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From YouTube: Governor Newsom's COVID-19 Update - July 20, 2020
Description
Governor Gavin Newsom provides an update on the state's response to the COVID-19 outbreak.
Recorded July 20, 2020 in Sacramento, California.
For more information regarding the impact of the COVID-19 outbreak in Cupertino, please visit https://www.cupertino.org/coronavirus
B
Well,
good
afternoon,
everybody,
it's
an
old
say
just
goes
that
repetition
is
the
mother
of
skill.
So
forgive
me
for
repeating
myself
on
number
of
admin
nations,
as
it
relates
to
the
issue
of
personal
responsibility,
as
it
relates
to
addressing
foundationally
the
transmission
and
spread
of
covet
19
and
the
importance
and
potency
of
our
own
individual
choices,
our
own
personal
responsibility,
as
it
relates
to
mitigating
the
spread
of
this
disease.
B
It
is
incumbent
upon
all
of
us
to
recognize
what
is
self-evident,
and
that
is
that
it
is
our
decisions,
not
our
conditions,
our
decisions
that
will
determine
our
fate
and
future,
as
it
relates
to
the
spread
of
this
virus.
It's
our
decisions
that
will
determine
how
quickly
our
children
go
back
to
school.
B
It
is
our
decisions
that
will
determine
what
kind
of
activities
we
get
to
once
again
enjoy
with
our
friends
and
family
and,
of
course,
it's
our
decisions,
personal
and
some
total
of
all
of
our
decisions
that
will
determine
how
quickly
our
business
sector
can
reopen
with
some
semblance
of
the
way
things
used
to
be.
It's
important
to
remind
all
of
us
that
this
transmission
can
be
substantially
mitigated
by
wearing
face
coverings
by
wearing
face
masks.
B
This
slide,
we
present,
is
pretty
self-evident
and
I
think
the
evidence
is
overwhelming
seen
in
other
countries
as
it
relates
the
importance
and
potency
of
wearing
face
coverings
to
mitigate
the
spread
of
this
disease
recommendations.
B
Accordingly,
we
talk
about
physical,
distancing,
social
distancing,
some
refer
to
it,
physical
distancing.
Just
being
six
feet
apart
from
people,
you
otherwise
do
not
mix
with
people
that
are
outside
of
your
household
people,
that
you
come
close
contact
with
when
you're
out
doing
the
essential
day-to-day
work
that
we
all
need
to
do.
Fewer
people,
you
mix
with
the
significant
reduction
in
the
likelihood
of
seeing
others,
contract
the
disease
and,
of
course,
you
as
well
being
impacted
by
this
disease.
This
next
slide
bears,
I
think,
some
consideration
and
reflection.
B
I
put
this
slide
up
a
few
months
ago.
It's
worth
putting
back
up
today
the
power
of
exponentials.
This
notion
that
just
an
individual
that
is
positive,
that
comes
into
contact
over
a
five-day
period,
just
two
people
two
and
a
half
people
within
30
days.
Those
two
and
a
half
people
start
mixing
with
others,
and
now
you
have
over
400
people
that
have
come
down
posited
with
covet
19..
B
You
see
just
a
significant,
rather
modest
by
some
people's
estimates,
but
significant
in
terms
of
its
impact
reduction
in
the
number
of
people
you've
been
exposed
to.
You
just
cut
that
in
half
from
two
and
a
half
people
to
one
and
a
half,
people
now
you're
only
impacting
over
a
30
day
period
through
the
power
of
those
contacts,
15
people
and
less
still,
if
you
reduce
your
exposure
to
less
than
one
individual,
and
so
the
point
is
we
have
to
minimize
our
mixing.
We
have
to
minimize
the
transmission
of
this
disease.
B
We
have
to
minimize
that
by
practicing
physical
distancing
wearing
the
face
coverings
and
doing
the
kinds
of
things
that
I
think
are
well
described
and
obviously
now
need
to
be
more
vigilantly
followed.
If
we're
going
to
move
past
this
more
expeditiously.
B
We
talked
about
those
counties
that
are
on
the
monitoring
list,
33
counties
and
I'll,
give
you
an
update
on
those
county
lists
here
in
a
moment
again
focusing
on
indoor
operations
on
gyms
and
fitness,
centers
places
of
worship
still
allowing
activity
to
occur
outdoors
accordingly,
issues
of
barber
shops
and
personal
care
services.
I
want
to
just
make
personal
clarification
on
the
issue
of
personal
services.
