►
From YouTube: Governor Newsom's COVID-19 Update - July 13, 2020
Description
Governor Gavin Newsom provides an update on the state's response to the COVID-19 outbreak.
Recorded July 13, 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
I'll
go
through
those
very
detailed
terms
in
a
moment,
but
just
to
remind
you,
our
approach
to
addressing
this
issue
going
back
many
many
months.
We've
made
this
point
on
no
multiple
occasions,
and
that
is,
we
were
moving
back
into
a
modification
mode
of
our
original
stay-at-home
order,
but
doing
so
utilizing
what
commonly
referred
to
as
a
dimmer
switch,
not
an
on
and
off
switch.
C
The
point
of
a
dimmer
switch
was
to
make
the
point
that,
as
data
trend
lines
as
the
experience
of
reopening
in
different
parts
of
the
state
and
people
beginning
to
mix
in
different
parts
of
the
state
begin
to
manifest
different
conditions
would
present
themselves
and,
as
a
consequence,
we
wanted
to
be
prepared
for
those
conditions
based
on
the
trend
lines
based
on
the
data
based
on
the
science
to
modify
our
stay-at-home
order,
subsequently,
meaning
not
on
open
economy
or
off
shut
down.
C
But
a
dimmer
switch
looking
at
conditions
throughout
the
nation's
most
populous
state,
as
they
present
themselves.
As
those
trend
lines
become
points
of
concern
before
they
invariably
become
headlines.
It's
a
consequence
of
increase
in
positivity
rate
increase
in
hospitalizations
and
icus,
based
upon
the
predicate
this
foundation
that
we
laid
on
utilizing
a
dimmer
switch.
Today,
we
are
announcing
additional
statewide
actions,
as
it
relates
to
our
stay-at-home
order.
Here
in
the
state
of
california.
C
We
are
now
effectively
rather
effective
today
requiring
all
counties
to
close
their
indoor
activities,
their
indoor
operations
in
the
following
sectors:
restaurants,
wineries,
tasting
rooms,
movie
theaters,
family
entertainment,
centers,
zoos
and
museums,
card
rooms
and
the
shuttering
of
all
bars.
This
is
in
every
county
in
the
state
of
california,
not
just
the
counties
that
were
on
the
monitoring
list
that
we
announced
on
july
1st.
C
In
these
specific
categories,
you
see
on
the
screen,
we're
also
announcing
effective
immediately
all
the
counties
on
our
county
monitoring
lists
and
I'll
show
you
that
list
an
updated
list
in
just
a
moment
all
the
counties
on
the
updated
monitoring
list.
We
are
directing
they
close
indoor
operations
in
additional
sectors,
so
the
sectors
that
we're
closing
statewide
again:
restaurants,
wineries
movie,
theaters,
family
entertainment,
zoos,
museums,
car
rooms
and
bars
to
outdoor
activities,
to
the
extent
possible
now
with
counties
on
the
monitoring
list.
C
We
have
this
list:
fitness,
centers
places
of
worship,
offices
for
non-critical
sectors,
personal
care,
services,
that
includes
hair
salons,
barber
shops
and
indoor
malls.
So
again,
these
are
sectors
to
close
indoor
operations
in
the
counties
that
are
on
the
monitoring
list
to
include
these
additional
sectors
that
you
see
on
the
list.
We've
provided
I'll
remind
you
that
that
monitoring
list
is
one
that
we
hold
very
closely.
We
monitor
every
county
in
the
state
of
california,
but
we
provide
additional
technical
assistance
to
the
counties
that
you
see
on
this
list.
C
C
I
made
this
point
very
clear,
a
number
of
many
many
weeks
ago
when
we
introduced
the
monitoring
list
to
all
of
you
that
it's
a
dynamic
list
counties
come
on.
In
some
cases,
counties
come
off
depending
on
the
criteria
that
again
was
established
on
the
front
end
and
their
ability
to
mitigate
trend
lines
to
mitigate
spread,
to
mitigate
hospitalizations
icus
and
the
like.
We
anticipate
over
the
next
few
days.
C
If
you
tuned
in
last
monday,
we
had
23
counties
on
this
list
today,
again
30
counties
on
this
list,
four
additional
counties
this
were
placed
over
the
weekend
and
I
anticipate
at
least
two
counties
likely
in
the
next
day
or
two
to
be
included
in
this
list.
So
in
these
counties
we
have
added
I'll
toggle
back
a
requirement
that
we
close
indoor
operations,
indoor
operations
for
these
sectors.
C
You
see
on
the
list
again:
personal
care
services,
indoor
malls,
worship,
services,
fitness
centers
and
the
like,
as
it
relates
to
the
total
number
of
cases
we're
experiencing
here
in
the
state
of
california.
