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From YouTube: Governor Newsom's COVID-19 Update - August 12, 2020
Description
Governor Gavin Newsom provides an update on the state's response to the COVID-19 outbreak.
Recorded August 12, 2020 in Sacramento, California.
For more information regarding the impact of the COVID-19 outbreak in Cupertino, please visit https://www.cupertino.org/coronavirus
C
Well,
good
afternoon
today
I
want
to
talk
about
jobs
and
the
economy.
I
want
to
talk
about
the
health
of
california's
economy,
the
health
of
our
workforce
and
the
obvious
impacts
this
pandemic
has
had,
as
it
relates
to
our
economic
security,
our
economic
prosperity.
Obviously
your
economic
future.
I
want
to
first,
though,
express
a
little
bit
of
bias,
a
little
bit
of
biography,
because
it's
a
point
of
privilege
also
a
point
of
passion.
C
C
We
opened
that
first
business,
a
small
little
retail
store
in
san
francisco
with
one
part-time,
employee,
pat
kelly,
that
business
grew
to
many
businesses
throughout
the
state
of
california.
At
one
point,
the
businesses
that
I
was
privileged
to
be
part
of
employed
close
to
1
000
people
here
in
the
state
of
california.
C
I
say
that
not
to
impress
any
of
you
but
to
impress
upon
you
a
passion
for
entrepreneurialism,
a
passion
and
recognition
of
the
passions
that
are
expressed
every
single
day
by
people
that
take
an
idea
and
put
their
dream
to
test
to
task
and
put
their
lives
on
the
line,
quite
literally
putting
their
financial
future
and
their
family
members
future
co-signing
loans,
making
sure
that
they're
leveraged.
C
So
they
can
get
a
line
of
credit
and
putting
all
of
that
out
and
then,
of
course,
dealing
with
the
travails,
even
in
a
good
economy
dealing
with
the
setbacks,
even
in
a
good
economy,
the
surprises,
the
things
he
never
anticipated,
never
expected.
But,
of
course,
in
this
environment.
With
this
pandemic,
the
challenges
are
more
acute
and
more
extraordinary
for
millions
and
millions
of
small
businesses
throughout
this
state.
C
For
that
matter,
all
throughout
the
rest
of
this
country,
and
so
it's
a
long
way
of
introducing
an
expression
of
deep
reverence,
deep
respect
for
our
small
businesses.
Deep
respect,
deep
reference
for
those
that
are
working
behind
those
counters,
not
only
as
entrepreneurs,
many
self-employed,
many
with
one
or
two
employees
themselves,
but
also
the
employees
that
also
are
supported
by
the
backbone
of
our
economy,
our
small
business
ecosystem,
and
so
I
want
to
talk
to
you
today.
C
You
can't
begin
a
conversation
about
economic
development
in
economic
recovery
without
asserting
what
I
think
is
universally
accepted,
at
least
in
the
context
of
those
experts
that
we
work
with
and
my
own
subjective
beliefs
and
that
belief-
and
that
is
the
most
urgent
economic
recovery
tool
for
the
business
community,
the
one
that
we
need
the
most
is
to
stabilize
this
virus
to
bend
the
curve
of
this
pandemic.
To
do
everything
in
our
power
to
mitigate
the
spread
of
covet
19.,
that's
foundational.
C
C
We
should
be
focused
on
resiliency
not
only
relating
to
pandemics,
but
more
broadly,
the
macroeconomic
vagaries
of
an
economy
that
downs,
the
highs,
the
lows,
the
nature,
the
cyclical
nature
of
the
economy,
particularly
an
economy,
that's
so
impacted
by
international
conditions,
the
state
of
california.
So
we
want
to
talk
in
terms
of
inclusivity.
We
want
to
talk
in
terms
of
resiliency,
but
we
also
want
to
talk
in
terms
of
the
future
I'll
talk
a
little
bit
in
a
moment
about
some
of
the
work
we're
doing
on
our
future
of
work
task
force.
C
When
we
talk
about
future
proofing,
our
economy,
we're
talking
about
some
of
the
macroeconomic
trend,
lines
and
I.t
and
globalization,
demographic
trend
lines
and
the
like
the
plumbing
fundamentally
of
our
economy,
radically
shifting
underneath
us,
and
that,
of
course,
has
been
a
trend
line
for
decades.
Increasingly,
even
pre-pandemic
became
a
headline
that
has
driven
a
recognition
of
this
hinge
moment
and
a
need
to
be
more
fluid,
more
responsive
and
more
resilient
in
our
rule
making
and
our
approaches
to
economic
growth
and
economic
security.
C
Any
strategy
also
should
be
focused
on
the
immediate,
the
near
term,
obviously
a
focus
mindful
on
what
may
take
a
year
or
two
in
the
median
term,
and
always
on
the
long
term,
a
sustainable,
not
just
situational
mindset,
as
it
relates
to
economic
growth
and
economic
prosperity.
One
of
the
most
important
actions
we've
taken
recently
here
in
the
state
of
california
was
the
development
of
a
hundred
plus
member
jobs
and
economic
recovery
task
force
led
by
some
of
our
nation's
top
entrepreneurs.
C
Some
of
the
our
nation's
most
well
iconic
individuals
from
tim
cook
runs
apple
to
bob.
Iger
runs
disney
two
home-based
companies,
two
companies
we're
very
very
proud
of,
but
the
frame
was
not
only
growth.
It
wasn't
just
highlighting
our
entrepreneurs
and
our
big
business
leaders
that
task
force
is
also
about
inclusion,
and
we
have
a
big
thrust
as
it
relates
to
equity.
A
big
thrust
as
it
relates
to
economic
justice,
social
justice,
racial
justice,
and
so
it's
a
remarkable
group
of
individuals
that
truly
represents
the
diversity
of
our
state.
C
Diversity
of
viewpoints,
diversity
of
concerns
and
considerations,
as
it
relates
to
economic
recovery.
I
just
want
to
briefly
highlight
some
of
the
work
that
they've
been
doing
over
the
course
of
last
number
of
months,
particularly
helping
us
with
our
sector-specific
guidance,
so
that
we
can
modify
that
original.
As
we
did
stay-at-home
order
put
out
sectoral
guidance
industry
guidance
for
a
safer
reopening.
The
task
force
has
been
instrumental
in
advancing
those
efforts.
C
We
also
launched
the
shop
safe
shop,
local
campaign
shop,
safe
shop,
local,
to
help
support
our
small
business,
our
micro
businesses,
our
neighborhood
businesses,
and
encourage
people
to
maintain
that
support
through
this
very
difficult
and
trying
time
we
also
had
90
members
of
that
100
member
task
force,
which
I
can
assure
you,
was
a
remarkable
number
of
people
that
signed
on
to
a
letter
agreeing
that
we
needed
to
advocate
for
more
federal
supports
for
federal
stimulus
dollars.
C
This
was
around
the
times
the
last
care
act
fund,
but
also
that
letter
is
instrumentally,
pointed
at
jump
starting
these
current
negotiations
between
mcconnell
and
speaker
pelosi
and
others
we're
not
giving
up
on
congress
moving
forward,
not
just
president
through
executive
orders,
but
congress
moving
forward
to
do
the
right
thing
in
subsequent
stimulus
support.
C
We
also
had
the
benefit
from
this
task
force
of
five
subcommittees
that
have
provided
dozens
and
dozens
of
recommendations
that
we
have
put
into
play
in
real
time
and
will
be
advancing
over
the
course
of
the
next
weeks,
not
just
months
and
I'll.