B
B
The
good
news
is,
we
now
have
new
guidelines
out
on
the
covet19.ca.gov
website,
cova19.ca.gov
website
clarifying
what
we
can
and
can't
do
as
it
relates
to
haircuts
and
and
activities
that
we
want
to
move
indoors
outdoors
for
a
personal
care
service
industry
turns
out
without
getting
into
too
many
details,
but
issues
of
chemicals
and
shampoos
and
perms.
It
was
more
complicated
than
some
had
considered,
particularly
as
it
relates
to
local
ordinances
and
rules
and
regulations
that
were
in
place.
B
So
we
worked
through
that
over
the
last
number
of
days
and
those
new
guidelines
are
up,
and
hopefully
that
provides
more
clarity
if
we
need
to
provide
even
more
we'll
get
the
good
feedback
which
I
anticipate
from
the
new
guidelines
we
put
up,
but
rest
assured,
the
intention
was
to
provide
those
activities
with
conditions
outdoors.
No
longer
indoors,
here's
why
again
we're
seeing
an
increase
in
our
seven-day
average
total
number
of
covet
19
positive
cases.
Yesterday
july
19
6846
positive
cases,
seven
day,
average
you
see
up
there
8911.
B
we
take
a
closer
look
at
our
positivity
rates.
Number
of
people
tested
number
of
people
that
test
positive
becomes
a
positivity
rate
with
now
record
seven
day,
average
of
daily
tests
over
124
000
daily
tests
on
average
over
seven
days
by
the
way,
127
000
tests.
Yesterday,
our
positivity
rate
over
a
14-day
period
is
holding
at
7.4
percent
this
time
last
week
it
was
at
seven
point
four
percent,
our
seven
day,
positivity
average
last
week,
was
at
seven
seven.
When
I
announced
on
monday.
B
It's
now
at
seven
point
two
percent
so
14
days
holding
at
7.4
our
seven
day
dropping
from
7.7
over
a
week
ago
to
7.2,
let's
get
under
the
hood
as
we
tend
to
do
here
and
look
at
the
numbers
a
little
bit
more
closely.
That
seven
point
four
percent
rounded
up,
you
see
seven
point
three:
nine
percent
positivity
rate
over
a
fourteen
day
period.
This
represents
about
a
nine
point.
Two
percent
increase
over
a
fourteen
day
period,
so
you
saw
a
big
increase
and
now
we're
seeing
some
stabilization.
B
But
again
I
no
one
is
satisfied
being
north
of
seven
percent
and
we
got
close
to
eight
percent
last
week,
so
these
numbers
can
change
very
very
quickly
again,
depending
on
our
personal
behavior,
some
total
of
which
will
determine
the
direction
of
the
lines
on
this
graft
and
ultimately,
the
direction
of
our
ability
to
reopen
this
economy
and
get
our
schools
back
open
as
all
of
us,
so
desperately
look
forward
to
as
it
relates
to
hospitalizations.
B
We've
seen
a
16
percent
increase
in
hospitalizations
over
a
14
day
period
by
the
way
that
is
an
increase,
but
it
is
a
decline
in
the
increase
we've
experienced
over
a
three
week
period.
Let
me
without
confusing
you
more
be
more
specifically.
Two
weeks
ago
we
put
up
on
monday
our
hospitalization
numbers.
It
said
we
were
increasing
over
two
week
period
by
50
percent.
B
Last
week,
monday,
over
two
week
period,
we
were
increasing
by
28
this
week
over
two
week
period,
we're
increasing
by
16.,
so
50
28
to
16..
That's
an
encouraging
sign,
but
I
will
enliven
you
with
some
additional
thoughts
in
a
moment
as
we
walk
through
not
just
hospitalizations
but
icus
and
then
start
breaking
things
down
by
county.
Remember
these
numbers
are
statewide
in
the
aggregate
in
our
state.
None
of
us
live
in
the
aggregate.
B
That
said
again,
it
is
encouraging
to
go
from
50
28
to
16
percent,
but
we
want
to
see
a
decline,
not
a
reduction
in
the
rate
of
growth,
total
population
of
individuals
currently
in
our
health
care
system,
about
nine
percent
identified
as
covet
positive,
which
is
about
where
we
left
the
week
last
week,
often
monday,
roughly
nine
percent,
traveling
anywhere
or
numbers
are,
are
you
know,
anywhere
from
eight
to
nine
percent
consistently
over
the
last
a
few
weeks,
but
we're
moving
in
a
direction
again
where
we're
seeing
pressure
on
a
hospital
system
will
impact
that
more
in
terms
of
where
but
total
hospitalizations
with
covet
19
patients
represents
nine
percent
of
the
available
hospital
beds
within
our
health
care
system
capacity
icus
again,
hospitalization
numbers
go
up,
invariably
you'll
see
icu
admission
increases
as
well,
not
dissimilar
to
the
hospitalizations.