C
Yesterday,
in
the
latest
reporting
period
we
had
8
358
cases
again,
I'm
now
tending
to
disproportionately
encourage
you
to
focus
on
the
seven
day
trends
in
average,
as
these
numbers
can
go
up
and
down,
they
can
mislead.
They
generate
a
headline,
but
don't
necessarily
tell
you
what
the
trend
lines
are.
Those
seven
day
averages
14
days
even
better,
but
give
you
a
more
contemporary
seven
day.
Average
you'll
see
that
seven
day
about
eighty
two
hundred
and
eleven
are
actually
at
eight
thousand
two
hundred
and
eleven.
C
So
yesterday,
a
little
above
the
seven
day
average
last
week
at
this
time,
again
put
it
in
perspective
again
23
counties
on
the
monitor
list
now,
30.
last
week's
seven
day
average
was
7876,
7
7876,
so
you
see
that
seven
day
average
trending
upwards.
What
has
trended
down
since
the
beginning
of
our
reporting
back
in
early
april
is
the
total
positivity
rates.
I'll
remind
you
again,
total
number
of
tests
performed
and
the
percentage
of
people
that
test
positive,
the
positivity
rate
was
originally
very,
very
high.
C
As
symptomatic,
people
were
going
out
and
getting
their
tests
now
that
we're
providing
an
average
of
over
107
000
tests
on
a
daily
basis,
not
just
the
2000
tests
that
we
were
providing
on
a
daily
basis
in
april
you're,
seeing
a
positivity
number
increase,
but
the
positivity
rate
has
now
settled
in
around
7.4
percent,
in
fact,
specifically
over
a
14-day
period
7.4
over
a
seven
day
period.
C
That
number
is
at
7.7
percent,
so
14
day,
positivity
rate
in
the
state
of
california
7.4,
a
seven-day
average
number
of
tests
conducted
over
107
000
for
what
it's
worth
yesterday,
we
tested
over
137
000
people.
Actually,
if
you
round
up
more
appropriately
138
000
people
were
tested
yesterday,
as
it
relates
to
the
test
positivity
rate,
we
constantly
want
to
take
a
closer
look,
you'll
see
where
we
were
just
a
few
weeks
ago
at
6.1
percent,
now
again
at
7.4
percent.
C
This
represents
a
21
increase
in
the
test,
positivity
rate
over
a
two
week
period.
Accordingly,
as
we
see
positivity
rates
increase,
as
I
say
often,
you
will
see
the
lagging
indicator
of
hospitalizations
begin
to
increase
you're,
seeing
hospitalization
numbers
increase
28
over
a
two-week
period.
C
That's
a
little
bit
better
than
the
50
percent
that
we
presented
to
you
a
week
or
so
ago
and
we're
two
week
period.
Last
week
we
saw
a
50
percent
increase,
we're
seeing
a
modest
reduction
in
the
rate
of
growth
in
hospitalizations,
and
that's
why
the
28
percent
two-week
period
is
represented
in
this
slide
of
increase
in
total
number
of
people.
C
Hospitalized
I'll
remind
you,
as
always,
our
hospital
care
system
is
not
just
licensed
beds,
also
alternative
care
sites,
but
for
the
purposes
of
just
clarity
and
constancy
or
other
consistency,
you'll
see
this
slide.
Some
of
you
may
be
very
familiar
with,
which
is
total
number
of
licensed
beds,
total
number
of
patients
that
are
hospitalized
with
covert
19
here
in
the
state
of
california
that
number
again
6485.
C
It
represents
8.7
percent
of
the
total
number
of
individuals
that
are
hospitalized,
utilizing
licensed
hospital
beds
in
our
health
care
system.
So
we
round
up
to
nine
percent
last
week.
At
this
time
it
was
a
little
above
eight
percent
trended
up
to
about
8.7
percent.
In
today's
reporting
period,
hospitalizations
go
up
invariably
we'll
start
to
see.
Icu
emissions
begin
to
increase
you'll
see
in
this
slide.
C
1833
individuals
now
admitted
in
our
icus
that
represents
a
20
increase
over
a
two
week
period.
C
Last
week
it
was
around
15,
so
you're,
seeing
it
plus
or
minus
15
16
represented
here
you'll,
see
the
total
number
of
ventilate
ventilators
available
still
north
of
10
000,
though
we
were
consistently
above
11
000
on
the
ventilators
available.
So
that's
something
to
watch.
We
continue
to
draw
down
purchasing
additional
ventilators
we've
been
in
constant
contact
with
fema
our
federal
partners
about
what
the
national
stockpile
and
ventilators
look
like.
C
C
The
reason
we
are
moving
forward
today,
with
additional
dimmer
in
terms
of
our
opening
begin
to
dim
down
again,
is
we're
starting
to
see
in
some
rural
parts
of
the
state,
an
increase
in
icu
use
that
is
generating
some
concern.