Get
to
that
in
just
a
moment.
Let
me
just
talk
about
some
specific
actions.
We
have
taken
to
support
the
economy
here
in
the
state
of
california.
Already
in
play,
we've
already
moved
forward
to
simplify
accounting
methods
to
reduce
tax
liabilities
for
most
small
businesses.
C
C
We
also
eliminated
through
the
budget
and
very
grateful
legislative
support
for
this
effort
eliminated
that
800
minimum
franchise
tax
for
all
new
startups
here
in
the
state
of
california,
so
that
franchise
tax
no
longer
applies
for
businesses
want
to
start
here
in
the
state
of
california.
We
also
have
allowed
small
businesses
to
defer
tax
payments.
This
we
did
a
number
of
months
ago-
and
this
has
been
very,
very
fruitful
up
to
12
months
and
up
to
50
000
of
deferred
sales
tax
payments.
That's
a
big
deal
again
as
a
former
small
business
owner.
C
I
could
deeply
appreciate
cash
flow
concerns
and
issues
being
able
to
defer,
for
at
least
a
year
up
to
fifty
thousand
dollars.
It's
like
getting
a
line
of
credit
against
those
dollars
that
are
owed
and
being
able
to
utilize
them
to
pay
rent
to
pay
your
employees
to
pay
for
these
extraordinary
expenses
and
burdens
that
have
been
placed
on
you.
We
also
extended
the
sales
tax
deadlines
during
this
pandemic
as
well.
Accordingly,
we
have
worked
to
support
the
economy
by
working
by
supporting
working
families.
C
3.6
million
working
families
have
already
received
a
billion
dollars
through
our
earned
income
tax
program.
I
don't
know
another
state
that
is
providing
more
for
working
families.
These
are
folks
on
the
edge.
These
are
people
working
hard.
These
are
families
in
need.
These
are
direct
contributions
in
their
pocket.
We
had
a
budget
that
just
passed
those
dollars
being
distributed
in
real
time
over
one
billion
dollars
in
new
tax
credits,
3.6
million
working
families
that
got
the
benefit
of
those
efforts.
C
Accordingly,
we
advanced
over
just
the
last
24-month
period,
but
I
thought
it
was
important
to
highlight
that
we
have
advanced
over
a
billion
dollars
unprecedented
in
california's
history,
for
low-income
housing,
tax
credits
and
this
all
goes
to
jump
starting
our
economy
jump
starting
housing
production
here
in
the
state
you'll
see
those
line
item
here
in
the
slide
18
bills
that
we
advanced
and
signed
with
incredible
leadership
of
the
legislature,
a
package
that
we
are
very
proud
of
to
move
housing
production
forward
last
year.
C
By
no
stretch
of
the
imagination
is
that
where
we
are
ending
our
efforts
on
housing-
quite
the
contrary,
I'll
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
some
of
those
efforts
in
a
moment,
but
we
are
fully
committed
to
doing
more
and
better
as
it
relates
to
housing
production
here
in
the
state
of
california.
That's
foundational
in
terms
of
our
economic
capacity,
not
just
our
ability
to
recover
from
this
pandemic,
but
our
ability
to
be
competitive
in
years
to
come,
and
so
that's
a
little
bit
of
highlight
on
what
we've
done
to
support
the
economy.
C
Let's
talk
specifically
now
the
work
we've
done
to
support
businesses,
one
of
the
programs
we're
very
proud
of
first
in
the
nation,
a
novel
program
where
took
that
entrepreneurial
mindset
took
pen
to
paper
of
sorts
and
tried
to
bring
it
into
government
that
entrepreneurial
mindset
worked
with
fema,
incredible
leadership
of
fema,
bob
fenton
and
others.
Our
regional
director
created
a
program
to
support
restaurants.
C
C
This
program
not
only
helps
our
seniors,
but
it
has
helped
support
these
restaurants
that
have
just
been
pummeled
by
this
pandemic
and
the
challenges
of
opening
and
reopening
all
related
to
the
transmission
of
this
disease.
So,
first
in
the
nation,
great
plates
delivered
program
is
paying
dividends
and
I'm
really
proud
of
that
program.
Proud
of
those
partnerships
and
proud
of
that
effort,
particularly
now
that
we're
seeing
other
states
replicate
this
model.
We've
weighed
property
tax
penalties
for
small
businesses
and
we
created
a
new
small
business
loan
targeting
minority
and
women-owned
businesses
micro
loans.
C
C
More
access,
liquidity
to
capital,
forgive
the
language,
be
a
little
confusing,
but
the
bottom
line
is
tens
of
millions
of
dollars
it's
over
100
million
now,
but
75
million
new
dollars
that
we
put
in
to
this
place
and
in
this
space
to
help
our
small
businesses
and
provide
access
and
opportunity
for
loans
during
this
very
difficult
period
of
time.
Accordingly,
we've
also
focused
our
efforts
on
supporting
organic
businesses
that
preside
or
reside
here
in
the
state
of
california.
C
We
announced
a
number
of
weeks
back
a
program
called
safelymakingca.org.
Safelymakingca.Org
is
a
platform,
encourage
you
to
take
a
look
at
it
that
encourages
you
to
support
small
businesses,
medium
businesses,
manufacturers
here
in
the
state
of
california.
It
is
a
fact
we
are
still
the
largest
manufacturing
state
in
america,
while
manufacturing
gets
so
much
attention
in
other
parts
of
this
country.
It
deserves
more
attention
here
in
the
state
of
california.
We
worked
with
the
manufacturing
association
developed
this
program.
Their
incredible
leader
and
leadership.
C
Hundreds
and
hundreds
of
small
businesses
procuring
ppe,
including
n95,
masks
that
we
are
actually
purchasing
from
a
business
in
santa
clara
california,
that's
reconstituted
its
line,
a
small
business
that
is
growing
in
this
pandemic,
developing
tens
of
millions
of
n95
masks
that
we're
procuring
the
virtual
cycle
of
sales
tax
and
dollars
that
flow
through
that
cycle
of
engagement
with
the
state
procurement
through
the
office
of
emergency
services
into
a
county
in
a
community
creating
jobs,
creating
opportunities,
direct
indirect
economic
supports,
is
exactly
what
we
want
to
see.
C
More
of
trust
me
when
I
say
this,
this
is
a
point
of
deep
emphasis
for
us,
but
we
have
a
new
platform.
We
have
new
programs,
we're
not
just
proposing
something
in
this
space.
We're
actually
manifesting
something
in
space,
not
at
the
scale
we
need
to,
but
with
real
progress,
not
just
promotion
behind
this
effort.
Another
program
we've
done
that
I'm
very
proud
of
I
long
have
been
an
advocate
not
just
for
unemployment
insurance.
C
C
Many
were
getting
actually
less
than
they
would
being
on
unemployment
insurance,
but
they
still
went
back
to
work
for
well
three
reasons
for
dignity
being
the
most
important
they
wanted
to
look.
I
remember
meeting
some
workers
who
said
you
know
what
the
reason
I
took
this
job
back
through
this
employment
insurance
program-
and
I
didn't
pick
up
an
unemployment
insurance
check-
is
that
I
want
to
look
my
kids
in
the
eye
and
say
that
I
earned
these
dollars,
and
that
was
a
touching
and
profound
statement.
