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Gov. Newsom says state will set aside COVID-19 vaccines for educators, hints at veto on school reopening plan

California plans to set aside 10% of first vaccine doses for educators, school staff and childcare providers starting in March to help get children back in classrooms, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday.The move is aimed at jumpstarting in-person learning after nearly a year of distance learning for most of California’s 6 million K-12 students. It comes a day after California’s legislative leaders announced a $6.5 billion proposal aimed at reopening schools this spring. Newsom said that’s not fast enough and suggested he could veto it.“I can’t support something that’s going to delay the safe reopening of schools for our youngest kids,” he said.| Video below| Gov. Newsom says legislative school reopening proposal moves ‘too slow’It also comes as the state faces delayed vaccine shipments affecting about 702,000 doses — more than half of its typical weekly allotment — due to winter storms in the eastern half of the country. The delays have prompted health officials around the state to shutter some vaccine centers and delay appointments.In Los Angeles, city officials postponed vaccine appointments Friday for about 12,500 people due to shipment delays, while in nearby Orange County officials temporarily closed a vaccination site at Disneyland.Aside from the weather delays, Newsom said the state expects more consistent vaccine shipments and that its allotment from the federal government to start rising. That consistency gives the state the confidence to set aside a baseline of 75,000 first doses of vaccine each week for teachers, school staff and childcare workers — a move welcomed as “an important step” by the California Teachers’ Association, which represents 310,000 educators.California has been ramping up vaccine efforts, giving 6.9 million shots to date by opening large-scale vaccination centers at places such as Disneyland and Dodger Stadium and running mobile clinics to vaccinate farmworkers and other vulnerable and hard-to-reach populations. Health officials have repeatedly said they are ready to provide far more doses but are limited by vaccine supplies.California’s virus cases, infection rates and hospitalizations have dropped precipitously after reaching record highs in early January. Only 3.1% of people tested in the last week were positive, while cases have fallen to 6,700 per day from a peak of more than 40,000. Hospitalizations are a third of what they were six weeks ago.California on Friday also announced a more rapid return to athletic playing fields for youth sports, while Newsom recently said more counties will soon be able to allow various businesses to reopen and expand customer volume.But school districts in many areas of the state such as San Francisco and the city of Los Angeles remain closed to in-person learning.Under the legislative proposal, those that offer in-person instruction by April 15 to “vulnerable” students in elementary schools, including English learners, homeless students and foster children, could tap into additional funding. The plan also requires schools that receive the funding to reopen classrooms for all students in grades TK-6 when coronavirus case rates in their counties drop below 7 per 100,000.Waiting until April 15 is too long, Newsom said, noting it’s nearly the end of the school year.State lawmakers plan to take up the school reopening bill on Monday, said Nannette Miranda, a spokeswoman for Phil Ting, the chair of the Assembly Budget Committee.___Taxin reported from Orange County.

California plans to set aside 10% of first vaccine doses for educators, school staff and childcare providers starting in March to help get children back in classrooms, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday.

The move is aimed at jumpstarting in-person learning after nearly a year of distance learning for most of California’s 6 million K-12 students. It comes a day after California’s legislative leaders announced a $6.5 billion proposal aimed at reopening schools this spring. Newsom said that’s not fast enough and suggested he could veto it.

“I can’t support something that’s going to delay the safe reopening of schools for our youngest kids,” he said.

| Video below| Gov. Newsom says legislative school reopening proposal moves ‘too slow’

It also comes as the state faces delayed vaccine shipments affecting about 702,000 doses — more than half of its typical weekly allotment — due to winter storms in the eastern half of the country. The delays have prompted health officials around the state to shutter some vaccine centers and delay appointments.

In Los Angeles, city officials postponed vaccine appointments Friday for about 12,500 people due to shipment delays, while in nearby Orange County officials temporarily closed a vaccination site at Disneyland.