Let
me
be
specific:
in
placer
county
and
butte
county
icu
capacity
is
now
limited
south
of
20
capacity
in
those
counties.
Now
we
have
mutual
aid
capacity.
C
We
have
a
system
again,
a
system
which
suggests
many
parts,
but
one
body
a
systemic
approach
to
how
we
share
assets
and
resources.
As
I
said,
we've
done
that
in
imperial
bringing
ventilators
down,
but
when
you
start
seeing
it
in
multiple
counties,
you
start
seeing
it
in
lake
county,
in
addition
to
placer
county,
in
addition
to
butte
county,
when
you
start
to
see
a
little
the
supply
constraint
in
terms
of
icu
beds
and
additional
increase
in
use
and
utilization
of
ventilators.
It
then
draws
our
attention.
C
C
One
thing
I
just
think
is
incredibly
important
to
remind
all
of
you
is
that
this
virus
is
not
going
away
anytime
soon.
I
hope
all
of
us
recognize
that
if
we
were
still
connected
to
some
notion
that
somehow,
when
it
gets
warm,
it's
going
to
go
away
or
somehow
it's
going
to
take
summer
months
or
weekends
off.
C
And
again
I
focus
on
effective
therapies,
because
on
the
therapeutic
side,
the
state
is
really
leading
the
nation
and
in
many
respects
the
world
in
terms
of
the
advanced
trials
that
are
be
done
here
and,
of
course,
as
the
birthplace
of
life,
science
and
biotech
we're
very
proud
of
our
innovation.
In
this
space
and
our
capacity
to
develop
partnerships
with
our
universities,
our
research
and
development,
federal
labs
and
the
like,
as
well
as
the
private
sector
and
its
ingenuity,
a
lot
is
happening
in
this
space.
C
As
I
mentioned
on
multiple
occasions
in
the
past,
we
have
an
advisory
group.
That's
focused
on
therapeutics
and
they're,
consistently
offering
us
some
rays
of
optimism
in
this
space,
and
I
just
want
to
share
that,
because
I
know
that
we
look
to
the
vaccines
and
we
see
that
the
vaccines
are
unlikely
at
scale
to
be
procured
administered
distributed
in
a
way
that
does
justice
not
only
to
the
state
but
our
nation
and
the
world
in
an
immediate
term.
C
But
there
are
some
interesting
opportunities
to
advance
therapeutics
that
can
mitigate
the
morbidity,
not
just
the
mortality
of
this
disease,
and
I'm
gonna
be
focusing
on
socializing
that
a
little
bit
more
by
inviting
our
members
of
our
advisory
committee
to
make
a
public
presentation
to
share
with
you.
Some
of
that
insight
very
very
shortly,
which
I've
been
looking
forward
to
doing.
C
We
want
to
make
sure
the
presentation
is
ready
and
we're
not
providing
you
a
false
sense
of
optimism
in
certain
cases,
so
we're
organizing
that,
as
we
are,
our
testing
update,
which
will
be
forthcoming.
In
fact,
tomorrow,
dr
galley
will
be
presenting
our
new
reconstituted
testing
task
force.
Two
new
co-chairs
of
the
task
force
again
just
coming
from
record
number
of
tests
conducted.
C
This
is
the
next
iteration
of
testing
that
includes
by
the
way
schools
includes
strategies
for
employers,
strategies
for
effectively
targeting
in
a
much
smarter,
more
efficient
and
effective
way
are
testing
sites
in
terms
of
testing
deserts,
diverse
communities,
vulnerable
populations,
but
also
looking
at
issues
of
costs
associated
with
testing.
So
it's
a
more
sustainable
model
and
we
could
build
on
the
success
we've
had
over
the
course
of
the
last
few
months.
C
C
As
a
consequence,
we
encourage
you
and
the
state
encourage
you
to
wear
a
mask,
wear
a
face
covering
continue
to
practice.
Physical
distancing
when
you're
coming
in
contact
with
strangers
or
people
outside
of
your
household
continue
to
practice
appropriate
hygiene
washing
of
your
hands
and
the
like.
Let
me
just
close
by
soberly
saying
that
we
lost
another
23
lives
to
this
pandemic.
C
In
the
last
day,
23
human
beings,
that
family
members
have
lost
loved
ones
being
torn
apart.
It's
a
reminder
of
the
deadliness
of
this
disease.
We
had
72
individuals
on
saturday
that
lost
their
lives,
and
so
I
just
remind
you
that
not
only
are
people
getting
covet
19,
not
only
we've
seen
people
transmit
this
disease,
but
we're
also
continuing
to
see
lives
lost.
