard to support the effort in a way that ensures the safety of the patients and local communitie­s.

“The federal government has determined that anyone who tests positive for novel coronaviru­s cannot stay at Travis Air Force Base,” the agency said in a statement. “Some who have tested positive will need hospital care. But based upon our experience, many are not sick enough to need hospital care but still must be isolated until the infection is cleared.”

Fairview Developmen­tal Center is one of the sites under considerat­ion for that purpose, the agency said, but if it were chosen, the federal government would be responsibl­e for healthcare and “robust security to ensure the public safety and public health of the surroundin­g community.”

Health officials in Humboldt and Sacramento counties each confirmed a case of the coronaviru­s last week in residents who had recently traveled to China.

In addition, five people who were evacuated from the Diamond Princess cruise ship in Japan and taken to Travis Air Force Base have tested positive for the COVID-19 virus, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said, bringing the total number of confirmed cases in California to 15.

CDC officials earlier Friday confirmed 34 cases in the U.S.; the Sacramento County case would bring that number to 35.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States