C
I
think
it
was
voltaire
that
said
a
work
solves
lies
three
great
evils,
boredom
vice
and
need,
and
I
certainly
believe
there
is
dignity
with
work
and
people
naturally
don't
buy
the
rhetoric.
You
keep
hearing
the
national
news
that
somehow
people
are
just
takers
and
prefer
just
to
take
an
unemployment
insurance
check
and
somehow
we
have
created
a
reverse
stimulus
in
this
country
by
providing
those
600
additional
contributions
on
a
weekly
basis
to
your
paycheck.
C
That's
nonsense
and
by
the
way,
overwhelming
majority
of
studies
on
this
bear
that
out
as
complete
garbage,
and
so
there
is
something
about
the
dignity
of
work,
dignity
of
being
employed
that
the
99
percent
of
workers
prefer-
and
I
just
want
folks
to
know.
We
have
a
program
called
our
work
share
program
and
already
it
supported
54
000
employees,
8
400
employers
have
taken
advantage
of
this
program
and,
if
you're
an
employer,
I
encourage
you
to
do
the
same.
You
want
to
keep
your
employees
employed.
C
Reach
out,
go
to
thecovet19.ca.gov
website
covet
19.ca.gov
website.
Learn
more
about
this
work
share
program
already
paying
dividends.
It
is
an
employment
insurance
program.
We
employ
your
employees,
so
we
keep
them
off
the
unemployment
line
and
it
is
a
program
worth
scaling
and
I
believe
worth
mentioning
here
today.
Accordingly,
I
want
to
just
mention:
we
have
86
active
small
business
centers
in
the
state
of
california
speaking
over
31
languages.
C
They
have
seen,
not
surprisingly,
a
tenfold
increase
in
their
financing
assistance
since
the
beginning
of
this
pandemic,
but
it's
also
the
backbone
of
our
small
business
supports
in
the
state.
This
network
of
small
business
centers-
and
I
just
want
to
thank
all
the
employees
working
in
those
small
business
centers
for
all
of
their
council
work,
their
counseling
work
all
their
work.
C
You
can't
talk
about
business
without
talking
about
workforce,
and
so
it
is
incredibly
important
for
us
to
highlight
some
of
the
work
that
has
been
done
in
some
of
the
work
we're
going
to
be
doing
as
it
relates
to
supporting
our
essential
workforce,
central
workforce,
broadly
defined
by
providing
workers
compensation
which
we
did
through
this
pandemic.
The
paid
sick
leave
that
we
provided
in
this
pandemic
for
our
food
service
workers,
the
paid
family
leave,
so
people
can
care
for
their
children
or
if
they
have
a
member
of
their
family,
that
is
quarantined.
C
They
need
to
have
that
paid
family
leave.
We
advanced
efforts
in
this
place.
We
also
advanced
efforts
to
support
our
front
line,
essential
workers
by
providing
more
support
through
child
care
contributions,
tens
of
millions
of
dollars
we
put
in
place
to
support
those
frontline
workers
to
help
them
get
child
care,
so
they
can
stay
there
on
the
front
lines
of
that
workforce
at
a
time
when
we
desperately
needed
them.
We
also
created
programs.
You
may
recall
a
hotel
program
where
we
subsidized
hotel
rooms
for
healthcare
workers
that
otherwise
we're
sleeping
in
their
cars.
C
We're
scared
to
death
to
go
back
home
and
expose
their
families
and
we're
going
out
of
pocket
staying
in
hotel
rooms
or,
in
some
cases
we're
in
shelters
as
we
discovered,
and
so
we
created
a
program
to
provide
housing
subsidies
or
rather
hotel,
voucher
subsidies
for
that
workforce,
and
we
extended
that
to
agricultural
workers
as
well.
We
did
cash
assistance,
direct
cash
assistance
through
philanthropy
and
chan
zuckerberg
foundation,
among
others
to
help
our
skilled
nursing
facility
workers,
tens
of
millions
of
dollars
in
that
space
as
well.
C
Millions
of
masks
talk
about
tens
of
millions,
tens
of
millions
of
masks,
ppe
and
other
important
gloves
gowns
face
coverings.
We
sent
out
to
our
essential
workforce
because
we
were
able
to
procure
hundreds
of
millions
of
procedure,
masks,
surgical,
masks
and
n95
masks
through
our
large-scale
purchasing
capacity.
We
did
an
eviction
moratorium.
We
talked
a
little
bit
about
that
on
monday.
I
want
to
just
thank
chief
justice
of
the
california
supreme
court
members
of
the
judicial
council
to
their
credit
that
are
considering
extending
that
moratorium
through
the
end
of
august.
C
They
haven't
done
so,
and
I'm
not
doing
this
to
put
pressure
on
them.
I
just
want
to
thank
them
for
their
very
constructive
dialogue
and
engagement.
That
will
give
us
time
working
with
the
legislature
to
enact
an
extension
of
those
moratoriums
and
meet
the
needs
for
millions
of
californians
that
are
feeling
the
anxiety
and
stress
in
that
space.
We
are
also
able
to
work
with
some
of
the
largest
big
banks
in
the
united
states
on
mortgage
forbearance.
We
negotiated
that.
C
I
think
we
were
the
first
states
in
the
country
to
do
so,
and
I
want
folks
to
know
that
we
are
working
aggressively
behind
the
scenes,
can't
make
any
promises
to
see
what
we
can
do
to
extend
some
of
the
same
support.
Look
no
one's
been
more
supportive
than
the
california
legislature,
and
I
want
to
just
thank
legislative
leadership.
C
The
pro
tem,
the
speaker,
some
of
the
key
legislative
leaders,
bob
hertzberg
and
others
who've
just
been
proactive
and
engaged
and
engaging
on
the
issue
of
elevating
ideas
and
legislative
supports
to
spur
economic
growth
here
in
the
state
of
california.
We
have
just
couple
weeks
left
just
just
over
two
weeks
left
in
this
legislative
session,
and
so
we
have
to
get
to
work.
We
have
been
at
work,
but
we
ought
to
roll
up
our
sleeves
now
and
get
this
package
across
the
finish
line.
C
So
a
I
want
to
acknowledge
their
leadership,
all
their
incredible
ideas.
The
work
they've
already
done
the
work
we
did
together
last
year,
creating
that
foundation
a
predicate
for
the
work
that
is
in
front
of
us
now.
Let
me
talk
a
little
bit
about
that
work
in
front
of
us
again.
Forgive
me
for
being
long-winded,
perhaps
speaking
a
little
bit
more
quickly,
but
I
want
to
get
through
this
presentation,
because
I
think
it's
incredibly
important
to
many
of
you
watching
and
those
that
will
be
supported
through
some
of
these
efforts.
C
Let's
talk
about
these
efforts,
one
of
the
most
important
things
we
can
do
area
where
I
think
we
have
clarity
in
terms
of
common
ground
with
legislature-
is
accelerating
state-funded
infrastructure
investment,
unspent
bond
monies
on
well
projects
that
are
ready
to
go.
I
always
hesitate
to
say
shovel
ready
products,
because
that
connotes
some
of
the
old
stimulus
after
a
weight,
but
we
have
a
lot
of
projects
that
are
ready
to
go
that
are
permitted
and
can
happen.
C
All
we
need
to
do
is
move
that
money
out
a
little
bit
quicker,
a
little
bit
faster,
hundreds
of
millions
of
dollars
well
in
excess
of
400
million
dollars
that
readily
we
have
identified
to
move
in
this
space
to
accelerate
state-funded
infrastructure
investment
to
create
jobs
in
the
immediate
area,
we're
working
with
the
legislature.