B
Two
weeks
ago
we
announced
50
percent
on
the
hospitalization
increase
over
a
14-day
period.
Two
weeks
ago
I
announced
a
39
increase
in
icu
admissions.
Last
week.
Last
monday
it
was
a
20
percent
increase
in
icu
emissions
over
14
day
period.
Today,
you'll
see
that
slide.
12
percent
increase
in
icu
emissions
over
14
day
period,
so
not
surprising,
hospitalizations,
icu's
tracking,
but
lagging
indicators
one
another.
B
We
are
seeing
a
reduction
in
the
rate
of
growth,
but
a
rate
of
growth
nonetheless,
which
only
reinforces
the
seriousness
of
this
moment
and
the
importance
of
taking
the
personal
responsibility.
We
all
must
to
practice
the
physical
distancing
do
our
activities
outdoors
as
much.
We
can
and
obviously
wear
face
coverings.
So
that
gives
you
a
sense
of
where
we
are
in
icu
missions.
Let's
get
closer
to
what
our
total
capacity
is
within
our
critical
care
system.
B
You'll
see
there
that
chart
about
17
of
the
icu
capacity,
and
that
includes
icus
and
nicus,
and
that
number
those
are
for
younger
people
that
number
17
is
I've,
been
in
the
15
to
17
range
over
the
last
few
weeks,
so
total
system
we
feel
like
there's.
You
know,
there's
more
of
the
orange
you
see
on
the
chart
than
the
blue,
but
again
certain
parts
of
the
state.
This
is
absolutely
not
the
case.
B
You
can
reverse
those
colors
and
you'll,
see
real
constraint
in
icu
capacity,
I'll
be
specific
in
placer
county
today,
just
18.6
percent
of
other
icu
beds
are
available.
There's
parts
of
the
state,
it's
even
less
still
san
benito
zero
percent,
the
icu
capacity
available
in
that
county
again,
an
indication
county
by
county
that
things
look
very
differently
than
they
do
system
wide
or
state
wide,
and
that's
why
it's
so
important
to
go
back
to
this
list.
This
monitoring
list
here
are
the
33
counties.
B
This
is
the
total
number
of
counties
that
are
on
the
monitoring
list
in
the
state.
San
francisco
did
come
on
the
county,
which
we
had
anticipated
announced
that
likely
to
happen
friday
did,
and
we
are
currently
monitoring
with
very
close
technical
assistance,
provided
these
33
out
of
our
58
counties
in
particular
because
of
a
number
of
issues
related
to
criteria
they
set
forth
where
we're
not
seeing
things
necessarily
improve
in
all
those
critical
areas,
and
so
again
this
is
a
list
that
we
are
laser
focused
on.
B
This
list
represents
overwhelming
majority
of
the
population
in
the
state
of
california.
This
is
a
list
where,
if
you
reside
in
these
counties,
we
just
only
reinforce
and
underscore
the
urgency
of
the
individual
activities
in
terms
of
modifying
our
activities
to
help
us
mitigate
the
spread
in
many
of
these
counties,
and
I
highlighted
placer
county
napa,
county
and
others,
we
are
seeing
constraints
in
icus
number
of
these
counties
more
challenging
as
it
relates
to
hospitals
and
that's
not
just
beds.
B
That's
individuals,
staffing,
the
beds,
a
lot
of
parts
of
the
state
now
where
we
are
seeing
an
exhausted
front-line
staff
of
of
credible
doctors
and
nurses
and
nurse
practitioners
that
are
being
stretched,
and
we
are
helping
to
provide
some
semblance
of
support,
including
the
support
we
received
last
week.
I
want
to
thank
the
vice
president
for
that
support
of
190
individuals.
B
Medical
team
came
from
federal
hhs
to
help
relieve
some
of
that
stress,
so
that
is
indeed
top
of
mind
in
terms
of
where
we
are
in
certain
counties.
San
joaquin
stanislaus
in
particular,
that
we
have
been
monitoring
very
very
closely
as
it
relates
to
hospitalizations
icus
and
the
issue
of
human
capital,
meaning
personnel
that
need
a
break
that
need
to
be
supplemented
need
to
be
supported.
B
As
always.
