The Mercury News

Rural areas to Gov. Newsom: One size won’t fit all on rules

- By George Skelton Los Angeles Times George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2020, Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Rebellion is infectious. Rural people are in revolt against Gov. Gavin Newsom’s statewide virus-fighting rules, which make little sense in burgs such as Bieber.

Bieber has hardly anything in common with places like Burbank.

“There’s a bar, a restaurant, a hardware store, market, post office, school and a gas station with one pump,” says Republican state Sen. Brian Dahle of Bieber in Lassen County. “No stop light.”

Dahle grows cereal grains and represents 11 mostly mountain counties in the Senate. His wife, Megan Dahle, is a Republican assemblywo­man.

In four of the senator’s counties — Modoc, Lassen, Sierra and Alpine — there hasn’t been one case of coronaviru­s, he says. Zero.

“People are getting fed up” with the governor’s stay-athome, business-shutdown orders, Dahle says. “They want to open up, get back to normal. We’re not like Los Angeles or San Francisco.”

Modoc, on the Oregon border, with a population of only 9,570, didn’t wait for the governor to set it free. The county reopened itself Friday.

“Our businesses are dying, and people need to be able to feed their children and pay their rent,” said Heather Hadwick, a Modoc County emergency services official.

Good for Modoc. Its “big city” is Alturas, with a population of 2,826. Alturas hardly equates with Anaheim in virus risk.

Neither does Coloma. Coloma is where gold was discovered in 1848. There’s a state park at the Coloma gold discovery site in El Dorado County. Newsom ordered it and several state recreation areas along historic Highway 49 closed to slow the virus spread.

Newsom also closed the parking lots.

“The governor said it’s OK for people to go out and exercise for their physical and mental health, so people are doing that,” says El Dorado County Sheriff John D’Agostini. “But the parks are closed and people can’t get into the lots. So they’re parking on the two-lane road. With a lot of traffic, somebody is going to get hit.”

D’Agostini asked the state parks department to reopen the lots and parks. “But they are absolutely refusing to do that. … They say they can’t violate the governor’s orders.

“The governor is dragging his feet,” the sheriff adds. “I’m monitoring it. If things look like they’re going to get out of control and threaten public safety, I’m considerin­g cutting the locks and opening the gates myself.”

El Dorado County — population 193,000, including South Lake Tahoe — is letting its stay-at-home directive expire and asked Newsom to loosen restrictio­ns on business. The county has been lightly touched by COVID-19, with no deaths.

Politicall­y, these northern mountain and valley farm counties are California outliers. They’re largely Republican.

Bakersfiel­d Republican Shannon Grove, Senate minority leader, says “The governor should realize that L.A. County is different than Kern County. We need to open up county by county. We’ve had only a handful of deaths. Our hospitals are empty. We definitely have to reopen the economy.”

Both parties are trying to keep partisan politics out of the virus fight. They’re following the lead of recent uncharacte­ristically cordial relations between Newsom and President Trump.

Neverthele­ss, northern farmers and mountain people have always fought against being looped in with and overpowere­d by Southern California, eyeing it suspicious­ly as water grabbing.

Now they’re trying to escape Newsom’s stay-at-home orders they say are too heavyhande­d for sparsely populated areas.

Yuba and Sutter counties in the Sacramento Valley plan to reopen businesses this week. They and four other nearby counties — Butte, Glenn, Tehama and Colusa — have asked Newsom to exempt them from his stay-home order.

“Local businesses can’t survive week after week with no business,” state Sen. Jim Nielsen, R-Tehama, says. “After a while they throw up their hands and quit, and there go the jobs.

“Given the low infection rates, we have to open up our local economy. It’s always struggling anyway.”

Assemblyma­n James Gallagher, R-Yuba City, a rice farmer, says: “We’re not saying all of California is ready to open, but we are. We’ve met the (governor’s) criteria. The dynamics have changed a lot. This doesn’t make sense anymore.”

Newsom keeps hinting at loosening his reins. He shouldn’t dawdle. Rural folks are beginning to cut the reins themselves and head in another direction.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States