On
again,
I
want
to
just
thank
their
leadership
for
presenting
ideas
and
we
have
confidence.
We
can
get
some
of
these
over
the
the
finish
line.
Accordingly,
we
have
a
lot
of
work.
C
C
We
have
been
working
with
our
economic
task
force,
some
of
the
nation's
leading
workforce
development
leaders
are
members
of
that
task
force
and
they
have
come
up
with
some
really
creative
ideas
on
workforce
training.
Legislature
has
their
ideas.
We
have
some
ideas
around
skills,
libraries,
I
don't
want
to
get
into
some
of
the
weeds,
but
we
have
some
really
innovative
strategies,
certification
strategies
where
we're
working
with
all
the
stakeholders
and
I'm
confident
we
can
get
some
of
this
done-
we're
making
real
inroads
in
terms
of
finding
some
common
ground
in
that
space.
C
You
can't
say
enough
about
time
value
of
money
as
someone
that
years
and
years
ago.
I
think
it
took
a
few
weeks
when
I
first
applied
for
my
business
license
to
open
a
business,
create
jobs,
create
tax
revenue
for
the
state
and
it
took
weeks
and
weeks
and
weeks
to
get
a
simple
business
license.
That's
absurd
and
I
recognize
now
my
responsibility
as
governor
to
make
sure
that
those
weeks
become
days-
and
I
wanted
to
thank
alex
padilla
secretary
of
state-
he's
done
an
amazing
job
in
last
few
years.
C
Reducing
that
time,
secretary
of
state
plays
a
role
in
this,
as
well
as
a
lot
of
other
state
agencies,
but
we're
not
just
talking
about
a
simple
license
to
operate.
We're
talking
about
licenses
across
the
spectrum
to
adapt
and
adjust
and
amend
operations,
particularly
in
this
pandemic
environment,
and
so
we've
got
to
streamline,
permitting,
doesn't
mean
eliminating
rules
and
regulations,
and
and
don't
don't
read
into
that-
it's
just
about
you
know
time
value
money
just
make
a
decision.
Let
me
know
what
the
rules
of
the
road
are.
C
Don't
let
this
linger
one
week,
one
month,
some
cases,
six,
seven,
eight
months,
so
that's
fundamental
and
we
have
some
sectoral
streamlining
strategies
underway
and
just
want
folks
to
know
that
this
is
a
point
of
real
commitment
and
resolve
and
we're
going
to
be
at
this
for
years.
But
this
is
an
area
we
are
focused
on,
particularly
now
in
hard-hit
sectors
of
our
economy
that
are
going
to
need
most
support
to
recover
from
the
last
six
months
can't
recover.
C
Unless
you
can
recover
information
data
measure
that
data
be
more
customer
service
oriented
in
terms
of
how
we
provide
services
in
the
state.
I
talked
about
this
on
monday
across
the
spectrum
large
scale,
I.t
even
medium
small
scale.
I
t
needs
to
be
improved
in
this
state.
We
need
to
get
well,
we
need
to
meet
you
where
you
are,
and
that's
not
all
mainframes
that
were
designed
in
1970.
C
It's
on
your
smartphones,
where
we
can
anticipate
your
needs.
We
can
predict
where
you'll
be
not
just
wait
for
your
inquiry
and
respond
and
that's
why
we
created
this
office
of
digital
innovation
and
that's
why
we're
putting
together
a
band
of
people
that
are
committed
to
the
cause
of
innovation
and
entrepreneurial
spirit,
breaking
down
silos
and
barriers
and
processes
to
do
more
and
do
better
to
meet
your
needs
in
a
more
efficient
and
effective
way.
C
And
so
I
included
that
because
I
think
that's
foundational
in
terms
of
our
economic
future
in
terms
of
our
workforce
as
well.
Look
one
thing:
we
know:
businesses
are
having
a
hard
time
that
are
on
the
edge
of
making
a
decision,
whether
or
not
they
can
afford
to
hire
someone,
and
so
we
want
to
make
that
a
little
easier
working
again
with
legislative
leaders
to
develop
a
new
hiring
tax
credit,
a
lot
of
good
ideas
from
the
legislature.
We
have
our
ideas.
C
We
also
want
to
work
legislatures.
Come
up
with
some
really
good
ideas.
We
very
much
support
some
of
those
ideas
to
conform
to
the
federal
ppp
taxation.
This
is
the
federal
loan
program.
We
want
to
exempt
that
loan
program
for
california,
california-based
businesses
from
state
taxation,
just
an
area
where
there's
been
real
leadership,
and
I
think
autumn
burke,
among
others,
have
bills
on
this.
I
don't
wanna.
C
If
I
get
into
the
details
of
everyone
who
has
a
bill,
I'm
gonna
get
in
trouble
for
those
I
didn't
mention,
but
I
just
want
to
thank
legislature
for
their
work
in
this
space
and
and
we're
working
to
see
what
we
could
do
to
to
make
sure
these
bills
are
successful
workers
protection.
C
We
talked
about
this
well,
ten
or
so
days
ago,
in
stockton,
california,
I
followed
up
here
a
few
days
later
talking
about
the
work
we
need
to
do
to
our
essential
workforce
and
how
disproportionate
this
impacts:
the
latino
community
and
the
black
community.
Here
in
the
state
of
california,
we
need
to
advance
more
worker
protections.
C
Look
if
we're
going
to
eliminate
this
disease.
We
want
people
that
have
tested
positive
or
been
exposed
to
covet
19.
We
need
them
to
isolate,
we
need
them
to
quarantine,
but
if
you
can't
afford
to
quarantine,
you
can't
afford
to
isolate
you
physically.
Don't
have
the
ability
to
do
that
at
your
home.
C
You
need
protections
and
that's
why
workers
protections
are
foundational
family
lead,
paid,
sick
leave,
workers
cop.
It's
the
only
way,
we're
going
succeed
here
and
so
for
businesses.
This
is
essential.
It's
not
just
for
workers
to
reopen,
but
for
businesses
it's
essential
that
their
workers
are
healthy
and
safe
and
not
coming
to
work,
because
they
need
that
paycheck,
sick
and
then
impacting
the
entire
company
and
impacting
the
ability
for
that
organization
to
continue
to
operate.
So
we
see
this
as
something
that's
very
connected
to
the
business
community
and
business
needs.
Also.
C
We
want
to
help
with
our
outreach-
and
I
mentioned
some
of
the
work
we've
done
in
this
space
in
terms
of
the
employee,
toolkits
employer
toolkits
know
your
rights
campaigns
all
of
this
culturally
competently
drug
delivered
throughout
the
state
of
california,
so
that
employees
that
are
entitled
to
a
lot
of
these
programs
that
actually
pay
in
to
these
programs
are
aware
that
they're
entitled
to
them
and
and
they
don't
have
any
retaliation-
it's
always
an
exception.
C
But
you
know:
we've
got
to
address
people
that
may
be
a
little
more
abusive
to
those
workers
and
their
rights
and
make
sure
that
those
workers
are
empowered
and
aware-
and
that's
part
and
parcel
of
our
efforts
to
protect
workers
to
more
quickly
and
expeditiously,
reopen
this
economy
and
beyond.
Even
this
pandemic,
big
awareness
campaign
public
awareness
campaign.