I
end
these
well
presentations,
as
I
often
begin
them
by
encouraging
you
to
to
wear
these
masks,
as
we
did
today
once
again,
encouraging
you
to
practice
the
physical
distancing,
wash
your
hands,
sanitation,
always
top
of
mind
and
one
of
the
most
potent
things
you
can
do
to
minimize
the
transmission
of
this
disease
and
then
minimize
mixing
large
crowds
of
all
types
and
encourage
you
to
continue
to
take
seriously
and
take
vigilant
and
be
as
vigilant
as
possible
to
work
through
the
next
few
critical
weeks
in
terms
of
the
pandemic.
B
Here
in
the
state
of
california,
just
close
with
one
additional
comment,
and
that
is,
we
had
a
relatively
low
and
again
devastating
number
nine
deaths
yesterday,
but
relatively
low
in
terms
of
numbers
we've
seen
in
the
past,
devastating
for
those
families
that
were
directly
impacted,
loss
of
a
loved
one
and
our
heart
goes
out
to
each
and
every
family
and
again
a
reminder
of
how
deadly
this
disease
is
as
well.
B
But
I've
said
this
in
the
past,
when
you've
seen
numbers
go
up,
you've
seen
numbers
go
down
best
to
look
at
these
trend
lines
over
a
seven
day
period
and
while
the
numbers
were
low
yesterday,
comparatively
we've
averaged
91
deaths
over
a
seven
day
period
in
the
states
a
little
better
than
the
102
deaths.
Tragically,
we
were
losing
the
week
prior,
but
seven
day,
average
tragically
is
91.
Just
on
on
saturday,
we
lost
90
individuals,
sunday
reported
in
nine
individuals.
So
I
don't.
B
I
want
people
to
be
cautious
about
running
with
that
news
as
somehow
that's
a
trend
or
should
be
a
headline
when,
in
fact,
we
should
be
very
sober
about
the
loss
of
an
average
of
91
human
beings
over
the
course
of
the
last
seven
days.
C
Hi
governor,
I
wanted
to
ask
you
about
president
trump's
comments
today
that
he's
interested
in
sending
federal
troops
potentially
into
oakland.
Has
the
administration
giving
you
any
heads
up
that
they
plan
to
send
a
homeland
security
agent
to
oakland
or
any
other
california
city,
and
if
they
did,
what
would
your
response
be.
D
Hi
governor
thanks
for
taking
my
question
with
respect
to
schools,
you
laid
out
the
the
criteria
last
week
for
schools
to
be
able
to
not
just
be
open
in
person,
but
stay
open
in
person,
given
that
that
depends
a
lot
on
the
situation
on
the
ground
and
to
avoid
a
situation
where
perhaps
having
to
open
up
and
close
down
and
a
lot
of
confusion
is
the
recommendation
at
this
point.
D
Would
it
be
better
if
schools
just
consider
if
they
are
consistently
on
this
list,
just
to
plan
not
to
open
in
the
fall?
And
additionally,
when
it
comes
to
testing
with
respect
to
schools?
And
overall,
do
we
have
an
idea
of
when
we
might
be
able
to
see
a
little
bit
more
of
the
supply
come
through
the
pipeline?
Dr
golly
talked
about
more
of
an
availability
of
those
tests
coming
through
schools
in
the
community,
but
when
we
actually
see
more
of
a
an
availability
of
tests,
not
just
a
testing
site.
B
Right,
no,
I
appreciate
that
and,
as
you
know,
we
provided
a
minimum
of
two
months
and
will
continue
to
provide
ppe
of
all
types,
not
just
masks,
face
coverings,
face
shields,
sanitation,
sanitizers
and
other
sanitation
equipment
to
the
schools,
we'll
continue
to
provide
them
as
needed
basis.
And,
as
you
know,
we
have
this
testing
strategy
where
we'll
cohort
individuals
on
a
consistent
basis
and
test
staff.
Look
as
more
testing
capacity
comes
into
play.
More
testing
will
be
made
available,
and
so
I
can
assure
you
the
reason
we
announced
a
new
testing
task
force.
B
The
reason
we
reconstituted
a
new
focus
a
week
ago,
dr
galley,
making
that
presentation
last
tuesday
was
to
intensify
our
areas
of
focus
and
that
would
include
our
schools
as
well
and
so
we're
very
aggressive
in
this
space.
We're
working
overtime
to
make
sure
that
we're
being
as
creative
as
possible
and
we've
made
a
subs
a
number
of
announcements,
not
just
dr
galley
but
myself
as
well
about
how
to
start
paying
for
these
tests
and
what
our
expectations
are
in
terms
of
the
health
plans
and
the
like.