Aside from the weather delays, Newsom said the state expects more consistent vaccine shipments and that its allotment from the federal government to start rising. That consistency gives the state the confidence to set aside a baseline of 75,000 first doses of vaccine each week for teachers, school staff and childcare workers — a move welcomed as “an important step” by the California Teachers’ Association, which represents 310,000 educators.

California has been ramping up vaccine efforts, giving 6.9 million shots to date by opening large-scale vaccination centers at places such as Disneyland and Dodger Stadium and running mobile clinics to vaccinate farmworkers and other vulnerable and hard-to-reach populations. Health officials have repeatedly said they are ready to provide far more doses but are limited by vaccine supplies.

California’s virus cases, infection rates and hospitalizations have dropped precipitously after reaching record highs in early January. Only 3.1% of people tested in the last week were positive, while cases have fallen to 6,700 per day from a peak of more than 40,000. Hospitalizations are a third of what they were six weeks ago.

California on Friday also announced a more rapid return to athletic playing fields for youth sports, while Newsom recently said more counties will soon be able to allow various businesses to reopen and expand customer volume.

But school districts in many areas of the state such as San Francisco and the city of Los Angeles remain closed to in-person learning.

Under the legislative proposal, those that offer in-person instruction by April 15 to “vulnerable” students in elementary schools, including English learners, homeless students and foster children, could tap into additional funding. The plan also requires schools that receive the funding to reopen classrooms for all students in grades TK-6 when coronavirus case rates in their counties drop below 7 per 100,000.

Waiting until April 15 is too long, Newsom said, noting it’s nearly the end of the school year.

State lawmakers plan to take up the school reopening bill on Monday, said Nannette Miranda, a spokeswoman for Phil Ting, the chair of the Assembly Budget Committee.

___

Taxin reported from Orange County.

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Alarming decline in COVID-19 testing in Sonoma County could hinder reopening more businesses

Before Christmas In Sonoma County, as many as 680 per 100,000 residents were getting tested each day. That’s about 3,400 daily tests countywide. Testing volume dipped during the holiday season, before again increasing during the first week of January. County officials this week reported the daily testing rate had dropped to about 490 tests, only slightly above the state’s median testing rate of 425 daily tests per 100,000 residents.

As part of the statewide pandemic reopening process, counties receive an adjustment based on local testing volume relative to the state median testing rate. If the local testing rate is greater than the state median, the county’s daily virus case rate — a key measure of COVID-19 transmission — is adjusted downward to account for the greater number of new infections being found.

The state assesses all counties’ virus transmission benchmarks every Tuesday.

Last week, Sonoma County’s testing volume dipped below the state median, so the county’s daily case rate was adjusted upward from 20.8 to 21.2 per 100,000 residents. This week, with a testing rate barely surpassing the state median, the county’s daily case rate was adjusted from 15.3 to 13.8 daily cases per 100,000 people.

The county needs to push that case, or daily rate of new virus infections, down to 7 or less per 100,000 residents, in order to qualify to advance under the state’s reopening plan and lift more limits on most businesses. For example, the county’s restaurant sector remains restricted to outdoor dining and takeout. During the recent winter surge, only takeout service was permitted.

“Testing can help detect COVID cases early, and stop possible outbreaks,” Mase said. “And it also will help us reopen our economy.”

Identifying virus mutations

As new coronavirus variants, both foreign and homegrown, begin to emerge, public health experts underscore the importance of testing to spot them.

Dr. John Swartzberg, a UC Berkeley infectious disease expert, said that without adequate testing done, it’s difficult to track the trajectory of the virus. But also, he said, insufficient testing cripples public health officials’ ability to judge the role coronavirus variants are playing, and will be playing, in the pandemic.

“Without testing, we’re blind,” Swartzberg said.

D’Arcy Richardson, Sonoma County’s director of nursing for COVID-19 response, agreed. Testing is essential for tracking COVID-19 mutations, she said, some of which could make the virus more transmissible.

“If we don’t have people getting tested, then we can’t do that genotyping to look for those new strains from South Africa, from the UK, from Brazil,” Richardson said. “It’s really important for us to know what’s happening to be able to mitigate and stop that transmission as quickly as possible when we start to see those strains … that could make these wonderful vaccination efforts less effective.”