You
saw
some
of
those
numbers
go
up
last
week.
C
North
of
100
lives
lost,
don't
be
fooled
respectfully.
I
say
this
not
because
I'm
hoping
for
this
quite
the
contrary,
but
one
has
to
be
honest
and
forthright
and
sober
about
this
23,
maybe
on
the
lower
end,
but
I'll
remind
you
a
week
or
so
ago
I
was
reporting,
just
six
lives
lost
and
then
a
few
days
later,
while
in
excess
of
100
lives
lost,
and
so
this
continues
to
be
a
deadly
disease.
C
This
continues
to
be
a
disease
that
puts
people
in
our
icus
and
our
hospitals
and
is
currently
putting
a
strain
on
our
hospital
system
and
in
our
icus
good
news
is
we
have
over
300
million
masks
and
95
masks
procedure
masks
in
our
current
state,
stockpile
hundreds
of
millions
being
distributed
over
the
last
few
months.
C
Hundreds
millions
more
will
be
distributed
and
are
being
distributed
in
real
time
as
we
built
up
our
ppe,
more
capacity
and
resource
with
plans,
protocols,
procedures
processes
throughout
the
state
of
california
in
different
parts
of
the
state,
alternative
care
facilities,
health
care
personnel
that
we've
been
able
to
identify
as
critical
additional
health
care
resources
to
provide
levels
of
expertise
where
there
may
be
mismatches.
That's
part
of
our
health
core.
C
All
of
these
things,
including
the
cohort
of
now
over
10
000
people
that
have
been
trained
in
our
contact
tracing
core
all,
are
advantageous
in
terms
of
meeting
things
head-on
and
allowing
us
to
navigate
through
this
white
water
at
the
moment
and
through
a
little
bit
of
the
headwinds
as
it
relates
to
a
resurgence
of
sorts
in
this
first
wave
of
the
pandemic
and
so
again,
dimmer
switch
being
utilized
a
little
bit
more
forcefully
continuing
to
be
targeted
in
those
areas
on
the
monitoring
list
to
additional
sectors,
but
now
broadened
throughout
the
state
of
california.
C
As
we
see
more
and
more
counties
entering
a
monitoring
list
and
more
and
more
people
now
going
from
one
county
to
the
other
and
icu
and
hospitalization
concerns
presenting
themselves,
particularly
in
rural
parts
of
the
state
that
may
mask
their
current
transmissions
and
total
number
of
positives
that
have
been
identified,
but
should
not
mask
the
availability
of
appropriate
levels
of
hospital
resources
which
again
have
precipitated
in
the
decision
that
we
are
announcing
and
advancing
today.
So
with
that,
as
always
happy
to
take
any
questions.
C
And
again,
I
just
want
to
thank
everybody
for
continuing
to
endure.
What
I
know
is
a
very
challenging
and
difficult
period
of
time.
We
were
able
to
suppress
the
spread
of
this
virus.
We
were
able
to
knock
down
the
growth
of
this
in
the
beginning.
We're
going
to
do
that
again.
C
There's
no
doubt
in
my
mind,
but
at
the
same
time
that
can't
happen
by
demanding
something
of
you
just
want
to
encourage
you
to
do
what
you
know
needs
to
be
done
in
terms
of
wearing
that
mask
and
physically
distancing
and
to
the
extent
we
have
to
look
at
sectors
of
our
economy
that
reinforce
a
mandate
of
focus,
we're
doing
just
that,
but
we'll
get
through
this,
and
let
me
again
just
thank
each
and
every
one
of
you
from
the
bottom
of
my
heart
for
your
perseverance
for
your
patience
for
your
recognition,
but
also
our
collective
reckoning
of
the
virulence
of
this
virus
and
the
ubiquity
of
this
virus
and
our
need
to
maintain
our
vigilance
and
continue
to
do
the
good
work.
C
E
Hi
governor,
I
have
young
kids,
as
do
you,
and
I'm
curious
as
to
what
kind
of
guidance
you
guys
are
going
to
be
giving
school
district.
It's
a
real
mix
right
now.
It
feels
like
if
indoor
activities
at
some
of
these
other
places
aren't
safe.
They
may
not
be
for
school
districts
and
I'm
just
curious
as
to
how
much
the
state
intends
to
wade
in
since
it's
such
a
hodgepodge
right
now,.
C
C
C
You
know
that
there
are
different
counties
with
local
health
guidelines
and
officials
working
in
partnerships
with
their
superintendent
of
public
schools,
based
on
the
conditions
on
the
ground,
making
subsequent
recommendations,
as
you
saw
demonstrably
that
it
played
today
both
la
unified
school
district,
as
well
as
san
diego
announced
that
they're
going
to
enter
into
the
fall
school
season,
the
way
they
ended
last
school
year,
and
that
is
by
utilizing
distance
learning
until
we
deal
with
the
background
rate
of
infections,
contextualizing
the
schools
and
where
they're
operating
the
communities
that
are
being
impacted
by
rates
of
growth,
positivity
and
spread
of
the
virus.