B
B
That's
well
known
in
testing
fields,
blood
banks
been
using
it
for
years
and
years
that
allows
more
individuals
to
be
tested.
You
pull
those
samples
together,
they
provide
up
to
four
of
those
samples
to
be
collected.
Some
cases
you'll
see
it
well
in
excess.
We've
been
waiting
for
those
guidelines
to
come
down.
I
think
that's
going
to
open
up
the
opportunity
to
see
more
testing
along
those
lines.
B
It's
beneficial
in
one
respect
that
if
everybody
comes
out
negative,
everybody
goes
on
their
way,
but
it
just
takes
a
positive
to
come
in
there
and
then
everybody
has
to
be
retested
again,
but
nonetheless,
this
is
a
again
strategy
that
has
been
utilized
in
other
parts
of
the
world
and
finally,
we
are
able
to
move
forward
more
aggressively
here
in
the
state
of
california.
It
relates
to
the
question
specifically:
you
asked
about
preparing
for
the
rest
of
fall,
I'm
not
of
that
fatalist
opinion
in
this
respect.
B
B
It's
inside
us
not
in
front
of
us,
meaning
we
have
agency.
We
can
shape
this
conversation.
We
can
shape
the
future
by
our
specific
decisions,
and
that
is
my
hope
and
intention
is
that
we
bend
the
curve,
as
we
did
the
first
time
in
this
pandemic,
and
we
do
it
again
as
we're
dealing
with
this
flare-up
still
in
the
first
wave
of
this
pandemic,
and
so,
if
we
can
do
that,
we
can
get
our
kids
back
to
school.
I
have
four
kids,
I'm
saying
this
as
a
parent
as
well
as
governor
of
california.
B
That's
my
hope,
my
intention,
and
so
I
don't
want
people
to
just
believe
that
somehow
we
can't
shape
that
future
and
somehow
we're
gonna
roll
in
over
three
or
four
months,
and
someone
else
has
written
this
script.
For
us,
this
script
has
not
been
written.
We
have
the
ability
to
write
it.
E
Hi
governor,
thank
you,
you
mentioned
vice
president
pence
and
his
assistants
recently
that
new
york
times
reported
over
the
weekend
that
at
one
stage
you
were
asked
or
told
that
if
you
wanted
federal
government
help
to
get
swabs
that
you
would
have
to
ask
president
trump
himself
and
to
thank
him.
My
question
is:
was
that
the
first
and
the
only
time
you've
ever
gotten
such
a
directive
from
the
white
house
to
personally
request
aid
from
the
president,
whether
it
was
regard
to
the
covet
emergencies
or
wildfire
assistance?
B
The
better
question
was:
is
it
true?
The
answer?
Is
it's
not
true.
So
the
answer
your
second
and
third
question
or
two
questions
is
that
no
one
told
me
that
no
one
asked
me
that
so
never
came
to
me.
There
may
have
been
a
conversation,
but
it
certainly
didn't
come
to
me
and
to
the
extent
that
we
were
able
to
procure
those
swabs.
We
were
grateful
and
I
expressed
gratitude,
but
no
one
told
me
to
express
it.
B
I
I'm
very
consistent
anybody,
that's
watching
this,
anybody,
that's
willing
to
help
this
state,
I'm
going
to
express
deep
gratitude
for
that
help,
and
I
appreciate
you
acknowledging
that
we
have
acknowledged
the
vice
president's
help,
specifically
as
it
relates
to
190
personnel.
We
continue
to
need
more
support.
B
We
need
a
national
strategy,
not
just
support
here
in
the
state.
This
nation
needs
more
support
on
testing
at
a
national
level
and
we
continue
to
need
more
support
on
our
efforts
to
contact,
trace,
isolate
and
quarantine
individuals,
and
we
certainly
look
forward
to
be
able
to
complement
those
efforts
if
and
when
they
materialize.
F
Hi
governor
your
administration
initially
said
that
for
counties
to
get
those
attestations
to
reopen
more
quickly
than
the
rest
of
the
state
that
they
would
need
at
least
15
contact
tracers
for
every
100
000
residents.
We
reported
last
week
that
at
least
17
of
the
counties
that
secured
the
attestations
did
not
meet
that
threshold
when
they
submitted
their
documentation.
F
So
I'm
wondering
why
did
your
administration
decide
to
let
them
reopen
without
meeting
that
threshold
and
are
you
planning
to
handle
that
threshold
differently
next
time?