C
We
want
to
continue
to
do
that
more
specificity,
more
nuance,
as
we
turn
the
page
and
I'll
get
to
the
latest
numbers
in
a
moment,
and
some
of
the
trend
lines
are
moving
in
the
right
direction,
how
we
can
more
effectively
target
our
public
awareness
campaigns.
I
also
want
to
acknowledge
all
those
caregivers
out
there.
C
This
is
personal,
my
wife
among
others,
but
it's
also
a
cause.
My
administration
holds
dear
chief
of
staff
analyria
among
many
others,
but
I
know
legislative
leaders
care
deeply
about
caregiving
care
economy
which
we
need
to
highlight.
Domestic
workers
and
the
like.
This
pandemic's
had
a
real
impact
on
their
lives.
There's
a
lot
of
legislative
conversations
in
this
space.
I
want
to
acknowledge
them.
Thank
them
for
introducing
more
formally
some
strategies
for
consideration.
C
We
want
to
work
together
on
those
efforts.
Accordingly,
we
also
need
to
protect
consumers.
We
have
as
part
of
our
package
we
introduced
earlier
this
year.
Consumer
financial
protection
bureau,
california,
can
lead
in
this
space
and
I
think
it's
foundational
to
protecting
workers
to
protecting
a
more
sustainable
framework
to
reopen
our
economy
that
again
advantages
everybody,
and
so
we
want
to
continue
to
work
closely
with
the
legislature
in
that
space.
I
mentioned
evictions
a
moment
ago
and
the
work
we're
doing
in
that
space
in
the
past.
C
C
Again,
I
wanted
to
thank
a
number
of
legislative
leaders
for
their
specific
ideas
and
we
continue
to
have
very
constructive,
including
yesterday
constructive
conversations
in
this
space,
and
we
will
update
you
as
as
is
warranted
on
that
progress.
I
don't
want
to
get
in
the
way
of
the
negotiation
right
now
of
talking
out
of
school,
except
to
say
that
we
are
committed
to
getting
something
done
over
the
course,
the
next
few
weeks
on
eviction
protections
and
addressing
the
needs
of
our
most
vulnerable
renters
and
small
landlords.
C
The
original
budget
proposed
that
we
would
spend
that
down
over
the
course
of
a
number
of
years-
75
million
dollars
in
this
year,
but
we
now
want
to
accelerate
that
and
we're
proposing
putting
all
300
million
dollars
out
this
year
to
address
the
needs
again
of
our
most
well
most
vulnerable
homeowners
and
renters.
So
this
really
helps
small
landlords
to
help
renters
and
and
homeowners
that
have
been
impacted
all
within
the
spirit.
C
The
letter
of
the
law,
the
settlement
related
to
the
mortgage
funds
by
the
way,
led
by
then
attorney
general
kamala
harris
we
want
to
thank
her,
wouldn't
be
having
this
specific
conversation
without
her
leadership
in
this
space,
and
this
is
just
a
demonstrable
example
of
that
leadership
and
how
important
it
is
to
come
at
this
time,
and
so
we
want
to
accelerate
those
funds,
and
I
think
we
have
a
lot
of
support
with
the
legislature
in
that
effort.
C
Accordingly,
can't
talk
about
economic
growth,
economic
recovery,
as
I
mentioned
a
moment
ago,
without
talking
about
housing,
no
greater
economic
stimulus,
the
virtual
cycle
of
housing,
growth,
housing
production
housing
starts.
We
did
a
lot
of
things
last
year
on
in-field
infrastructure
grants
more
money,
mentioned
billion
dollars
of
last
few
years
and
tax
credits.
C
We
also
have
the
ability
to
move
some
of
our
bond
funds
in
this
space
and
move
those
dollars
distribute
those
dollars
sooner,
and
so
we
are
working
with
the
legislature
to
do
just
that.
I
want
to
thank
again
legislature
for
their
efforts
in
this
space
and
know
that
we
are
very
committed.
We've
identified
well
over
100
million
dollars
in
this
space
to
move
quickly
and
efficiently
and
effectively
out
there.
C
Accordingly,
we
have
a
lot
of
bills
in
the
legislature,
and
I
just
want
to
thank
the
pro
tem
among
others
that
have
bills
on
moving
housing
production,
which
just
simply
means
you
know,
get
housing
built
faster.
I
can't
be
more
clear
about
that
number
of
bills.
I
don't
want
to
attach
to
any
one
bill,
we're
negotiating
those
points,
but
the
time
value
of
money
also
includes
the
time
to
actually
start
construction.
C
Once
you
identify
a
piece
of
property
line
up
the
financing
get
through
all
the
local
permits,
the
regional
permits,
the
state
permits
any
federal
barriers
and
then
you've
got
to
go.
I
mean
it's
a
labyrinth,
and
so
we
have
an
obligation,
economic
obligation,
but
also,
I
would
argue,
an
ethical
one
in
the
context
of
how
housing
prices
have
ravaged
the
economy
in
the
state
over
decades
and
how
we
simply
have
not
produced
enough
housing
in
the
state
over
the
course
of
decades.
C
We
have
to
address
that,
and
I
think
some
of
these
bills
will
move
in
that
direction.
With
caveats,
with
amendments
with
considerations,
all
stakeholders
at
the
table
final
couple
points
I
want
to
make
and
I'll
jump
briefly
into
today's
data
and
then
answer
any
questions
is
later
this
week,
we'll
be
putting
out
more
detailed
plan
on
closing
the
digital
divide.
It's
clear
that
reforms
in
the
economic
space
also
need
to
address
and
adapt
to
the
reality
of
this
pandemic
and
the
conditions
this
pandemic
has
created.
C
Digital
divide,
as
relates
to
education,
that's
obvious
and
foundational,
but
also
as
it
relates
to
the
economy.
Broadening
access
to
tablets.
Broadening
access
to
broadband
is
fundamental.
It's
not
just
access
to
broadband.
It's
high
quality,
high
speed
broadband,
that's
also
fundamental,
and
so
we'll
be
putting
out
more
details
in
that
space
later
this
week.
But
I
wanted
to
just
point
them
out
here
today,
as
well
as
recognizing
we're
doing
a
lot
more
telework.
C
What
are
the
rules
of
engagement
on
telework
for
employees
and
employers,
and
so
we're
looking
in
that
space
as
well?
And
I
want
to
telegraph
that,
as
relates
to
teleworking
in
this
state
that
we
need
to,
I
think,
get
under
the
hood
and
consider
some
strategies
of
flexibility
that
meet
the
needs
and
the
rights
our
responsibility
to
protect
employees
at
the
same
time
recognize
these
new
tools
of
technology.
New
tools
of
engagement
require
perhaps
some
new
thinking.
C
Speaking
of
new,
you
see
here
briefly
and
I'll
jump
through
just
very
briefly.
These
numbers
a
number
eleven
thousand
six
hundred
and
forty
five
total
number
of
coveted
cases
that
we're
reporting
in
the
last
24-hour
period
here
in
the
state.
Now
I
mentioned
on
monday
that
this
week
over
the
next,
you
know
a
few
days
up
to
72
hours
through
tomorrow,
night,
most
likely
that
we
will
take
all
of
that
backlog.
The
295
000
backlog
numbers
cases
figure
out
total
number
of
positives.
C
We
have
and
then
begin
to
stack
those
positives
on
the
actual
dates
those
numbers
came
in
so
we're
beginning
to
do
that,
but
for
the
purpose
of
transparency,
yesterday
12
500
today,
11
645
we're
giving
you
numbers
that
represent
the
actual
number
of
positive
cases
and
a
number
that
begins.