Fewer tests at hospitals

County public health data show significant declines in testing conducted at the local public health lab, the county’s three large hospitals and at state-contracted OptumServe public testing sites.

For example, Kaiser Permanente went from doing more than 5,420 coronavirus tests during first full week of January, to 2,871 during the first week of February. Public health lab testing plunged from a high of nearly 5,000 tests during the week starting Dec. 6, 2020, to 2,820 in the first week of February.

Locally, OptumServe, which reached a high of nearly 5,000 tests during the first week of January, has dropped to 2,650 tests during the first week of this month. Also, testing at local health clinics has declined somewhat during that period, according to county public health data.

Providence St. Joseph Health, which runs Santa Rosa Memorial, Petaluma Valley and Healdsburg hospitals, went from 1,128 weekly virus tests to 819, during that same monthly stretch.

Dr. Chad Krilich, Providence St. Joseph Health’s chief medical officer, said the COVID-19 tests included those administered in emergency rooms, urgent care centers or in the hospitals. The declines, he said, could be caused by an actual decrease in coronavirus transmission, or possibly people’s lack of interest to be tested.

“Ultimately, my concern is that we don’t forget what it is that we need to do in order to see us through this phase of the pandemic,” Krilich said, citing virus tests as a critical item.

You can reach Staff Writer Martin Espinoza at 707-521-5213 or martin.espinoza@pressdemocrat.com. On Twitter @pressreno.

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US Department of Education releases Covid-19 handbook along with CDC guidelines for reopening schools

A medical technician fills a syringe from a vial of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine in Bates Memorial Baptist Church on February 12 in Louisville, Kentucky. Jon Cherry/Getty Images

When it comes to the Covid-19 vaccine, about 31% of adults say they plan to “wait and see” how it works for other people before deciding whether to get vaccinated themselves, according to a report released by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) Friday.

Because they are still undecided, KFF says that group is a smart target for vaccine education. To do that, the foundation notes that it’s important to understand the group is not a monolith and concerns about getting vaccinated vary. 

About half of those in the “wait and see” group are White, 16% are Black and 19% are Hispanic. A majority say they are worried that they or a family member will get sick from coronavirus. 

Over half of the “wait and see group” view getting vaccinated as a personal choice and just 40% see vaccination as a responsibility to protect others.

The “wait and see group” are also politically diverse; 42% identify as Democrats or Democratic leaning and 36% identify as Republicans or Republican leaning. 

About 67% of “wait and see” Republicans view the decision to get vaccinated as a personal choice, relative to 43% of Democrats. 52% of “wait and see” Democrats believe everyone has a responsibility to protect the health of others while just 29% of “wait and see” Republicans believe the same.

About half of Republicans who want to “want and see” believe the seriousness of the pandemic has been exaggerated 

Black and Hispanic adults who plan to “wait and see” are very concerned about the prospect of personally getting sick or having a family member getting sick from coronavirus. However, many are skeptical of the vaccine and the health care system at large.  

About 61% of Hispanic adults and 59% of Black adults in the “wait and see” group said they were concerned that they might get coronavirus from the vaccine. About 57% of “wait and see” Black adults expressed distrust in the health care system and KFF noted that the lower levels of trust are associated with lower uptake of the vaccine. 

Many who say they plan to “wait and see” said that a close friend or family member getting vaccinated would be most likely to sway their decision.

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Coronavirus in Oregon: 529 new cases, 7 deaths as Portland area prepares for restaurant, gym reopening

The Oregon Health Authority announced 529 new cases of COVID-19 on Tuesday along with seven new deaths, raising the state’s coronavirus death toll to 2,031.

The new cases come as Gov. Kate Brown announced that restaurants, bars and brewpubs in the Portland metro area could reopen for indoor dining with a limited capacity starting Friday.