If
you
know,
indeed,
numbers
go
back
down
and
you're
faced
with
a
situation,
a
similar
situation,
where
counties
want
to
reopen
more
quickly,
will
you
be
handling
that
piece
of
it
differently?
Next
time.
G
G
Thank
you
governor.
Indeed,
when
we
rolled
out
our
attestation
process,
we
asked
counties
to
demonstrate
a
number
of
different
things,
and
one
of
them
was
around
contact
tracing.
We
asked
them
to
be
able
to
demonstrate
the
capability
and
have
a
plan
to
build
up
to
15
per
hundred
thousand
residents
in
their
county,
and
each
of
those
counties
did
that
they
were
not
required
to
have
them
identified
named
at
the
moment.
G
We
knew
that
we
were
building
up
our
contact
racing
program
that
we
at
that
time
had
a
lower
number
of
cases
being
reported
statewide
and
that
this
was
an
opportunity
to
prepare
around
contact
tracing,
not
necessarily
to
have
it
all
there.
So
at
that
time,
each
county
that
attested
to
that
variance
process
did
indeed
say
that
they
had
a
plan
and
a
credible
plan.
We
talked
to
many
of
the
counties
about
those
plans
and
verified
that
they
could
be
done.
G
We
also
knew
that
through
state
assistance
and
our
redeployment
of
state
staff,
which
we
set
a
goal
to
have
thousands
of
state
staff
ready
to
go,
support
the
counties
that
we
could
help
them
get
to
that
critical
level.
So
indeed,
at
the
time
maybe
there
were
counties
that
didn't
have
that
was
15
per
100
000
named.
We
knew
that
they
had
a
plan
to
get
there
and
continue
to
work
with
those
counties
to
meet
those
plans
and
go
beyond
that,
as
the
increased
level
of
transmission
requires.
B
I
should
note,
because
of
the
trained
cohort
of
contact
tracers
now
in
excess
of
10
000
in
the
state
phase
one.
We
look
forward
to
training
more
in
partnership
with
u.s,
ucla
and
ucsf,
with
a
new
platform
that
we
have
established.
We
also
and
it
connects
the
dot
to
the
schools.
As
I
mentioned
last
week,
I'll
reinforce
it
again.
Today
we
will
be
directing
our
contact
tracers
to
partner
with
county
health
officials
and
what
we
refer
to
as
laes.
H
Governor
hi,
I
know
you're
not
going
to
weigh
in
on
specific
falls,
but
I'm
wondering
how
much
of
an
app
open
weight
do
you
have
for
signing
bills
that
are
not
covered
related
lawmakers
have
been
asked
to
scale
back
their
legislative
packages,
and
your
administration
is
obviously
very
busy
with
with
the
cover
pandemic.
If
you
could
just
put
some
light
on
that.
B
Yeah,
I
know
I
I
appreciate
you-
we
were
preparing
for
wildfire
season.
We
were
successful
in
getting
pg
e
out
of
bankruptcy.
We
worked
to
balance
a
50
4.3
billion
dollar
budget
deficit.
We're
very
pleased
that
we
have
some
good
revenue
news.
That
appears
at
least
for
the
moment,
to
be
a
little
better
than
we
had
anticipated.
B
We
continue
to
be
doing
work
all
up
and
down
this
state,
a
myriad
of
different
sectors,
including
putting
out
what
we
refer
to
as
a
nofa
for
600
plus
million
dollars
to
address
the
homeless
crisis
in
the
state,
so
we're
not
backing
off
on
any
of
our
responsibilities
in
this
state.
So
I
appreciate
the
spirit
of
your
question,
but
no
my
responses
and
spirit
of
capacity.
B
There
are
many
things
we
must
attend
to
in
this
state
and
should,
with
some
urgency,
attend
to,
and
I
look
forward
to
signing
many
bills
that
the
legislature
signs
down
and
we're
working
very
collaboratively
on
a
number
of
those
bills
that
we
think
are
of
the
highest
priority
in
areas
that
are
well
defined
as
priorities
in
this
state
and
I'm
very
grateful
to
legislative
leadership,
the
speaker
and
the
pro
tem
for
how
they
have
organized
a
construct
during
this
very
difficult
time
where
they
are
not
in
a
traditional
legislative
session.
B
I
know
how
pressure
inducing
that
is
and
challenging.
That
is
for
them,
and
I
just
want
to
compliment
them
on
their
leadership
and
their
stewardship,
and
we
look
forward
to
working
collaboratively
together,
particularly
over
the
next
well
30,
to
60
days.
