►
Description
Governor Gavin Newsom provides an update on the statewide demonstrations as well as new information on the COVID-19 pandemic.
Recorded June 1, 2020 from the Genesis Church in South Sacramento.
For more information regarding the impact of the COVID-19 outbreak in Cupertino, please visit https://www.cupertino.org/coronavirus
B
Good
morning
my
name
is
dr.:
Corey
Porter
I'm,
the
pastor
of
the
Genesis
church
in
South
Sacramento
and
most
of
the
present
of
the
National
Action
Network
here
in
the
Sacramento
and
California
State
chair,
it's
so
important
to
have
a
clear
voice
in
this.
Our
and
governor
Newsom
has
been
that
just
not
only
for
California,
but
also
for
the
nation
we
just
got
through
meeting
in
regards
to
what
I
believe
is
happening
in
America,
a
double
pandemic.
B
We
have
crossed
that
threshold
of
a
hundred
thousand
persons
being
impacted
and
dying
and
in
our
nation
and
then
and
just
in
fact
hurting
so
many
in
our
nation
is
heart-wrenching,
and
then
we
have
this
other
viruses
going
on
that
were
seen
in
Minneapolis
with
what
happened
to
George
Floyd
and
that
virus
is
racism
and
I'm
happy
to
say
that
we've
actually
are
speaking
against
that
we're
talking
about
it
and
we
have
a
governor
here.
That's
going
to
call
that
out
and
I'm
glad
that
we
just
had
a
conversation
with
myself.
B
Him
and
other
leaders
they're
calling
this
other
virus
out
this
virus.
That
is
not
in
plaque,
impacting
just
a
black
community
or
Brown
community,
but
impacting
our
nation
and
facing
that
and
so
I'm
glad
to
welcome
here
our
governor
here
and
to
welcome
you
to
this
press
conference
and
guess
the
meeting
after
the
meeting.
And
so
thank
you
for
governor
for
coming
and
welcome
to
Genesis.
Welcome
to
Sacramento
governor.
C
Thank
You,
pastor,
Porter
and
thank
you
to
all
of
those
that
were
assembled
here
are
assembled
here
behind
the
cameras
that
took
the
time
to
reach
out
and
connect,
not
just
with
me
to
one
another
and
to
talk
about
the
state
not
only
of
the
state
of
California,
but
the
state
of
this
nation
and
more
broadly,
the
world
that
we
live
in.
Today's
meeting,
like
so
many
that
I've
had
is
humbling.
C
C
We
make
a
point
to
assert
a
new
paradigm,
and
yet
over
and
over
and
over
and
over
again,
we
hear
the
names
of
those
whose
lives
have
been
lost
have
been
taken,
justice
that
was
never
advanced
and
communities
continuing
to
feel
that
they're
not
only
being
torn
asunder
but
not
being
listened
to
and
I
fear
as
I
know.
Many
Americans
fear
that
we
could
be
back
in
that
moment
every
moment
when
you're
in
it
feels
like
it's
a
different
moment
every
moment
when
we're
in
it.
We
feel
like
well
this
time.
C
We're
gonna
do
things
fundamentally
differently,
yet
over
and
over
and
over
and
over
again
we
don't
meet
that
next
moment
over
and
over
and
over
again,
we
fail
to
rationalize
the
good
will
and
we
fail
to
materialize
and
manifest
the
ideals
that
we
so
often
assert
and
so
I
come
here
today,
a
place
of
worship
humbled
by
that
past
humbled
by
the
fact
that
I've
been
part
of
that
past.
As
a
former
County
Supervisor.
C
As
a
former
mayor
as
a
former
lieutenant
governor
as
a
governor
of
the
nation's
largest
state,
the
question
I
have
to
ask
myself
the
question
we
have
to
ask
ourselves:
are
we
capable
of
not
just
meeting
this
moment
but
capable
doing
justice
to
the
moments
in
front
of
us?
I
could
put
together
a
group
of
advisers.