C
I
want
to
just
acknowledge
and
applaud
the
leadership
of
those
districts
for
leaning
in
and
recognizing
their
responsibility
at
this
moment
to
give
their
children
not
just
their
children.
Their
caregivers
give
the
system
to
all
parents
the
opportunity
to
begin
to
adjust
and
make
plans.
I
will
say
on
distance
learning,
and
this
is
a
broad
stroke
statement.
C
We
were
able
to
knock
down
that
digital
divide
by
roughly
in
half
over
the
course
the
last
five
months,
but
halfway
is
not
all
the
way,
and
so
we
still
have
enormous
amount
of
work
to
do,
and
so
it's
also
a
reminder,
as
some
of
these
districts
make
determination
based
upon
background
infection
rates
based
upon
their
own
physical
constraints.
C
When
we
work
through
these
different
constraints
criteria
and
concerns,
utilizing
the
cdc
guidelines,
utilizing
the
cde
guidelines,
department
of
education
at
state
level
and
our
own
health
guidelines
and
partnerships
with
locals
that
each
of
these
criteria
need
to
meet
the
needs
in
these
respective
districts
and
that's
why
we
put
up
5.3
billion
dollars
in
this
year's
budget
to
allow
for
the
ability
to
procure
assets
to
allow
for
distance
learning
to
make
sure
that
we
have
the
resources
to
continue
to
do
more.
To
close
that
divide
and
to
keep
our
children
and
to
keep
our
teachers.
C
We
will
continue
to
modify
based
upon
changing
conditions,
and
so
just
for
the
purposes
of
your
question
a
little
bit
of
a
preview
on
friday,
I
signed
off
on
some
additional
guidance
that
will
be
that's
being
socialized
in
so
respect,
please
that
it's
currently
being
socialized
within
the
system
over
the
weekend
and
today
around
masks
around
contact
sports
around
choir,
around
bus
busing
of
our
kids
and
keeping
them
safe
and
around
furthering
our
efforts
around
distance
learning
and
how
to
make
sure
that
we're
addressing
the
divide
in
social
and
emotional
concerns.
C
Obviously
that
are
a
big
part
of
distance
learning
that
otherwise
are
substantially
mitigated
in
terms
of
the
socialization
of
our
kids,
when
they're
physically
present
in
the
schools.
Again
I'll
remind
you.
Two
things
are
non-negotiable:
our
children's
health
and
the
absolute
essential
importance
of
educating
our
children
to
me,
it's
an
and
not
an
ore,
and
I
didn't
want
to
just
applaud
austin
buettner,
who
has
been
working
very
very
closely
with
the
state,
not
just
the
county,
in
los
angeles
and
the
team
down
in
san
diego
for
the
decision
they
made
today.
F
Hi
governor
just
to
follow
up
on
on
schools.
I
understand
that
you
know
what
happens
in
schools
is
a
local
decision,
but
you
know
you're
the
leader
of
california's
response
to
this
pandemic,
and
if
indoor
activities
are
dangerous
for
everything
else,
why
would
schools
be
okay
and
what,
if
anything,
will
the
state
do
to
step
in
if
districts
choose
to
return
to
in-classroom
learning?
Well,.
C
We
put
and
you'll
see
the
budget.
I
think
you
report
on
the
budget,
and
I
think
it's
important
that
folks
take
a
closer
look
at
the
language
of
the
5.3
billion
dollars
that
we
put
up
in
the
statutory
language,
not
just
the
guidance
we
put
out
through
the
department
of
public
health
as
it
relates
to
our
expectations
with
the
districts,
but
you're
absolutely
right.
We're
monitoring
this
in
real
time.
C
As
I
made
very
clear
in
the
last
answer,
we
over
the
course
the
last
number
of
days
I
made
decisions
to
further
strengthen
our
guidelines
based
upon
the
increased
growth
and
rate
of
spread.
If
that's
not
leading
to
a
conclusion
that
you
should
anticipate
even
more,
I
would
disabuse
you
that
it
should
encourage
you
to
believe
that
we
will
be
leaning
in
even
further
well
aware
of
my
responsibilities
well
aware
of
the
dynamic
that
is
a
state
as
large
as
ours.
C
Again,
I
want
to
just
caution
people.
This
is,
unlike
any
other
state
in
the
nation
in
terms
of
the
scope
and
scale
over
six
plus
million
children
that
we
are
responsible
for
in
our
education
system.
