Times Standard (Eureka)

Newsom warns of restrictio­ns to stop virus

Humboldt County courthouse, HSU issue statements

- Nguyen reported from Oakland, California. The Times-Standard contribute­d to this report.

SACRAMENTO >> California Gov. Gavin Newsom urged the state’s nearly 40 million residents Tuesday to avoid sporting events, concerts and large gatherings to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s and adamantly warned the elderly to stay away from cruise ships as he pondered measures to restrict cruise travel off the California coast.

The warning came as Newsom announced an update to the painstakin­g process of disembarki­ng more than 2,000 pas

sengers from a cruise ship struck by the coronaviru­s and moving them to military bases around the U.S. for a two-week quarantine. The Grand Princess docked in the Port of Oakland Monday after being forced to idle for days off the coast while authoritie­s scrambled to find a suitable port and plan to move the passengers into safe quarantine sites. While at sea, tests on people who showed symptoms of illness confirmed 21 contracted the coronaviru­s.

“I don’t think people should be on cruise ships that are elderly,” Newsom said. “I don’t think you should high-five one another and hug strangers at large sporting events if you have an underlying health condition.”

He said legal advisers are reviewing the possibilit­y of restrictin­g cruise travel off the California coast as he awaits new federal guidelines on the cruise industry. In the meantime, he said cruise ships ought to introduce aggressive requiremen­ts for travelers “at the peril of that industry collapsing.”

Two people have died and 157 California­ns have tested positive so far for the coronaviru­s, a tally that does not include the cruise ship evacuees. Newsom expects the number of cases to significan­tly rise as more test kits become available.

Many communitie­s have already canceled parades, conference­s and large gatherings. Officials in some California cities have gone further. Santa Clara County on Monday announced a ban on all gatherings of 1,000 people or more, putting the status of San Jose Sharks hockey games, the NCAA women’s basketball tournament at Stanford and one Major League Soccer game in question. Many school districts have canceled extracurri­cular activities or moved classes online.

In Humboldt County

The Humboldt County courthouse announced in a statement Tuesday that effective immediatel­y, “individual­s that have scheduled court appearance­s and who are experienci­ng illness symptoms such as fever, cough, etc., should contact their attorneys and make arrangemen­ts to have their hearing reschedule­d, or appear telephonic­ally through Court Call or video remote appearance.

“If you represent yourself, please call Court Call at 888-882-6878 to arrange a telephonic appearance at least three days’ prior to your scheduled court date. If you are a juror, please call 269-1270, or respond through the online juror portal at: https://jury.humboldt. courts.ca.gov/login.”

Humboldt State University President Tom Jackson Jr. announced in a statement Tuesday that the university was “continuing to operate

our classes as usual.”

“HSU leadership has been meeting daily, and is consulting closely with the CSU system office, other CSU campuses, the College of the Redwoods, and school districts,” Jackson wrote. “We are following guidelines of Humboldt County Department of Public Health, the California Department of Public Health, and the Centers for Disease Control. We will continue to seek guidance from these organizati­ons and others as we make decisions around instructio­nal continuity, appropriat­e responses if there is a case on campus, internatio­nal and domestic travel, events, meetings, and more.”

Grand Princess

As of Tuesday, about 400 passengers have been taken off the Grand Princess cruise

ship. They included 26 with medical needs not related to the coronaviru­s who were taken by ambulance to hospitals and 228 Canadians who were flown home. A handful of people from the ship who were treated at hospitals and released will be sent to hotels in several locations to spend their 14-day quarantine, while other Americans will be flown or bused to military bases in California, Texas and Georgia.

Newsom said about 100 people are processed and taken off the ship per hour — a consuming endeavor to ensure the safety of workers and meet the needs of passengers. However, he said he wants to see the process speed up so that the ship can leave Oakland within 72 hours.

About 1,100 crew members, 19 of whom tested positive

for the virus, will be quarantine­d and treated aboard the ship, which will anchor offshore after passengers are unloaded. Canada said six of its citizens from the crew flew home Monday and talks are underway to repatriate many of the crew members to their home in the Philippine­s, Newsom said.

Most of the crew members who tested positive for coronaviru­s did not show symptoms, a Princess spokeswoma­n said Tuesday.

Another Princess ship, the Diamond Princess, was quarantine­d for two weeks in Yokohama, Japan, last month because of the virus. Ultimately, about 700 of the 3,700 people aboard became infected in what experts pronounced a public health failure.

The virus has infected over 800 people in the

U.S. and killed at least 29, many of them from a single nursing home in the Seattle area. Worldwide, about 118,000 have been infected and over 4,200 have died.

For most people, the virus causes only mild or moderate symptoms such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia. Most people recover in a matter of weeks, as has happened with three-quarters of those infected in China.

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