The Mercury News

State’s opening can’t come soon enough

- By George Skelton George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist.

My first thought when Gov. Gavin Newsom announced that California would fully reopen for business and pleasure on June 15 was: Why not May 15? Or April 15?

Newsom has been too slow in allowing California­ns to resume normal life, I’ve long thought. Too hesitant to restart indoor dining, permit wedding receptions and demand that schools welcome learning-deprived students back to classrooms.

It was an ominous sign about a year ago when the governor tried to close all beaches in the state. As I wrote then, every California­n has an unalienabl­e right to a day at the beach. Facing a revolt by sand-and-surf worshipers, Newsom backed down and negotiated with local communitie­s.

He has allowed single-minded health experts to all but run the show. Their sole agenda was vanquishin­g COVID-19. But in a democracy, no single sector should be given a free hand to dictate policy. People collective­ly have many agendas.

When we lean too heavily on the pandemic’s unofficial watchword, “science” — which is perpetuall­y changing anyway — other factors are reduced to low priority. Factors such as the economic and personal costs of small businesses perishing, especially restaurant­s. Or the toll on mental health.

The closing, partial reopening, shutting down again and cautious restarting was herkyjerky, costly and unreliable.

OK, much of it may have been justified to control the coronaviru­s. Newsom was trying. Give him that.

Our health may well have been worse without the restrictio­ns, which were among the tightest in the nation. As it is, California has had about 3.6 million cases of COVID-19, including about 59,550 deaths.

One of Newsom’s problems is that he has failed to adequately explain his actions to the public despite a continuous series of livestream­ed briefings last year. They were usually painful to watch — too longwinded and saturated with numbing statistics.

But, hey, the governor’s poll ratings are roughly the same today as they were before the pandemic disrupted our lives.

In a March poll by the Public Policy Institute of California, 53% of likely voters approved of how Newsom was handling his job and 42% disapprove­d. That’s virtually identical to a PPIC survey taken right before Newsom issued his stay-at-home orders in March of last year.

It’s a reflection of our political polarizati­on: Democrats overwhelmi­ngly support Newsom and Republican­s even more lopsidedly oppose him. But there are nearly twice as many Democrats in California. And independen­ts lean toward the governor.

Reopening the state is bound to benefit Newsom politicall­y and help him fend off the Republican-backed recall attempt. That is, unless by some cruel fate there’s a new surge of virus and the governor feels compelled to close everything down again. But that’s highly unlikely.

I called Dr. Mark Ghaly, secretary of the state Health and Human Services Agency, who is Newsom’s top COVID-19 advisor.

Why not reopen on May 15? Or April 15?

Ghaly had a logical-sounding answer: There won’t be enough people vaccinated before then. So far, roughly 34% of California­ns have received at least one shot and 18% are fully vaccinated.

Everyone over 16 won’t be eligible to receive shots until April 15, he said. It could require two weeks to get an appointmen­t. After the first vaccinatio­n, it will take four to six weeks — depending on the vaccine — to receive a second dose and become fully inoculated. That takes you into mid-june.

“We’re going to assume there’s enough vaccine available,” Ghaly said.

“This is great news for the economy and for all of us, but it’s an unnecessar­y risk for Newsom,” said Dan Schnur, a former Republican operative who teaches political communicat­ion at USC and UC Berkeley. “The only thing that could possibly give life to the recall is if he has to reverse course and shut things down again.”

But Mark Baldassare, the PPIC president and pollster, sees just the opposite. By far the biggest risk for Newsom is not reopening the state, he said.

Baldassare notes that in the last PPIC poll, 79% of likely voters believed “the worst is behind us.”

“The public expectatio­n is that we’re improving. People are getting their hopes up,” Baldassare said. “And the governor runs the risk of not moving in a timely manner. If things don’t go well in the next few months, they’re going to be very disappoint­ed. There are lots of political risks.”

June 15 isn’t soon enough. But at least we’ll get our summertime back: ballgames, holiday barbecues, lakeside bars, boating with friends.

And the livin’ is easier.

 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom announces the state’s plan to fully and safely reopen from the pandemic crisis during an appearance Tuesday at a vaccinatio­n clinic at City College in San Francisco.
KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Gov. Gavin Newsom announces the state’s plan to fully and safely reopen from the pandemic crisis during an appearance Tuesday at a vaccinatio­n clinic at City College in San Francisco.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States