I
could
put
together
a
taskforce.
I
could
promise
and
promote
a
few
pieces
of
legislation.
But
I
said
this:
on
Friday
I'll
say
it
again:
program
passing
is
not
problem-solving.
C
You
got
to
change
hearts
minds,
you
got
to
change
culture,
not
just
laws,
and
we
have
to
own
up
to
some
very
difficult
things.
The
black
community
is
not
responsible
for
what's
happening
in
this
country.
Right
now
we
are,
we
are
our
institutions
are
responsible.
We
are
accountable
to
this
moment.
Let's
just
call
that
out.
C
We
have
a
unique
responsibility
of
the
black
community
in
this
country,
and
we've
been
playing
to
lip
service
about
that
for
generations,
generations
things
move
away
and
headlines
and
we
indulge
on
the
margins.
But
we
don't
systemically
foundationally
address
the
root
of
these
issues.
We
prune,
we
don't
tear
out
the
institutional
racism
from
all
of
our
institutions,
large
and
small.
We
don't.
We
know
that
the
community
knows
that
you're,
seeing
that
manifested
out
in
the
streets
the
last
five
days.
C
They
know
that
question
is,
do
we
do
deeply
understand
that?
Do
we
or
are
we
prepared
to
do
something
differently
about
it,
each
and
every
one
of
us
watching?
What
are
we
going
to
do
differently?
Foundationally,
fundamentally
not
in
the
short
run,
but
in
the
long
run
to
do
justice.
To
this
moment,
people
have
lost
patience
because
they
haven't
seen
progress.
C
C
People
have
lost
patience
and
if
leaders
and
if
leaders
are
gonna
meet
not
just
this
moment
but
the
moments
in
front
of
us,
we
better
start
listening.
We
better
start
hearing
people
we
better
own
up
to
our
own
responsibility,
own
accountability
that
led
to
this
moment
Society
becomes
how
we
behave.
We
are
our
behaviors,
each
and
every
one
of
us
as
an
obligation
to
knew
more
and
better
and
folks
in
my
position.
More
still,
I
get
that
I
own
that,
but
leaders
can
be
found
everywhere.
C
Leadership
is
not
just
some
fancy
title.
We
are
desperate
for
leadership
in
this
country,
desperate
for
leadership
in
the
state
of
California,
desperate
for
leadership
and
communities.
Large
and
small
leaders
can
be
found
anywhere.
You
don't
have
to
be
something
to
do
something
to
soften
the
edges
and
in
the
spirit
of
Bobby
Kennedy
make
more
gentle
the
life
of
this
world.
Dr.
C
King
didn't
wait
to
become
President
of
the
United
States
to
exercise
his
authority
every
day
he
shared
his
moral
authority
each
and
every
one
of
us
has
the
capacity
to
exercise
their
moral
authority
every
day,
and
we
need
moral
leaders
now
more
than
ever.
Each
and
every
one
of
us
has
that
capacity
resides
inside
of
a
it's.
Our
capacity,
lead
by
example,
to
find
our
better
angels
to
focus
on
the
things
that
unite
us.
C
That
would
divide
us
and
to
reinforce
the
sense
of
optimism
because
we
recognize
we
have
to
do
things
differently
and
we
resolved
to
prove
that
not
just
assert
that
and
to
hold
ourselves
to
account,
because
each
of
us
will
be
judged
and
judge
each
other
to
the
extent
we
do
justice
and
advance
our
cause
in
a
different
way.
And
so
I
am
here
as
your
governor
humbled
over
the
course.
C
C
C
That
is
not
serving
the
greater
good
and
we
need
to
also
call
that
out
the
looting,
the
violence,
the
threats
against
fellow
human
beings
that
has
no
place
in
this
state
and
in
this
nation
we
as
a
society,
need
to
call
that
out
and
we
need
to
call
forth
our
better
angels
and
those
that
want
to
express
themselves
and
have
thank
you.
God
bless
you
keep
doing
it.