Well,
less
than
that
by
the
end
of
august,
we've
got
to
work
through
this
legislative
session
and
getting
a
lot
of
those
things
across
the
desk.
Hopefully
many
of
them
signed
and
the
extent
we
have
some
disagreements,
a
few
of
them
where
we
may
have
to
send
them
back
for
reconsideration.
I
Hi
governor,
we
have
been
talking
about
testing
a
lot
here
where
we
are
in
la
and
specifically
some
of
the
issues
that
we're
seeing
here
that
you
briefly
mentioned-
and
I
wanted
to
see
if
you
could
go
into
more
depth
on
was
the
amount
of
time
it's
taking
right
now.
Places
like
quest
are
saying
that
they're
seeing
an
average
wait
time
of
about
seven
days,
but
we've
talked
to
people
who've
seen
maybe
taking
13
days
to
get
results,
and
at
that
point
they
maybe
have
one
day
left
to
have
a
day
of
quarantine.
B
Yeah,
no
as
you've
seen
an
increase
in
the
total
number
of
tests,
and
I'll
just
remind
you,
you
don't
need
to
be
reminded,
but
those
that
may
be
tuning
in
just
remind
you.
Over
100
days
ago
we
were
testing
less
than
2
000
people
a
day.
That's
not
a
lot
of
strain
on
the
system
in
terms
of
getting
those
test
results
back
now,
as
we
noted
averaging
over
124
000
tests
a
day,
no
longer
2
124
000.
over
the
last
seven
days.
B
It's
not
just
california
you're,
seeing
increased
tests
across
the
country
of
these
national
labs
quest
being
one
of
those
national
labs,
putting
pressure
and
you're
absolutely
right
to
point
out
these
time.
Delays
which
are
profoundly
consequential,
particularly
in
vulnerable
populations,
congregate
settings,
skilled
nursing
facilities
in
incarcerated
settings
and
the
like.
But
all
that
said,
the
reason
our
task
force
was
reconstituted
was
to
substantively
answer
that
question
and
the
reason
dr
galley
is
here
today
and
was
here
a
week
or
so
ago,
when
he
laid
out.
B
G
G
You
know
testing
task
force
2.0,
if
you
will,
is
really
focusing
on
getting
the
collection
sites
on
the
one
hand,
and
matching
them
up
with
labs
that
can
process
those
tests.
On
the
other
hand,
more
quickly,
so,
instead
of
sending
all
of
those
tests
that
increasing
number
of
tests
that
the
governor
references
just
to
the
same
labs
that
we've
always
been
working
on,
we'll
contin
working
with
we'll
continue
to
work
with
we're,
exploring
how
to
get
those
labs
to
other
laboratories
where
they
can
be
processed
more
quickly.
G
So
in
some
ways
it's
matchmaking
between
where
the
tests
are
being
collected
and
where
the
tests
could
be
processed
to
bring
down
that
test.
Turnaround
time.
All
that
said,
we
did
lay
out
last
week,
prioritization
or
tiering
for
our
tests
that
both
were
who
should
be
tested
on
the
one
hand,
but
also
how
quickly
those
tests
should
be
processed
on
the
other,
and
we
hope
that
is
going
to
allow
us
to
make
sure
those
people,
those
populations
that
need
the
fastest
turnaround.
G
B
Very
dynamic,
the
disease,
it's
very
dynamic
in
many
respects,
meaning
california,
was
very
successful.
Early
on
nation's
first
stay-at-home
order
to
mitigate
the
growth
of
the
spread
of
this
disease.
We
were
able
to
extend
that
curve
for
a
period
of
time
that
gave
us
some
confidence
once
counties,
attested
self-attested,
to
be
able
to
meet
certain
criteria
that
we
can
phase
in
a
reopening
of
the
economy.
B
We
have
on
multiple
occasions,
presented
different
models,
in
fact,
so
much
so
that
we
presented
a
tableau
of
models
going
back
some
time
and
opened
up
our
data,
the
first
in
the
nation
to
do
machine,
readable
downloadable
data
that
people
can
mash
up
and
they
can
work
through
their
own
criteria
of
thinking
in
order
to
establish
a
different
framework
of
engagement
as
it
relates
to
modeling,
because
modeling
broadly
across
the
spectrum,
not
just
here
in
the
state
of
california
but
all
across
the
country
has
one
thing
in
common,
and
that
is
these
models
are
iterative,
they're,
constantly
being
updated,
they're
constantly
changing
in
the
basis
of
different
conditions.