Different
cohorts
of
children,
high
school
students
middle
elementary,
a
lot
of
preschool
components
and
pre-k
components
that
are
all
part
and
parcel
of
our
considerations.
C
Looking
at
the
local
nature
of
the
way
we've
designed
our
system
of
education
here
at
k-12
education
in
the
state
of
california,
that
is
a
bottom-up
approach,
but
we
certainly
will
be
asserting
have
been
asserting
ourselves
for
a
number
of
months
now,
in
terms
of
the
guidance
we've
been
putting
out
and
the
statutory
language,
that's
in
the
budget
related
to
school
funding.
That
is
also
a
demonstrable
example
of
leaning
in
in
terms
of
the
expectations
in
this
state,
but
again
the
dynamic
nature.
G
Dickerson
fox
40.
hi
hi
governor.
I
understand
that
you're
going
to
be
talking
to
the
subject
of
testing
strategy
tomorrow
with
dr
galley.
But
could
you
address
the
issue
of
just
testing
availability,
we're
starting
to
see
just
a
harder
situation
for
people
on
the
ground
trying
to
get
tests
people
talking
about
waiting
weeks?
I
spoke
with
a
woman
today
at
a
pop-up
testing
site
who
basically
expressed
you,
know
a
three-week
lag
between
finding
out.
She
had
been
exposed
to
someone
who
had
been
tested,
positive
and
actually
being
able
to
get
tests.
G
G
So
again,
can
you
just
discuss
what
a
testing
capacity
is
like
at
this
point
and
what
people
can
expect
going
forward
and
also
just
the
you
know,
the
the
basic
fundamental
of
when
we
were
talking
about
three
weeks
from
the
time
you're
finding
out
that
you've
been
exposed
to
the
time
you're?
Actually
getting
tests
with
the
lagging
getting
results,
I
mean
it'll,
be
about
a
month
before
when
it's
all
said
and
done
before
this
woman
knows
whether
or
not
she's
positive
for
this.
So
you
know
how
that's
actually
effective
at
all.
C
So
I
would
encourage
everybody
that
wants
to
access
a
test
to
go
to
the
covet19.ca.gov
website
covet19.ca.gov
website.
You
can
pull
down
type
in
your
zip
code,
which
will
give
you
a
map
of
the
most
proximate
testing
sites
in
your
area.
We've
been
working
over
the
course
of
last
number
of
months
to
go
from
an
average
of
2000
tests
a
day
just
over
90
days
ago,
and
now
you
saw,
we
are
running
at
a
record
rate,
more
testing
than
the
state
has
ever
conducted
over
a
seven
day
period.
C
C
Today,
even
137
000
tests
is
inadequate
to
meet
the
needs
of
a
population
as
large
as
ours,
including
this
individual
that
you
have
exampled,
and
so
it's
unacceptable
in
this
nation
and
in
this
state
that
we
are
not
at
in
a
position
to
be
doing
even
larger
scale,
testing
that
all
of
us
have
been
very,
very
aggressively,
promoting
and
and
trying
to
manifest.
C
We
announced
a
task
force
a
number
of
months
ago
when
we
were
averaging
just
2
000
tests
a
day
and
we
were
able
to
reach
some
stretch,
goals
goals
we
set
out
sixty
thousand
get
to
eighty
thousand
as
a
stretch,
goal
of
tests
that
we
conduct
on
a
daily
basis.
We
also
targeted
what
we
refer
to
as
testing
deserts
all
throughout
the
state
of
california.
C
We
also
targeted
our
diverse
communities
within
urban
settings
that
were
also
under
resource,
so
not
just
in
rural
parts
of
the
state,
not
only
in
remote
parts
of
the
state,
but
also
even
in
densely
populated
parts
of
the
state.
Certain
communities
were
not
getting
tested.
We've
seen
marked
improvement.
C
C
The
presentation
today
I
reinforced
and
thank
you
for
acknowledging
that
tomorrow,
dr
galley
will
be
making
a
presentation
announcing
the
two
new
task
force
members
and
addressing
exactly
the
concern
that
you're
bringing
up
as
it
relates
to
access
issues
that
remain
stubborn
issues
related
to
supplies
that
once
again
are
presenting
themselves,
particularly
in
the
pcr
tests,
as
it
relates
to
transport
media
viral
collection,
the
ability
to
get
swabs
the
questions
that
were
long
standing
concerns
we're
continuing.
C
Now,
when
you
see
a
scale
of
testing
happening
in
other
parts
of
the
country,
we're
starting
to
concede
constraints
again,
including
time
to
test
results.
We've
seen
a
real
marked
improvement
for
a
number
of
months
and
now
we're
starting
to
see
delays
once
again
in
terms
of
the
testing
results.