Your
rage
is
real,
express
it
so
that
we
can
hear
it.
C
I'm,
not
patient,
any
longer,
I
know
you're,
not
we
hear
you
and
we
have
a
responsibility
now
to
prove
to
you
not
just
to
assert
that
we're
capable
of
being
more
and
doing
better
as
a
society
and
a
community,
and
so
I
just
again
want
to
express
my
deep
gratitude.
My
deep
humility
to
those
leaders
every
stripe
that
all
across
this
state
and
all
across
our
nation
are
doing
justice.
In
this
moment.
C
Those
demonstrators
that
were
seen
reaching
out
and
trying
to
calm
other
people
to
those
community
leaders
that
were
out
there
with
brooms
in
the
early
morning
sweeping
up
glass
to
folks
that
you
know
we're
on
the
periphery.
That
said,
you
know
what
I
can't
stand
on
the
periphery
any
longer.
I
need
to
be
part
of
this
effort.
Thank
you
to
all
of
your
examples
as
well,
so
much
good
and
so
much
right,
that's
out
there,
but
there
is
a
stain
in
the
history
in
this
country.
C
We
have
concealed
and
it's
rearing
its
head
again,
because
we
never
come
to
grips
with
it.
We've
never
owned
it.
It's
the
issue
of
racism.
The
pastor
is
exactly
right
pandemic.
On
top
of
a
pandemic,
impacting
our
health
impacting
our
economy
and
impacting
our
capacity
to
live
up
to
our
greatest
ideals,
we
could
talk
about
being
bound
together
by
a
web
of
mutuality.
As
dr.
King
said,
and
if
that's
the
case,
we
need
to
reconcile
that
fact
that.
A
C
C
South
Africa
called
in
boom
I
am
because
you
are
time
for
more
empathy,
more
care
or
capacity
to
collaborate,
Society
it's
about
dominance
and
aggression.
This
is
what
you
get,
not
because
the
protestors,
but
the
conditions
that
led
to
this
moment
or
protest
was
inevitable.
So
we
are
committed
and
resolved
to
bringing
peace
back
to
the
streets,
not
only
in
this
state
but
to
support
the
efforts
all
across
this
nation.
We'll
do
our
part,
but
it's
not
just
a
situational
moment.
C
C
Now
it's
time
for
your
voice
to
be
brought
to
the
forefront,
and
let
me
thank
all
of
those
that
are
doing
their
best
to
keep
people
safe
under
very
difficult
circumstances
and
all
of
those
leaders
that
are
out
there
supporting
others,
keeping
people
safe,
our
communities,
large
and
small,
all
across
the
state
of
California
safe
at
this
very
trying
and
difficult
moment.
So
with
that
we're
happy
to
take
any
questions.
We
of
course
happy
to
also
a
step
aside
and
have
members
of
the
community
respond
as
well.
Thank.
D
C
My
reaction
is
the
meeting
I
just
had
my
reaction
or
the
words
that
I
just
spoke.
My
reaction
is
my
commitment
to
the
people
of
this
state,
the
most
diverse
State
and
the
world's
most
diverse
democracy,
to
focus
on
the
things
that
unite
us.
Not
what
divides
us
to
make
sure
people
are
safe,
but
to
make
sure
people
recognize
that
there's
something
that
lies
deep
underneath
that
has
come
to
the
fore.
That
needs
to
be
dealt
with
with
an
equivalency
of
energy
focus
and
resolve.
C
D
C
A
choice
we
all
have
a
choice:
I
could
be
part
of
the
daily
back
and
forth
in
the
new
cycle
and
continue
to
perpetuate
the
problems
that
persist
in
this
country.
I
could
choose
to
go
back
and
forth
and
just
be
another
voice
in
that
cause
or
I
can
choose
to
focus
a
message
that
I
think
is
so
much
more
powerful
and
I
hope
more
residents.
People
watching
and
that
is
I
care
more
about
them.
Then
some
of
the
noise
I
heard
on
a
morning
phone
call.