The
process
over
a
few
day
period
of
truing
up
the
total
number
of
positives
from
that
backlog.
C
C
Give
you
a
sense
of
how
many
backlog
numbers
we
just
added
today,
but
give
you
a
sense
that
I
think
is
a
little
bit
more
optimistic,
the
5400
too
high,
but
a
lot
lower
than
we've
been
tracking
the
last
few
weeks
again,
another
indication
that
we
are
turning
the
corner
on
this
pandemic.
Briefly,
let's
follow
that
up
with
some
other
proof
points
hospitalizations.
C
These
are
the
facts.
These
are
the
grounding
numbers,
hospitalizations
icu's
deaths.
These
are
the
lagging
indicators
and
these
numbers
obviously
very
consequential.
It's
very
encouraging
still
to
see
the
14-day
hospitalization
numbers
continue
to
decrease
over
19
percent.
I
think
19.3
19.4
decrease
in
the
last
14
days
consequence
that
decrease.
You
saw
that
on
monday
you
saw
it
last
week
the
week
prior
seen
a
decrease
in
hospitalizations
that
number
now
5442
represents
about
seven
percent
of
the
health
care
system
capacity
in
the
state
nine
eight
now
down
to
about
seven
percent
of
the
capacity.
C
This
relates
to
icu
admissions.
You
see
similar
trend
line
a
little
even
more
encouraging
than
last
week.
Rather
on
monday
last
presentation
on
icu's
now
16
decrease
on
icu
emissions
over
a
14-day
period,
so
tracking,
similarly
to
the
decreases
we're
seeing
19
in
hospitalizations
as
a
consequence
again,
looking
total
capacity
that
pie
chart
critical
care
capacity.
C
As
always
again,
I
appreciate
you
sticking
in
with
me
on
this
presentation.
As
always,
we
encourage
you
to
wear
a
mask,
want
to
see
those
numbers
continue
to
go
down.
Wear
a
mask.
You
want
to
see
those
numbers
continue
to
go
in
the
right
direction
continue
to
physically
distance.
I
want
to
see
those
numbers
continue
to
go
down,
as
the
temperatures
go
up,
try
to
avoid
mixing.
C
You
know
I
was
saw
the
american
river
the
other
day
and
I
might
as
well
been
at
spring
break
thousands
and
thousands
of
people
we're
not
minimizing
mixing
it
kind
of
raised
little
shivers
in
my
spine
that
here
we
are
making
all
this
progress
and
it
could
be
done
away,
and
you
know
a
day
two
a
week,
two
people
begin
again
to
let
their
guard
down
can't
let
your
guard
down
got
to
continue
to
practice
all
of
these
fundamental
rules
of
the
road
as
it
relates
to
what
we
know,
works
non-pharmacal
interventions
to
mitigate
the
spread
of
this
disease,
including
washing
your
hands,
but
none
again
more
important
than
wearing
a
mask,
and
so
want
to
encourage
you
to
do
just
that
final
point.
C
I
just
want
to
say
on
businesses-
and
I
have
a
mantra
to
bias
and
forgive
me
it
is
a
bias,
but
that
bias
I
wear
again
through
personal
experience.
Not
just
intellectualization,
as
governor
of
the
state
of
california,
cares
deeply
about
economic
growth
and
economic
prosperity,
and
that
mantra
is
simple,
that
you
can't
be
pro
job
in
anti-business,
and
I
think
it's
just
fundamental
that
when
we
talk
about
job
growth
and
job
creation
that
we
support
our
small
businesses,
we
support
those
folks
that
take
risks
and
put
everything
on
the
line.
C
The
second
point
I
want
to
make
is
businesses
can't
thrive
in
a
world,
that's
failing
and
that's
also
fundamental,
and
so
if
it
is
indeed
a
truism
and
you
can't
be
pro-job
and
anti-business
and
businesses
can't
thrive
in
a
world,
that's
failing,
then
we
have
to
recognize
that
the
new
paradigm
on
economic
growth
is
growth
and
inclusion,
and
that's
the
foundation.
That's
the
framework
to
which
we
believe
the
values
of
the
state
of
california
are
advanced.
Our
principles
are
advanced
and
long-term.
C
Sustainable
economic
recovery
can
be
found,
growth
and
inclusion,
and
so
in
conclusion,
I
wanted
to
make
that
point
and
thank
everybody
on
our
task
force.
Thank
everybody
in
the
legislature
for
all
of
their
ideas
in
the
business
community,
for
their
ideas
and
cities,
large
and
small,
all
across
the
state
that
have
submitted
their
ideas
to
help
us
in
the
pursuit
of
these
efforts
and
close
to
open
up
for
questions
by
saying.
C
There
are
a
number
of
very
potent,
powerful
and
very
insightful
ideas
that
are
being
promoted
by
members
of
the
legislature
that
are
not
on
that
list
that
we
continue
to
engage
on,
and
I
just
want
to
acknowledge
that
and
let
you
know
that
it
is
not
intentional
that
neglect.
I
just
wanted
to
put
together
a
list
today,
where
I
think
we've
made
a
lot
of
progress
but
know
that
is
by
no
means
an
exclusive
list
of
the
considerations
that
we
are
advancing
over
the
course
of
this
legislative
session.
E
C
C
It's
a
way
of
being
factual
and
very
transparent,
absolutely
focused
on
bending
this
curve,
mitigating
the
spread
of
this
disease,
getting
our
economy
moving
again
getting
people
back
to
work,
getting
our
kids,
including,
dare
I
say,
selfishly
my
kids
back
to
school
and
getting
back
to
semblance
of
normalcy
and
looking
forward
to
turning
the
page
as
a
nation
and
working
very
very
closely
with
my
old
friend
of
over
a
quarter
of
a
century.
F
Governor
when
it
comes
to
the
evic,
the
temporary
eviction
rules
that
the
judicial
council
could
set
to
expire
on
september,
the
1st
isn't
it
likely
that
any
bill
the
legislature
passes
won't
take
effect
until
january
1st.
So
we
might
have
a
gap
there
and
I'm
wondering
if,
if
that's
the
case,
would
you
issue
an
executive
order
to
extend
those
protections
to
the
end
of
the
year.
C
We
have
urgency
capacity
with
the
legislature,
so
the
answer
is
there's
a
way
of
addressing
that.
But
let
me
also
just
make
this
point.
We
were
able
to
take
executive
action
through
the
emergency
orders
that
are
afforded
to
me
during
this
pandemic
right
now,
and
then
we've
done
that
and
we
advanced
those
same
orders
in
terms
of
capacity
that
we
provided
the
judicial
council
to
do
the
same.
They
did.
C
But
right
now
we
are
working
in
the
spirit
of
collaboration,
cooperation,
partnership
with
the
legislature
and
a
lot
of
stakeholders
on
some
nuances
that
I
think
are
incredibly
important
to
work
through,
and
so
I'm
I'm
confident
that
we'll
get
to
where
we
need
to
go.
But
I'm
very
cognizant-
and
I
think
it's
a
very
good
question
very
cognizant
of
that
timeline-
and
that's
why
we're
hoping
it
does
get
extended
to
september
1st.
C
That
will
give
us
the
opportunity
to
move
with
the
urgency,
that's
required
and
to
do
so
in
a
way
where
we
can
address
that
concern
around
a
gap
by
january
1st.