Falling COVID-19 cases led Brown to shift 10 Oregon counties — including Multnomah, Clackamas and Washington — from the “extreme” to the “high” risk category, allowing the partial reopening of some businesses including restaurants, gyms and movie theaters for the first time since November.

Gyms in the Portland area can also reopen for indoor workouts of up to 50 people starting Friday. Brown relaxed the restrictions on gyms a bit last month, allowing up to six clients inside, after indoor workouts were shut down across much of the state last November as coronavirus infections were soaring.

The state opened up general vaccinations to Oregonians ages 80 and older on Monday, in a day wreaked by online havoc and frustration as metro-area appointments filled up within hours of registration opening.

Many were able to secure appointment slots over the next week, but local health providers who run the Portland area’s two vaccination clinics couldn’t say on what date new appointments would open up for booking. It appears, however, that the next available appointments won’t likely be until Wednesday, Feb. 17.

Where the new cases are by county: Baker (4), Benton (20), Clackamas (65), Clatsop (2), Columbia (3), Coos (9), Crook (1), Curry (3), Deschutes (5), Douglas (16), Grant (1), Harney (18), Hood River (10), Jackson (19), Jefferson (5), Josephine (20), Klamath (9), Lake (13), Lane (39), Lincoln (1), Linn (9), Malheur (1), Marion (54), Morrow (3), Multnomah (78), Polk (19), Tillamook (1), Umatilla (29), Union (5), Wallowa (9), Wasco (7), Washington (40) and Yamhill (11).

Who died: The 2,025th death is a 68-year-old Columbia County woman who tested positive Dec. 22 and died Feb. 4 at her residence.

The 2,026th death is a 92-year-old Deschutes County woman who tested positive Nov. 23 and died Dec. 9 at her residence.

The 2,027th death is a 92-year-old Josephine County man who tested positive Dec. 21 and died Jan. 17 at his residence.

The 2,028th death is an 82-year-old Lane County man who tested positive Dec. 16 and died Feb. 6 at McKenzie-Willamette Medical Center.

The 2,029th death is a 79-year-old Marion County man who tested positive Jan. 25 and died Feb. 2 at his residence.

The 2,030th death is a 77-year-old Union County woman in who tested positive Jan. 22 and died Feb. 7 at Grande Ronde Hospital.

The 2,031st death is a 44-year-old Hood River County man who tested positive Jan. 25 and died Feb. 6. Location of death is being confirmed.

Unless noted above, each person who died had underlying health conditions or state officials were working to determine if the person had underlying medical conditions.

The prevalence of infections: On Tuesday, the state reported 622 new positive tests out of 14,063 tests performed, equaling a 4.4% positivity rate.

The OHA said it received about 3,000 negative laboratory results Feb. 8 from tests performed June 1 to Feb. 2 due to a delay in reporting. Total lab results are higher for Feb. 8 than usual, but there was no change in percent positivity, the health authority said.

Who’s in the hospital: The state reported 226 Oregonians with confirmed coronavirus infections were hospitalized Tuesday, five more than Monday. Of those, 53 coronavirus patients were in intensive care units, two fewer than Monday.

Vaccines administered: Oregon has administered 588,740 first and second doses out of 801,125 received, which is about 73.5% of its supply. Oregon reported 16,340 newly administered doses, which includes 7,863 on Monday and the remainder from previous days.

Since it began: Oregon has reported 147,932 confirmed or presumed infections and 2,031 deaths, among the lowest per capita numbers in the nation. To date, the state has reported over 3,328,998 lab reports from tests.

— Jaimie Ding

jding@oregonian.com; 503-221-4395; @j_dingdingding

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Debate over reopening schools rages as CDC finds low COVID-19 spread if precautions taken

After almost a year of virtual learning due to the coronavirus pandemic, Philadelphia’s youngest students will see the inside of a classroom in February. “We’ve relied on science and data to help inform every step that we’ve taken to develop and implement a plan,” superintendent William Hite said.

The reopening comes after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced there’s little evidence of coronavirus transmission in schools if precautions are followed. In addition to face masks, physical distancing and increased room ventilation, schools need to limit risky activities like indoor sports and restricting indoor dining.