D
C
I
said
leadership
can
be
found
anywhere
in
the
absence
of
leaders
of
people
in
positions
of
formal
authority.
We
have
people
that
exercise
their
moral
authority
each
and
every
day,
church
leaders,
community
leaders,
faith,
leaders
of
all
stripes
teachers,
parents,
caregivers
people,
strangers
walking
the
street
that
exercise
their
moral
authority
by
trying
to
soften
the
edges
of
people
that
are
apt
to
do
more
harm
and
create
more
violence.
Leaders
in
law
enforcement
that
meet
this
moment
that
recognize
the
empathy
that's
called
for
as
well.
C
D
C
As
many
know,
we
have
been
working
with
mayor's
on
deploying
National
Guard,
the
two
resources
the
state
of
California
has
from
a
law
enforcement
perspective,
California
Highway
Patrol,
which
has
been
on
tactical
alert
for
days,
12-hour
shifts
up
and
down
the
state
of
California
working,
mutual
aid
positions,
pre-positioned
and
also,
and
strike
teams
to
react.
The
National
Guard
was
brought
up
over
3,400
National
Guard's
men
and
women
were
called
up
today.
C
We
added
another
1100,
so
we
have
over
4,500
National
Guard
men
and
women
that
are
available
throughout
the
state
of
California
part
of
the
protocols
of
mutual
aid.
It's
a
bottom-up
process,
not
a
top-down
process,
mayors
working
with
their
Chiefs
working
to
coordinate
and
collaborate.
The
deployment
of
those
teams,
the
National
Guard,
as
you
know,
have
been
I've,
been
already
distributed.
Parts
of
the
state
disproportionately
concentrated
in
Southern
California,
but
in
Northern
California.
C
We
have
people
preassembled,
we
have
folks
in
other
parts
of
the
state
that
have
been
called
back
up,
but
thousands
and
thousands
of
National
Guard's
men
and
women
by
the
way,
who
are
also
members
of
the
community,
many
putting
on
their
uniform
dentists,
doctors,
folks,
working
construction
that
are
part
of
that
group
that
are
participating
in
making
sure
that
we
keep
the
peace
and
we'll
continue
to
meet
the
requests.
We
believe
of
every
mayor
and
every
police
chief
in
the
state
done
so
so
far,
and
we
intend
to
continue
to
so.
D
C
You
cannot
proactively
send
them
in
without
creating
more
problems
than
you
fix.
If
the
state
of
California
from
the
state
capital
is
sending
National
Guard's
men
and
women
without
concurrent
support
collaboration
and
coordination
through
the
mutual
aid
system,
through
a
spirit
of
collaboration
and
support
at
the
county
level
and
the
local
level,
then
that's
a
recipe
for
more
problems.
The
process
we
have
today
is
well
established
very
formal.
C
It's
a
mutual
aid
process
established
as
just
to
proxy
examples
in
the
Bay
Area
in
Oakland
and
in
San
Francisco
San
Francisco
had
mutual
aid
yesterday
from
Tulare
County
from
Santa
Barbara
County
other
parts
of
the
state
coming
in
to
provide
mutual
aid
into
the
City
and
County
of
San
Francisco.
Similarly,
mutual
aid
from
surrounding
regions
into
Oakland
other
parts
of
the
state,
a
mutual
aid
approach,
first
working
with
CHP
to
help
coordinate
and
collaborate,
as
relates
to
efforts
on
freeways.
It
relates
to
jurisdictions
where
those
lines
begin
to
blur
and
then
the
National
Guard.
C
D
C
Believe
the
conditions
are
very
different
in
Del,
Norte
versus
other
parts
of
the
state
and
pareil
or
places
in
San
Diego
different
than
even
here
in
the
Bay
Area.
So
each
and
every
jurisdiction
is
a
former
mayor.