So
we
are
working
through
that
and
we
have
a
pathway,
but
we
believe
to
put
something
in
place.
That
would
work
very
nicely
through
that
september.
First
night
deadline.
G
Hi
governor,
you
know,
you
said
again
today
that
you're
optimistic
about
the
trend
of
where
the
infections
are
heading
and,
and
it
looks
like
the
state
is
turning
the
corner.
Could
you
specify
a
bit
more
about
what
you
mean?
What
what
are
you
seeing?
That
makes
you
optimistic
and
do
you
think
we're
turning
the
corner
enough
that
you
can
start
considering
a
plan
to
reopen
the
businesses
that
have
been
forced
to
shut
down
again
a
second
time
through
the
recent
orders
that
you've
made
yeah.
C
So
let
me
bring
up
the
slide
on
hospitalizations.
This
is
what
gives
me
some
confidence
we're
moving
in
the
right
direction.
We
have
cobia
19
hospitalization
numbers
again
have
decreased
19
over
the
course
last
14
days,
the
last
four
presentations
that
I've
made
public
presentations
you've
seen
similar
decline
in
hospitalizations
after
significant
growth.
You
may
recall
a
month
or
so
ago,
and
those
very
very
difficult
period,
early
july,
where
we
saw
hospitalization
growth
over
a
14-day
period
north
of
50,
now
we're
seeing
declines
in
hospitalizations.
C
Accordingly,
in
icu
admissions
trend
lines
are
favorable
so
specific
to
your
question.
These
are
specific
proof
points
that
connect
to
some
optimism
that
what
we're
doing
as
a
state-
and
I
say
we-
the
people,
the
state
of
california,
40
million
strong-
what
you
are
doing
is
working
wearing
those
face
masks
is
responsible.
C
I
believe
disproportionately
for
this
trend
line
socially
distancing
physically
distance
responsible
for
this
trend
line,
people
that
are
becoming
more
cognizant
of
mixing
outside
of
their
households
more
cognizant
of
letting
down
their
guard,
even
within
their
household
you're
responsible.
They
are
responsible
for
these
trend
lines.
C
The
worst
mistake
we
can
make
I've
said
this
in
the
past
is
run
the
90
yard
dash
where
we
think
we've
got
this
and
we
walk
away
and
we
revert
back
to
the
way
things
used
to
be,
and
that's
why
we
have
to
be
very
cautious
and
very
deliberative
as
we
begin
the
modification
now.
You
specifically
asked
in
addition
to
what
gives
you
some
optimism,
including
by
the
way
the
total
case
rates,
I'm
going
to
give
you
the
new
positivity
numbers.
C
I
want
to
make
sure
those
are
100
accurate
when
we
work
through
the
details
of
that
backlog.
That's
forthcoming,
but
you
also
note
that
we
have
been
consistently
engaged-
and
I
mentioned
this
in
the
outset
of
the
presentation
today,
with
our
recovery
task
force
on
sectoral
guidelines
for
safely
reopening.
We
did
that
when
we
put
up
guidelines,
we've
been
doing
that
consistently
working
with
health
officials
all
up
and
down
the
state
of
california,
and
we
are
consistently
iterating.
We
are
consistently
modifying
those
orders.
C
C
Even
if
we
reopen
a
sector
of
our
economy,
continuing
to
enforce
a
consciousness
literally
and
figuratively,
enforce
a
consciousness
of
promotion
of
these
efforts
to
mitigate
the
spread
and
transmission
of
disease.
Because
one
thing
we
know
is,
this
can
flare
up
in
a
moment
and
there
is
no
having
made
it
as
it
relates
to
being
successful
in
this
space,
as
it
relates
to
transmission
of
this
disease.
Unless
and
until
we
get
a
vaccine.
C
Unless
and
until
we
have
kind
of
therapeutics
that
can
significantly
mitigate
the
impacts
of
this
disease,
and
so
until
that
point,
even
if
we
modify,
we
have
to
maintain
our
vigilance
and
we'll
need
a
commensurate
public
awareness
campaign,
an
enforcement
campaign
with
any
subsequent
modifications
to
ensure
that.
I
Governor,
as
you
mentioned,
you've
known
kamala
harris
for
a
very
long
time.
The
country
is
now
getting
to
know
her
and
think
about
her
in
a
different
way.
I'm
wondering
if
you
can
share
some
insight
on
what
she's
like
behind
the
scenes.
What
the
nature
of
your
relationship
is
like
with
her
and
although
you're
not
thinking
about
a
replacement,
I'm
curious.
If
anybody
has
already
started
to
pitch
themselves
as
a
replacement
to
you.
Well.
C
That's
what
matters
to
you
and
that's
what
matters
to
me
as
my
top
priority
look,
it
relates
to
I
don't
I
don't
want
to
belabor
and
get
into
too
much
personal
issues,
but
you
know,
as
you
said,
or
I
said,
thank
you
for
reflecting
on
it
that
I've
known
kamala
harris
before
she
was
district
attorney
in
san
francisco.
Before
I
became
mayor,
we
of
course
served
were
elected
the
same
day
when
she
was
district
attorney.
C
When
I
was
mayor,
I
had
the
privilege
of
working
with
her
for
two
terms
when
she
ran
for
attorney
general
to
be
a
supporter
and
advocate
for
her
campaign.
I
ran
myself
for
lieutenant
governor
work
with
her,
as
attorney
general,
that
supported
her
efforts
very
proudly
so
when
she
ran
for
the
u.s
senate
and
now
as
governor
been
working
very
collaboratively
in
a
very
supportive
way
with
her
team
and
with
her
in
the
united
states
senate.
C
I
accordingly,
and
not
surprisingly,
based
upon
that
history
based
upon
that
relationship
and
in
my
my
my
insight
in
terms
of
the
character
and
the
competency
and
her
devotion
to
the
cause
that
I
think
unites
the
vast
majority
of
us.
Her
empathy,
her
compassion,
her
her
her
learnedness,
her
doggedness,
her
commitment
to
solving
problems,
not
just
identifying
problems,
her
executive
experience,
not
just
legislative
experience,
made
it
an
easy
decision
when
she
announced
her
campaign
for
president
for
me
to
come
out
and
endorse
her.
C
Couldn't
be
more
proud
of
that,
and
so
you
can
imagine
how
proud
I'm
feeling
american
people
are
feeling
not
just
democrats,
I
have
a
few
republican
friends
that
are
actually
a
smile
on
their
face
yesterday
about
her
candidacy
now
for
the
next
vice
president.
So
it
is
a
proud
moment,
historic
and
it's
very
meaningful
I'll
close
on
this.
Forgive
me
meaningful
moment
for
california.
C
You
know
I'm
privileged.
I
sit
at
a
desk
that
earl
warren
sat
at
former
by
the
way
assistant
district
attorney
in
alameda
county,
where
kamala
harris
started
obviously
made
his
way
to
governor
became
supreme
court
justice
where
ronald
reagan
sits.
I
you
know
it's
a
proud
place
to
sit
there.
Where
you
know
great
work
was
done
by
pat
brown
and
jerry
brown
among
many
other
schwarzenegger,
proud
of
the
work
in
partnership
now
with
davis,
wilson
and
others
that
have
been
incredibly
supportive.