Dr. Joseph Allen, the director of the Healthy Buildings Program at the Harvard School of Public Health, called school closures “a national emergency.”

“We are seeing the devastating cost just pile on top of each other,” he said. “The reports we see on suicides and decreases in literacy, less access to food, food insecurity issues.”

The new data “supports that schools are not the source or not contributing in meaningful ways to community spread,” Allen said.

But across the country, the divisive debate rages between districts and teachers unions refusing to return. Chicago, the nation’s third-largest school district, is on the brink of a teacher strike. 

“My message to the teachers unions is we need you guys,” said Tameika Hinton, a single mother to 10-year-old Destin. 

Hinton had to move in with her grandfather after cutting her work hours to be able to stay home to supervise her child’s learning. 

One reason unions are pushing back on returning is because there are only 23 states that prioritize teachers to receive the COVID-19 vaccine

The Biden administration is seeking to get younger students back in the classroom as soon as possible. The White House confirmed to CBS News that President Biden’s goal to reopen a majority of schools in his first 100 days does not apply to high schools and there’s no word of a timeline for reopening secondary schools.

© 2021 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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CDC; schools reopening; Eli Lilly; Biden; vaccine; Fauci

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If you’re planning a ski trip, follow these six tips to stay safe.

USA TODAY

COVID-19 has killed more than 425,000 Americans, and infections have continued to mount despite the introduction of a pair of vaccines late in 2020. USA TODAY is tracking the news. Keep refreshing this page for the latest updates. Sign up for our Coronavirus Watch newsletter for updates to your inbox, join our Facebook group or scroll through our in-depth answers to reader questions.

With more and more students going back to school this week, evidence from the U.S. and other countries indicates schools can operate safely with precautions and they should open for in-person instruction as soon as possible, researchers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say.

In an article published Tuesday in JAMA Network, the researchers wrote that wearing masks and maintaining social distance have proved effective at limiting transmission of the coronavirus in schools, but activities such as indoor sporting events can promote spread and should be diminished.

“The preponderance of available evidence from the fall school semester has been reassuring,” the three researchers wrote. “There has been little evidence that schools have contributed meaningfully to increased community transmission.”

Still, returning college student populations may be at even greater risk than they were in the fall – not to mention their surrounding communities, where research has suggested greater outbreaks in college towns.

In the headlines:

►Longtime NBA writer Sekou Smith, known for his basketball insight and friendly demeanor, died Tuesday of COVID-19. He was 48 years old.

►Eli Lilly announced that its monoclonal antibody cocktail cuts hospitalizations by 70% for high-risk COVID-19 patients.

►Alaska and Kentucky have detected their states’ first known cases of the coronavirus variant identified last year in the United Kingdom, officials said Tuesday. The diagnoses raise the total of states reporting cases of the variant to 25.

►The global total of coronavirus cases surpassed 100 million Tuesday, according to the Johns Hopkins University dashboard. The U.S., with a little over 4% of the world’s population, has more than 25% of the infections and nearly 20% of the deaths.

📈Today’s numbers: The U.S. has more than 25.4 million confirmed coronavirus cases and more than 425,000 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University data. The global totals: More than 100.2 million cases and 2.15 million deaths. About 44.4 million vaccine doses have been distributed in the U.S. and 23.5 million have been administered, according to the CDC. 

📘 What we’re reading: Luck, foresight and science: How an unheralded team developed a COVID-19 vaccine in record time.

Biden hopes to have majority of population vaccinated by fall

President Joe Biden has announced that he will raise the minimum weekly supply of vaccines to states over the next three weeks by 16%, to 10 million. Biden is has a deal in the works to purchase 200 million more doses, which would give the U.S. a total of 600 million ordered doses of the two-shot vaccines. That’s enough to inoculate 300 million Americans and more than enough for the country’s estimated 260 million adults. Biden said he expects the new supply to be fully delivered by mid-summer and for the majority of the population to be vaccinated by late summer or early fall.