I
understand
this
intimately
has
made
determinations
based
on
conditions,
as
they
see
them
in
real-time
curfews,
as
early
as
1:00
p.m.
in
some
parts
of
the
state
others
as
late
as
8:00
p.m.
and
that
is
a
determination
made
by
the
experts
on
the
ground
based
upon
the
conditions
in
their
communities.
Statewide,
we
have
7,000
California,
Highway
Patrol
again.
C
Full
tactical
alert
have
been
for
days
with
protective
gear,
all
up
and
down
the
state
of
California
working
again
to
deploy
the
National
Guard,
an
additional
1100
guards,
men
and
women
that
are
deployed
just
today.
Thousands
over
the
last
few
days
we
are
looking.
We
have
many
National
Guardsmen
and
women
working
on
Kovan
response.
We
are
looking
at
a
subset
of
those
ANCOVA
response
to
see
if
we
can
pre
position
and
make
them
available
to
meet
the
needs
of
communities
all
across
the
state
of
California.
C
D
Next
question
is
from
joel
coen
of
the
new
york
times.
She
would
like
to
know
how
worried
you
are
about
the
spread
of
kovat
19
at
these
protests
and
how
the
state
is
tracking
any
related
spread,
and
after
we
saw
testing
sites
close
in
Los
Angeles,
as
curfews
went
into
effect.
How
are
you
and
local
health
officials
ensuring
that
protests
can
get
tested?
Well,.
C
We
want
to
make
sure
everybody
can
get
chested
I
encourage
people
to
go
on
the
Cova,
19
ca.gov
website
type
in
your
zip
code
and
you'll
see
that
closest
site
for
testing
available
and
open.
Today,
yesterday,
we
conducted
over
67
thousand
tests
day,
four
and
five
into
this
very
challenging
period,
so
people
are
being
tested
substantially
so
all
throughout
the
state
of
California.
C
Even
the
myths
of
this
latest
challenge,
and
so
we
encourage
that
from
public
health
and
public
safety
perspective,
and
we
want
to
make
sure
we
continue
to
provide
more
sites,
more
points
of
access
for
people
to
get
tested
and
obviously,
when
those
testing
sites
open
to
deal
with
the
backlog,
as
it
relates
to
those
individuals
that
otherwise
would
have
gotten
tested,
which
again,
we
continue
to
encourage
people
all
throughout
the
state
with
symptoms
and
those
that
are
asymptomatic.
That
may
be
in
an
environment
where
they're
more
vulnerable
prospect
of
the
spread
of
this
disease.
The.
D
C
They're,
well-defined,
all
throughout
this
country,
their
names,
you've
heard
of
names,
I,
don't
even
particularly
want
to
reinforce
and
promote,
which
is
their
intent
and
their
interest,
but
they
are
well
defined.
Those
same
names,
those
same
groups
that
many
do
come
from
out
of
the
communities
of
which
they're
creating
havoc
many
come
from
other
parts
of
not
only
the
well.
C
But
that
is
also
a
two-way
conversation.
Local
law
enforcement
sharing,
what
they're
hearing
in
real
time
as
well.
So
we
are
monitoring
those
groups
and
I
will
say
this
I,
don't
think,
because
I've
been
deeply
involved
in
terms
of
the
collaborative
spirit
and
engagement,
the
local
regional
federal
level.
It's
been
an
incredibly
focused
and
very
effective
system
and
I'm
pleased
with
the
communication
flow
between
those
respective
agencies
in
those
jurisdictions.
I
understand.
C
You
have
you
look.
You
have
groups
that
are
hell-bent
on
creating
problems
in
our
crisis
groups.
You've
got
the
folks
that
are
well
defined.
That
I've
been
highlighted
by
the
president
and
others,
and
there
are
other
groups
out
there
that
are
organized
some
less
organized
and
some
that
individuals
that
are
not
even
organized
that
certainly
are
looking
to
create
havoc
I,
don't
by
any
stretch
I'm
suggesting
we
hide
these
names.
These
names
are
well
reviewed,
well
received,
but
I
also
see
every
time
elected
official
like
me
mentions
them.