So
your
example
is
a
twofold
example
of
someone
who
may
have
had
difficult
time
accessing
a
test
and
then,
after
they
get
tests
to
have
a
difficult
time
being
patient
waiting
for
those
test
results.
C
That's
exactly
what
dr
galley
will
be
discussing
tomorrow,
our
new
strategy,
our
new
approach
and
new
partnerships
we've
formed
rather
than
complaining
about
it
like
we
did.
The
last
time
we're
doing
something
about
it.
We'll
do
this
again,
as
it
relates
to
different
capacity
building
partnerships
and
a
different
approach
that
he'll
be
highlighting
in
detail
tomorrow.
H
Hi
governor,
thank
you.
I
want
to
ask
you
about
alameda
county.
As
you
may
be
aware,
there's
been
a
lot
of
confusion
in
alameda
county
the
last
few
days
it
had
been
allowing
outdoor
dining
for
the
last
few
weeks
found
out
thursday.
It
wasn't
supposed
to
the
county
issued
a
new
order.
There
was
confusion
between
the
state
and
the
county
over
the
weekend.
A
number
of
cities,
including
oakland
livermore
hayward,
said
they
would
not
enforce
the
new
county
order.
H
A
lot
of
angry
people
at
restaurants,
a
lot
of
confusion
and
that
confusion
extends
even
to
this
briefing
because,
while
alameda
county
is
shown
on
the
state
watch
list
on
the
website,
it's
not
on
the
list
of
counties
you
just
put
out
and
this
the
website
shows
31
and
you
said
30.,
so
is
that
to
some
people,
that's
sort
of
emblematic
of
the
kind
of
confusion
and
chaos
there
is
in
where
people
aren't
really
sure
whether
what
is
safe,
where
it's
safe.
Why
it's?
H
H
And
how
that
can
even
be
happening,
as
kathleen
said,
you're
the
leader
of
this
state.
Okay,
things
seem
to
be
going
in
the
wrong
direction.
How
do
we
turn
it
back
around.
C
Okay,
so
alameda
county
is
one
of
two
counties
that
I
previewed
just
a
moment
ago
that
are
likely
to
go
on
the
list,
as
I
said
tomorrow
or
the
next
day.
So
apparently
that
may
have
happened
as
it
relates
to
the
website
and
forgive
that
mismatch.
That's
rare
occurrence,
many
many
months,
I've
not
seen
that
happen,
forgive
me,
but
as
it
relates
to
alameda
county
as
it
relates
to
a
number
of
other
counties.
As
I
said,
it's
likely
they'll
enter
onto
this
list.
C
We've
had
a
process,
that's
been
very
consistent,
you're
well
familiar
with
it.
I
think
the
public
is
as
well
as
relates
to
an
attestation
process.
The
attestation
process
is
a
give
and
take
between
county
health
directors,
with
their
county
board
of
supervisors
with
their
hospital
system
and
with
our
health
team.
Here
in
the
state
of
california,
we
promote
those
attestations
and
on
our
website
covid19.ca.gov.
C
I
made
it
crystal
clear
a
moment
ago
and
I'd
encourage
you
to
to
rewind
the
presentation
that
people
come
on
that
monitoring
list
and
they
come
off
that
monitoring
list
because
of
the
dynamic
nature
of
this
virus.
Nothing's
constant,
nothing
is
linear,
as
it
relates
to
infectious
disease
there's
a
dynamic
and
that
dynamic
needs
to
be
monitored
in
real
time.
C
The
purpose
of
the
presentation
today
many
other
presentations,
is
to
make
that
point
and
reinforce
it
by
saying
it
is
not
an
on
and
off
switch,
it's
a
dimmer
switch
and
any
of
you
have
used
a
dimmer
switch.
The
dimmer
switch
goes
up
and
down
based
upon
changing
conditions
based
upon
context
or
what
you're
trying
to
accomplish,
and
so
that's
exactly
what
we're
doing
as
things
dynamically
change.
C
As
we
see
the
spread,
as
we
see
our
capacity
in
certain
parts
of
the
state
improve,
we
see
capacity
constraints
in
other
parts
of
the
state
and
as
a
consequence,
we
have
to
continue
to
toggle
back
and
forth,
and
so
that's
part
of
our
resolve.
It's
part
of
the
leadership
in
the
state,
the
first
state
in
the
country
and
to
move
forward
with
the
state-home
order.
That
didn't
mean
we
shut
down
every
sector
of
the
economy
mark.
This
is
a
consideration.
60-Plus
percent
of
the
economy
still
remained
open
even
after
the
stay-at-home
order.
C
We
began
to
make
modifications,
after
extended
period
of
time,
of
stabilization
of
our
hospitalizations
stabilizations
in
our
icus
stabilization,
in
terms
of
the
positivity
rate,
to
make
some
modifications
based
upon
local
conditions
in
a
state
as
large
as
ours.