Antibody cocktail could be game changer for high-risk patients

While vaccines may help slow the COVID-19 pandemic over the next months, drug company Eli Lilly announced Tuesday that its treatments can help save lives in the meantime. The Indianapolis-based drug giant says its monoclonal antibody cocktail cuts hospitalizations by 70% for high-risk patients. A monoclonal antibody mimics one of the natural antibodies the immune system uses to fight off the virus. Former President Donald Trump as well as former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani all received monoclonal antibodies shortly after they were diagnosed with COVID-19.

Karen Weintraub

High risk: Schools often ignore public health guidelines for in-class learning

Many school districts and states holding in-person classes have ignored recommendations from public health officials or written their own questionable safety rules – creating a tinderbox where COVID-19 can sicken and kill. An analysis of federal and state data found more than 780 complaints covering more than 2,000 public and private K-12 schools. Among complaints: Employees reported sick children coming to school, maskless students and teachers less than 6 feet apart and administrators minimizing the dangers of the virus and punishing teachers who spoke out.

“The response to the virus has been politicized,” said Dr. Chandy John, an expert in pediatric infectious diseases at the Indiana University School of Medicine. “There’s a willingness to ignore data and facts and go with whatever you’re hearing from the Internet or from political leaders who don’t have any scientific knowledge.”

Laura Ungar, Kaiser Health News

January already deadliest month for pandemic in US

The 4,087 deaths from COVID-19 reported Tuesday – the fourth-highest day in the history of the pandemic – have already made January the deadliest month of the pandemic, a USA TODAY analysis of Johns Hopkins University data shows. In the first 26 days of January, the United States reported 79,261 deaths. The total number of deaths in December, which had been the most deadly month, was 77,486 deaths in December. At this pace, January could end with about 94,500 reported deaths.

Some states have been ravaged. California’s previous worst month was 6,772 fatalities, in December, but the state has already reported 12,282 dead in January. January is already the deadliest month for another 15 states: Alabama, Arizona, Georgia, Hawaii, Kentucky, Maine, Mississippi, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, Virginia and Washington.

– Mike Stucka

Oklahoma Health Department sues company that promised N95 masks

The Oklahoma Health Department in March ordered more than 2 million N95 masks from a Tulsa piano bar owner who promised he could get the coveted PPE from China in large amounts and quickly.

They ordered the masks from Casey Bradford’s brand-new company, PPE Supplies LLC. On the second order, they even paid him half upfront – $2.125 million – after he promised delivery in 10 days.

The Oklahoma Health Department on Tuesday sued Bradford and PPE Supplies LLC in Oklahoma County District Court. Health officials got fewer than 10,000 masks from PPE Supplies and only $300,000 of the deposit back, according to the breach of contract lawsuit. The Health Department is seeking the rest of its money back – $1.825 million, plus interest. It also is seeking punitive damages for “misconduct.”

“Bradford intentionally and willfully misrepresented facts to Plaintiff that induced Plaintiff into entering purchasing orders and advancing a deposit, ” the lawsuit alleges.

– Nolan Clay, The Oklahoman

Double masking ‘just makes common sense,’ says Dr. Anthony Fauci

Double masking was in the spotlight last week during President Joe Biden’s inauguration, where several high-profile officials and celebrities were photographed wearing two masks.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, says that it’s likely more effective to prevent spread: “So, if you have a physical covering with one layer, you put another layer on, it just makes common sense that it likely would be more effective,” Fauci told “NBC News’ TODAY” on Monday. “That’s the reason why you see people either double masking or doing a version of an N95.”

So does a study published in the peer-reviewed journal Matter in July, which found that wearing two masks could increase protection from virus particles by 50% up to 75%. It not only added an extra layer of protection but also made the mask fit snugger around the face, said study author Dr. Loretta Fernandez.

Americans’ renewed interest in double masking also comes as variants that appear to be more contagious emerge from the U.K, South Africa, Brazil and California.

– Adrianna Rodriguez, USA TODAY.

Contributing: The Associated Press

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