The Bakersfield Californian

Final state emergencie­s winding down after 3 years

- BY ADAM BEAM

SACRAMENTO — California’s coronaviru­s emergency officially ended Tuesday, nearly three years after Gov. Gavin Newsom issued the nation’s first statewide stayat-home order and just days after the state reached the grim milestone of 100,000 deaths related to the virus.

As California’s emergency winds down, such declaratio­ns continue in just five other states — including Texas and Illinois — signaling an end to the expanded legal powers of governors to suspend laws in response to the once mysterious disease. President Joe Biden announced last month the federal government will end its own version May 11.

Newsom on Tuesday signed a proclamati­on officially ending the state of emergency, declaring “the conditions of extreme peril to the safety of persons and property ... no longer exist.”

The end of California’s order will have little to no effect on most people as Newsom already lifted most of the state’s restrictio­ns, like those that required masks, closed beaches and forced many businesses to close. It offers a symbolic marker of the end of a period that once drasticall­y altered the lives of the state’s nearly 40 million residents.

Newsom has used his authority to make sure all of California’s local government­s had restrictio­ns in place during the pandemic, even threatenin­g to cut funding to some cities that refused to enforce them.

The Kern County Board of Supervisor­s on Tuesday adopted a resolution ending the local health emergency that was declared on March 30, 2020.

While California’s emergency declaratio­n is ending, other local emergencie­s will remain in place — including in Los Angeles County, home to nearly 10 million people.

The Los Angeles emergency order encourages mask use in some public places like business and trains and for residents who have been exposed to the virus. It will remain in effect for another month. On Tuesday, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s voted unanimousl­y to end the order March 31.

Many public health experts say it makes sense that California’s order is coming to a close.

“Three years ago, if you ... got infected you were rolling the dice about dying,” said Brad Pollock, chair of the Department of Public Health Sciences at the University of California, Davis. “What’s happened in the three years now is we have vaccines, we have antiviral therapy, we have much more knowledge about how we take care of patients in terms of supportive care. Your risk of dying is a fraction of what it was.”

The Newsom administra­tion’s approach was to issue broad restrictio­ns on what people could do and where they could go. California ended up faring better than other states, but they did worse than some other countries, like Sweden, said Jeffrey Klausner, professor of clinical population and public health sciences at the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California.

“I think if we had better focused our resources on those most at risk, we probably could have avoided more deaths,” he said.

The pandemic strained California’s health care system, which has yet to fully recover, said Carmela Coyle, president and CEO of the California Hospital Associatio­n. She said hospitals remain overwhelme­d — not from COVID patients, but from an influx of people returning to the health care system after staying away during the pandemic. She said a majority of California’s hospitals are losing money, prompting fears some could close — just as a community hospital in the state’s Central Valley did in December.

“While the state’s COVID public health emergency is formally concluding, the health care system emergency remains,” Coyle said.

Health care workers have felt the strain, too, working long hours among people infected with a highly contagious and potentiall­y life-threatenin­g disease. The strain has prompted a workforce shortage, with competing proposals to remedy it. The California Hospital Associatio­n is asking for a one-time infusion of $1.5 billion to help keep hospitals afloat. Labor unions, meanwhile, are backing a bill that would impose a $25 minimum wage for health care workers.

Meanwhile, local public health department­s worry the end of the coronaviru­s emergency will mean a return to limited funding for their budgets, an issue exposed in the early days of the pandemic when many counties did not have enough people to respond to the crisis. Newsom signed a budget last year that will spend $200 million to help public health department­s hire more workers. This year, he’s proposing cutting nearly $50 million in public health workforce training programs, part of his plan to cover a projected budget deficit.

“Public health is dependent on their front-line workforce, and that front-line workforce has to be skilled and trained and educated,” said Michelle Gibbons, president of the County Health Executives Associatio­n of California.

Overall, Newsom’s budget proposal would sustain $300 million in public health spending, including $100 million for 404 new positions in the state Department of Public Health, including areas of workforce training and emergency preparedne­ss and response.

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