That
was
the
attestation
process,
and
this
is
now
the
monitoring
of
that
asset
station
process
and
the
technical
assistance,
and
that
is
an
iterative
process.
I
D
Abc7
hi
governor,
taking
a
look
at
some
of
the
information
on
your
website
in
regards
to
those
closures
for
the
counties
that
have
been
on
that
list
for
three
consecutive
days.
One
of
the
items
listed
is
protest.
Can
you
explain
what
that
means.
C
Well,
I
and
forgive
me,
maybe
more
clarification
in
terms
of
your
question.
Yes,
we
we
have
a
framework
around
protests.
Is
that
what
you're
asking
exactly.
D
Right
so
on
the
website,
it
has
a
category
for
industries
that
should
be
shut
down
unless
they're
modified
it
says
to
operate
outside
or
by
pickup.
This
says:
fitness,
centers,
worship,
services.
The
third
thing
listed
on
that
list
says
protest,
so
I'm
wondering
is
that
supposed
to
be
in
this
specific
category?
I.
C
Think
you're.
Referring
to
that,
I
appreciate,
I
think
I
think
what
you're
referring
to
is
no
indoor
activities,
and
that
would
include
certainly
protests
as
it
relates
to
those
indoor
activities.
So
if
it's
under
the
header,
indoor
and
again,
I
don't
have
the
benefit
of
exactly
what
you're
looking
at
specifically,
if
it's
under
that
heading,
that's
what
it
would
be
referring
to
one
more
question.
I
Yes,
sir,
a
quick
question
about
today,
we
understand,
there's
going
to
be
another
conference,
call
with
vice
president
pence
and
a
bunch
of
the
governors
on
the
coronavirus
I
wanted
to
find
out
if
there
was
any
specific
help
that
you
wanted
the
federal
government
to
provide
at
this
point
or
any
form
of
aid
that
you'd
be
looking
for
in
today's
call.
C
Yeah
I've
I've
not
in
today's
call-
but
I
mentioned
this
last
week
and
thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
share
it
again.
We
were
the
beneficiary
of
relationship
with
the
vice
president
in
terms
of
our
partnership
that
we've
formed
over
the
class,
of
course,
the
last
number
of
months
to
secure
190
individuals
that
the
vice
president
was
able
to
secure
for
the
state
of
california
to
help
basically
decompress
some
of
the
stress
of
some
of
our
key
health
care
workers
and
some
of
these
hot
spots
in
the
state.
C
Through
partnership
with
hhs,
we
were
able
to
get
these
teams
total
number
of
health
experts
of
190
individuals.
So
in
contemporary
terms,
that
was
done.
That
commitment
came
in
just
a
number
of
days
ago,
and
it
was
formalized
I
think
late
last
week
and
those
folks
are
now
being
sent
and
will
be
deployed
throughout
the
state
of
california.
C
But
the
calls
are
really
about
governors
sharing
best
practices
and
updating
on
some
of
their
efforts
and
their
concerns.
It's
also
an
opportunity
to
hear
not
only
from
a
number
of
other
governors
as
it
relates
to
sharing
of
those
best
practices
and
concerns,
but
also
vice
president
and
other
experts
in
the
administration,
all
part
of
the
testing,
or
rather
the
corona
task
force.
Forgive
me
the
corona
task
force
they
put
together,
we'll
hear
from
a
number
of
them,
as
it
relates
to
ppe
issues,
testing
issues,
skilled
nursing
facility
issues,
issues
related
to
opening
of
schools.
C
Let
me
again
just
thank
all
of
you
for
the
opportunity,
however
long
you've
tuned
in
to
this
update
and
this
presentation,
I
want
to
thank
you
for
continuing
to
take
seriously
the
spread
and
transmission
of
this
virus.
I
want
to
always
remind
you
the
same
mantra
that
is
to
wear
a
mask
to
physically
distance
and
continue
those
hygiene
practices
that
are
essential.
C
Continue
to
remind
you
what
I
don't
need
to
remind
you
at
this
stage,
the
vulnerability
that's
still
placed
on
our
seniors
and
those
that
have
pre-existing
conditions
that
are
more
prone
to
the
impacts
and
reality
of
this
virus
so
for
seniors
and
for
those
that
are
have
immunity
systems
and
are
compromised
in
that
respect.
C
Please
please
take
seriously
the
fact
that
positivity
rates
are
growing
in
the
state
and
across
many
parts
of
this
country
and
continue
to
be
vigilant,
as
it
relates
to
your
own
activities
and
your
own
health
take
care
everybody.
I
look
forward
to
updating
you
on
testing
tomorrow
and
look
forward
to
subsequent
ebsc
updates
throughout
the
week.
Take
care.