C
California
has
a
proud
history
of
electing
some
outstanding
leaders
and
I
got
to
say
also
a
point
of
pride,
not
just
being
a
californian,
but
you
know
growing
up
in
san
francisco
and
a
lot
of
these
leaders
emanate
from
san
francisco
and
if
you
followed
san
francisco
politics,
you
know
it's
not
for
the
timid
and
it
doesn't
surprise
me
at
all
that
so
many
of
our
nation's
great
leaders,
nancy
pelosi
being
top
among
them,
emanate
from
that
extraordinary
city,
the
birthplace
of
my
kids,
my
father,
my
grandfather,
not
only
myself.
D
Hi
governor,
thank
you
for
your
time.
So
there's
you
know
four
and
a
half
million
people
who
have
lost
the
six
600
a
week,
extra
unemployment
and
I'm
just
wondering
what
what's
next
for
them.
What
do
you
have
to
say
to
them?
And
and
what
is
your
plan
going
forward
with
that.
C
That
was
the
original
proposal
based
upon
the
executive
order,
the
president
put
out
to
receive
the
federal
support,
the
supplement
on
the
unemployment
insurance.
I
commented
that
would
cost
the
state
about
2.8
billion
dollars
a
month,
2.8
billion
dollars
a
month
to
meet
the
rules
and
regulations
that
were
assigned
to
that
original
executive
order.
Yesterday,
as
you
know,
it's
been
well
reported.
C
There
was
a
modification
to
the
executive
order,
at
least
an
assertion
that
there
would
be
guidelines
forthcoming
to
modify
it
where
it's
no
longer
a
400
contribution.
600,
we
believed
it
to
be
400.
25
would
have
to
be
picked
up
by
the
state.
We
talked
about
how
that
was
simply
not
possible
for
the
state,
even
as
large
as
ours,
to
be
able
to
do
now
that
400
600
400
has
now
dropped
to
300..
C
C
This
is
when
we're
all
in
it
together
and
traditionally
those
needs
are
met
by
forwarding
money
from
the
federal
government
that
has
a
printing
press
states
simply
do
not
to
provide
for
the
needs
of
the
american
people
in
the
most
direct
and
impactful
way,
and
we
were
very
proud
and
pleased
and
very
thankful
of
congress.
The
president
for
endorsing
the
cares
act
for
getting
that
600
dollar
contribution.
I
think
it
substantially
mitigated
the
economic
consequences
of
this
pandemic.
C
I
think
it
substantially
aided
the
capacity
for
businesses
to
remain
over
because
of
consumer
spending
and
consumer
confidence,
even
during
that
difficult
period
of
time
that
maintained
itself
at
a
level
that
otherwise
would
never
have.
I
think
it
is
a
historic
blunder
if
we
are
unable
to
accommodate
the
needs
of
tens
of
millions
of
americans
with
subsequent
supplemental
on
unemployment
insurance,
and
I
believe,
personally
and
professionally,
that
300
is
simply
inadequate
to
do
that.
C
To
help
support
small
businesses
to
help
support
economies
large
and
small
across
state,
and
very
directly
help
support
individuals
and
their
families
that
are
vulnerable
to
evictions
and
vulnerable
to
bill
collectors
vulnerable
in
this
climate,
and
so
we
continue
to
advocate
for
more
federal
support.
We
continue
to
be
strong
and
assertive,
and
I
take
a
back
seat
to
no
one
going
back
months
in
advocating
for
a
new
cares,
act
supporting
state
and
local
government,
as
well
as
individuals
related
to
the
unemployment
insurance
efforts
and
will
continue
to
make
our
voice
heard.
C
C
If,
indeed,
the
gift
horse
comment,
we
only
get
300
how
we
can
process
that
300
as
quickly
and
efficiently
as
possible.
So
at
least
we
get
those
dollars
out
as
we
wait
for
either
a
deal
with
the
current
administration
or
a
deal
with
the
next
administration
in
january.
Here's
the
report
back.
The
ability
to
do
so
can
happen
relatively
easily
relatively
easily.
You
go
from
600
to
300.
If
the
rules
of
the
requirements
do
not
change,
meaning
the
rules
for
eligibility,
don't
change.
The
unfortunate
part
is
in
the
executive
order
that
has
now
been
changed.
C
The
eligibility
rules
have
also
changed
and
when
you
introduce
new
eligibility
rules
into
these
ancient
systems
and
trust
me,
california,
is
not
the
only
one.
It
creates
a
processing
problem
that
can
delay
the
distribution.
These
checks-
and
you
know
this
well
because
you've
seen
governors
of
all
political
stripes,
make
this
crystal
clear
to
the
administration.
So
we
are
also
encouraging
the
administration.
C
We've
made
it
clear
to
our
partners
at
fema,
and
we
have
made
it
clear
to
a
lot
of
our
federal
partners
that,
if
you're
going
to
move
forward,
if
you
want
these
dollars
to
have
the
impact
that
you
intend
them
to
have
we're
grateful
to
take
those
dollars,
we
happily
will
accept
them.
We
believe
they're
not
enough,
but
you
can't
change
the
eligibility
rules
in
a
way
that
will
impact
our
capacity
to
get
these
dollars
in
the
pockets
of
people
that
need
them.
The
most
as
quickly
as
we
otherwise
could.
H
Anal
hard
kaiser
health
news
good
afternoon
governor.
I
wanted
to
ask
you:
we
understand
that
you
didn't
have
the
full
extent
of
the
cal
ready
problems
until
a
couple
of
mondays
ago,
but
have
you
had
any
indication
or
received
any
indication
that
cal
ready
wasn't
up
to
the
task
and
what
about
future
problems
with
the
system?
Do
you
have
any
plans
to
try
and
replace
it
that
the
flaws
continue.
C
Yeah,
we
talked
a
lot
about
that
on
monday,
dr
galley
talked
even
more
detailed
last
thursday
and
last
tuesday,
and
forgive
me
just
in
the
spirit
of
the
work
that
was
presented
and
work
that
has
been
done,
including
some
that
we
socialized
on
monday.
C
We
made
it
crystal
clear
that
our
commitment
is
not
just
to
piecemeal
a
solution,
and
we
have
now
addressed
the
backlog
we
made
that
clear
on
monday,
but
to
build
a
new
strategy,
a
parallel
strategy-
and
I
also
mentioned
this
monday-
to
create
a
separate
system
on
top
of
calradi
now
it's
connected,
but
that
would
absorb
a
covet
19
focus
and
a
forward-minded
way.
It
is
clear.
The
calretti
system
just
simply
does
not
have
the
capacity
to
scale,
as
we
had
hoped
for.
C
We
will
reform
that.
We
have
mitigated
that
as
we
speak,
we
will
reform
that
in
the
medium
term,
with
this
parallel
strategy
and
then
in
the
long
term
we
have
amy
tong
and
others
that
run
our
technology
department
that
are
putting
together
a
package
of
longer
term
reforms
to
make
sure
that
we're
not
back
in
the
situation.
The
next
governor
is
not
back
in
the
situation
that
we
have
a
legacy
of
learning
from
these
challenges
and
fixing
them
once
and
for
all.
C
Well,
I
believe
that
may
have
been
the
last
question.
Thank
you
all
for
your
time
and
your
patience.
Thank
you
again
for
your
vigilance.
Thank
you
all
for
doing
what
you
can
and
what
you
have
to
mitigate
the
spread
and
to
see
this
transmission
begin
to
subside
modestly,
we
continue
to
encourage
you
to
be
vigilant.
Stay
safe,
obviously,
stay
healthy
and
stay
ever
vigilant
about
how
easy
this
disease
can
transmit
itself.