The Mercury News

‘Turning a corner’ on pandemic

Newsom notes ‘encouragin­g’ signs appearing statewide

- By Fiona Kelliher f kelliher@bayareanew­sgroup.com

California appears to have turned a corner after a swell of coronaviru­s cases and hospitaliz­ations earlier this summer, though the path toward economic recovery remains more precarious than ever.

Hospitaliz­ations have dropped to the lowest point in nearly six weeks, new caseloads have slowed down and the death toll has begun to level off — all “encouragin­g” signs that the virus’s grip has lessened in recent weeks, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Wednesday. But that positive message came as many out-of-work California­ns anxiously wait key decisions on eviction and unemployme­nt pol

icies.

“These are specific proof points that connect to some optimism that what we’re doing as a state … that what you are doing is working,” Newsom said, adding, “We want to continue to see these numbers go down.”

In early July, California­ns who got sick in the early weeks of summer began flooding hospital beds — prompting Newsom to shut down more sectors of the economy by the middle of the month. Hospitaliz­ations statewide quickly ramped up to an all-time peak with more than 7,000 patients by July 21; since then, California has shed a whopping 22% of patients and hit 5,549 as of Tuesday.

New cases, meanwhile, have also dropped off — a trend that was initially questioned after a series of errors led the state to accidental­ly backlog up to 300,000 lab records. Over the weekend, the state began processing those records, which counties are now analyzing and adding to their own data platforms. Of the state’s approximat­ely

12,000 new cases Tuesday, about half represente­d backlogged data, Newsom said.

On Wednesday, California counties reported 8,346 new cases and 161 new deaths, according to data compiled by this news organizati­on.

“It’s a little bit more optimistic,” Newsom said of the declining case numbers. “Again, another indication that we’re turning a corner on this pandemic.”

Even so, California is hovering in the highest plateau of COVID-19 deaths since the pandemic began. After reporting the most deaths ever in a single day — 215 — on July 31, the state’s seven-day average of deaths has remained above 125 for the past two weeks. Before mid-July, that average had never scraped 100.

Those numbers are likely to stabilize throughout August and the sickest patients among the dwindling wave of hospitaliz­ations die, said Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an epidemiolo­gist with UC San Francisco. The seven-day average for weekly deaths already dropped down to 135 as of Tuesday.

After that, Chin-Hong said, new cases and hospitaliz­ations

will hit another trough — before people get antsy to go out, schools and businesses reopen and parties resume, all of which could lead to yet another peak of infections in the early fall.

“It’ll be the unfortunat­e roller coaster of COVID,” Chin-Hong said.

Newsom, for his part, seemed determined to avoid that fate. When asked about the next potential wave of reopenings, he said that his office will use a “much more intentiona­l and deliberate mindset” to promote safe practices and behaviors.

How many of those decisions will play out, however, remains largely up in the air. Even as California has seen about 7.31 million workers file for unemployme­nt since mid-March, the state hasn’t delivered payments to more than 1 million of them whose claims remain stuck in the bureaucrat­ic process. That burden only increased with the loss of the $600 weekly federal unemployme­nt benefit at the end of July.

At the same time, the future of the statewide eviction moratorium is in flux after the Judicial Council of California said it would

likely end the ban on Sept. 1 — potentiall­y leaving millions of renters on the hook.

Even as Newsom rattled off various strategies Wednesday his team will consider to jump-start the economy — like streamlini­ng small business permits and developing a new tax credit — the governor offered no immediate promises on either front. His

team plans to process unemployme­nt dollars “as quickly and efficientl­y as possible” while waiting for the federal government to step up, he said.

Economist Stephen Levy, director of the Palo Altobased Center for Continuing Study of the California Economy, said that Newsom’s biggest focus ought to be on stemming the coronaviru­s’s

spread. Until cases are consistent­ly low, full economic recovery is impossible, Levy added.

“He can’t mint money, and we don’t have the budget resources to put up $400 or $600 ourselves,” Levy said. “He has really limited options besides getting the pandemic under control — and he’s kind of limited there, too.”

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