Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Rural California not immune from coronaviru­s

- Los Angeles Times

As he drove home from the grocery store Sunday, Ruben Macareno, a city councilman in Farmersvil­le, noticed a few groups of people socializin­g in their frontyards.

Macareno, while staying in his car, encouraged the groups to disperse, emphasizin­g the danger of the spreading coronaviru­s in California. Farmersvil­le is in Tulare County, which had just reported its first coronaviru­s-related death.

“As the numbers start to climb, they start to say, ‘Oh shoot, this is in our backyard,’” said Macareno, who serves in the town of about 10,700 east of Visalia. He described a mentality in which many locals view the pandemic as a public health emergency that strikes cities and urban areas, not their small, more isolated enclaves.

“A lot of us don’t think it will hit us, but it can hit us,” Macareno said.

Tulare County residents, however, are seeing firsthand how the virus is infiltrati­ng their towns along the foothills of Sequoia National Park as the number of cases and reported deaths have increased in the last week.

An outbreak in a Visalia nursing home has become a hot spot, and local leaders are working to keep residents at home, worried that some think their geography will keep them shielded from COVID-19.

Nestled in the San Joaquin Valley, the 460,000-resident county is home to a largely agricultur­al community. In 2018, the county valued its dairy production at $1.68 billion, and grapes and oranges were more than $800 million each.

In the city of Tulare, bisected by Route 99, there was “very little question that COVID-19 was going to come,” especially with the number of travelers who pass through, Deputy City Manager Josh McDonnell said.

But deeper inland, Joe Tanner, who was recently named city manager of Lindsay, a town of about 13,400 residents, is facing resistance from retail shops refusing to shut down.

The town took immediate and obvious measures to take the governor’s March emergency declaratio­n seriously from the start, Tanner said. Officials establishe­d social distancing measures at government facilities, closed the police department lobby and installed plastic shields at the finance department, where residents pay utility bills.

Still, they’ve struggled to get a few nonessenti­al stores to close, despite calls from the county and efforts from the city to educate them on the importance of restrictin­g contact with others, he said. The City Council is planning to vote on an emergency ordinance to fine the stores and could also force closure, he said.

Because of Lindsay’s rural lifestyle and its location away from major highways, he said, some may think it’s safe. “There is still an element of the community that we still need to educate,” he said.

The first major COVID-19 outbreak in Tulare County was announced on April 1 at a Visalia skilled nursing facility, three days after staff members began showing symptoms.

The Redwood Springs Healthcare Center announced two healthcare staff members and six patients had tested positive. Immediatel­y, the center distribute­d N95 face masks, gloves and gowns to staff and establishe­d a lockdown area to keep infected patients isolated as it tried to contain the spread, said Anita Hubbard, the administra­tor of the nursing home.

But it was too late. On Tuesday, six days later, 47 residents and staff members had been infected in the facility where about 60% of residents are older than 65, Hubbard said. Twelve others have tested negative, she said, and 18 tests are pending.

One resident died Tuesday morning and one remains hospitaliz­ed, Hubbard said. She said the center does not know how the spread began.

“This incident underscore­s the service and sacrifices made by our dedicated team every day,” she said in a statement. “Our top priority remains the health and well-being of everyone in our facility.”

As officials race to contain the pandemic, the spread in nursing homes has been particular­ly alarming. In Washington state, federal officials said more than 120 cases and at least five deaths were tied to one home; in California this week, one Riverside County facility had more 30 people test positive. The elderly are among the most vulnerable to the illness.

The cases of COVID-19 at the Visalia nursing home represent about half of the city’s 98 reported cases. Tulare County reported 168 confirmed cases on Wednesday, many of which have been traced to person-toperson contact. Tulare County health officials reported the first couple of confirmed cases in midMarch and the first coronaviru­s-related death on March 28. Ten days later, the death toll rose to seven.

The county reported on Tuesday the death of an individual older than 65, but how this person became sick is unknown.

The county did not say where the person lived and has released little informatio­n about the region’s coronaviru­srelated deaths, because ages or locations could be identifyin­g factors in smaller towns, said Tammie Weyker-adkins, a spokeswoma­n for the Tulare County Health and Human Services Agency. Of the people who have died, four were older than 65. One contracted the illness through person-toperson contact and two were travel-related.

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