D
C
Don't
know
specific
issues
related
to
those
incidences
and
I'm
happy
to
get
more
details
about
those
incidences
all
across
the
state
were
monitoring
from
Bakersfield
to
Modesto
Fresno
Santa,
Barbara,
San,
Luis,
Obispo,
LA,
San,
Francisco,
San,
Jose
up
northern
parts
of
the
state.
We've
been
monitoring
all
across
the
state
activity
and
and
all
I
could
say
this
is
we
want
restraint.
We
want
as
much
expression
of
respect
with
law
enforcement
and
protesters
as
humanly
possible
empathy,
understanding
again
a
collaborative
spirit,
but
we
also
need
peace
and
we
need
to
protect
small
businesses.
C
D
C
We
will
appropriately
investigate
any
acts
of
violence
against
others,
whether
those
acts
be
perpetuated
by
people
and
positions
of
power
and
influence
with
badges
on
or
uniforms
or
members
of
the
community
that
are
attacking
and
assaulting
violent
in
a
violent
manner.
Innocent
people
and
businesses
I'm.
D
Being
told
that
we
need
to
wrap
it
up,
so
as
our
final
question,
a
number
of
reporters
have
asked
about
the
state
budget.
As
you
know,
the
state
Senate
passed
their
own
proposal
last
week.
What
was
your
reaction
to
what
they
passed
on?
Do
you
agree
with
you
know
the
parts
that
they've
passed
related
to
state
workers.
C
We
obviously
have
to
do
more
to
help
support
our
small
business
leaders
as
a
former
small
business
person,
myself
I
intimately
appreciate
the
incredible
sacrifice:
the
courageous
entrepreneurial
entrepreneurialism
that
is
so
much
part
of
the
state
of
California,
in
particular,
where
innovation
and
entrepreneurial
spirit
runs
through
our
veins
and
so
I'm
deeply
concerned
about
the
pandemic.
As
it
relates
the
impact
on
small
businesses,
we
doubled
the
budget
that
we
put
together
for
small
business
loans,
micro
loans
for
business,
particularly
women
and
minority-owned
businesses.
C
We
had
other
very
targeted
support
for
small
business
as
it
relates
to
waiving
fees
for
new
small
business
creation
in
the
budget,
and
clearly
this
moment
will
demand
us
to
consider,
perhaps
even
more
as
it
relates
to
the
give-and-take
of
a
budget
process.
I've
been
through
this
many
many
times.
All
I
can
say
is
I
appreciate
the
collaborative
spirit,
I
appreciate
the
work
that
the
Senate
it's
doing,
support
that
the
assembly
is
giving
to
this
process.
We
continue
to
have
very
robust
and
very
very
positive
conversations
and
that's
what
a
budget
is
all
about.
C
We
submit
our
thoughts.
We
go
through
a
deliberative
process.
They
put
out
competing
proposals.
We
work
across
those
differences
in
the
spirit
of
collaboration
and
the
spirit
that
defines
this
moment,
which
is
the
spirit
of
collaboration,
and
we
work
to
get
to
a
threshold
where
we
can
together
support
a
package
that
needs
to
be
delivered
by
June,
15th
and
signed
by
by
myself
by
July,
1st
and
I'm.
Confident
we're
well
on
our
way
to
meeting
those
goals
and
I
respect
and
appreciate
the
work
that
they've
done
in
the
process
to
date.
C
Their
power
of
their
voice
I
again
want
to
just
encourage
people
to
exercise
their
voice
and
recognize
how
resonant
each
and
every
one
of
you
are
in
terms
of
your
capacity
to
lead
and
lead
us
through
this
very
difficult
and
challenging
time,
and
do
so.
The
spirit
of
commonality
is
spirit.
That
brings
us
all
here
together
in
this
house
of
worship.
I
want
to
thank
the
pastor
for
his
support
and
his
leadership
and
for
all
of
those
leaders
that
were
assembled
here
today.
Thank
you
for
your
guidance.