B
So
we
went
out
aggressively
and
very
proudly
to
get
hundreds
of
millions
of
masks
through
a
byd
contract,
and
we
brought
those
in
no
other
state
in
the
country
is
more
well
in
doubt
in
terms
of
having
an
inventory
of
masks
and
bpe
we've
distributed
an
unprecedented
amount,
we've
gone
out
and
we've
acknowledged.
We
need
to
do
more
on
testing
and
we
put
the
accelerator
on
and
increase
that
testing
exponentially.
B
We
gave
a
phase
one
on
our
contact
tracing
and
it
assumed
you're
right
on
the
modeling
3600
cases
a
day
and
that's
why
we
continue
to
test
even
more
people
in
anticipation
that
we're
going
to
have
to
make
our
contact
tracing
even
more
robust
still.
So
it's
a
constant
memorandum
process
of
iteration,
I
point
no
fingers
never
have
never
will
no
fingers.
I
take
responsibility
as
governor
of
california,
because
this
is
my
state.
B
I
love
it
the
core
of
my
bones
in
my
soul
as
a
fifth
generation,
california,
I
care
about
every
single
person
in
this
state.
I
don't
care
if
you're
a
democrat,
a
republican.
You
agree
with
me,
disagree
with
me.
I
care
about
everybody,
and
my
job
is
try
to
bring
people
together.
My
job
is
to
try
to
hold
us
all
to
a
higher
level
of
accountability
and
expectation.
B
I
can't
demand
anything
of
people
that
they're
not
willing
to
do
on
their
own.
I
just
hope
to
influence
a
process
and
a
behavior
and
that's
what
today
was
about
encouraging
people
to
practice
some
more
personal
responsibility
along
the
lines
that
they
have
for
many
many
months.
The
reason
we
bent
that
curve
had
nothing
to
do
with
the
state
of
california
was
a
state
of
mind
that
was
demonstrably
advanced
by
40
million
californians.
B
That
met
that
moment
early
on
and
practiced
that
kind
of
social
distancing
through
the
stay-at-home
order
that
allowed
california
not
to
become
what
other
states
were
experiencing
and
now
because
we
reopened
and
the
modifications
and
the
guidelines
weren't
universally
abided
by
we're
asking
people
to
just
sort
of
sharpen
the
focus
sharpen
their
efforts.
And
that's
exactly
what
we're
doing
here
today.
K
Hi
governor
you've
talked
about
the
relative
safety
of
outdoor
settings
compared
to
indoor.
Earlier
today
you
mentioned
that
there's
new
guidance
for
hairdressers
and
barbers
to
be
outside.
Is
there
any
consideration
for
letting
schools
or
classrooms
operate
outside?
Could
that
be
part
of
the
waiver
process
for
schools
that
want
to
resume
in-person
learning.
B
It's
not
currently
in
terms
of
the
guidelines
we've
put
out
specifically
so
far,
but
I'm
open
argument
we're
interested
in
evidence
and
certainly
we'll
work
with
our
local
health
officials,
but
we
have
the
guidelines
that
we
set
out.
We
put
forth
as
it
relates
to
this
counter
monitoring
list
for
14
consecutive
days
once
you're
off
that
we
can
start
to
recalibrate
for
being
open
for
in-person
instruction.
B
We
talked
about
additional
waivers
that
are
afforded
elementary
schools,
which
are
also
part
of
that
guideline,
and
we
obviously
are
doing
everything
we
can
to
help
the
collective
and
that
is
to
deal
with
the
background
infection
rates
that
fundamentally
impact
the
decisions
for
schools
to
ultimately
open.
So
with
that,
let
me
thank
everybody
for
your
questions.
B
Your
time
and
your
consideration
tuning
in
I
want
to
remind
everyone,
power
and
potency
simple,
asked,
acting
simple
gesture
wearing
face
covering
again
not
just
to
protect
yourself
but
to
protect
others
and,
moreover,
to
send
a
message.
That's
important
at
this
moment
that
we
are
in
the
midst
of
this
pandemic.
B
None
of
that
easy.
I
recognize
and
again
not
admonishing
everyone,
I'm
just
encouraging
everybody.
The
sooner
we
do
that,
the
sooner
we
can
reopen
these
schools
sooner,
we
can
get
back
to
some
semblance
of
normalcy
sooner.
We
can
extinguish
this
virus,
it
will
be
extinguished,
but
it
can
be
done
on
an
accelerated
time
frame
and
that's
why
can't
press
upon
you
more?
Please,
please,
please,
wear
these
face
coverings!
Take
care,
everybody.