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From YouTube: Governor Newsom's COVID-19 Update - May 1, 2020
Description
On International Workers' Day, Governor Gavin Newsom today recognized the contributions and sacrifice of California's essential workforce, including health care workers, farmworkers, grocery workers, teachers, care givers and countless others keeping the state operating during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Governor highlighted state resources available for essential workers and resources for those who may have lost their jobs as a result of the pandemic.
Recorded May 1, 2020 in Sacramento
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
today,
as
many
people
know,
is
May
Day,
otherwise
known
as
International
Workers
day,
and
we
want
to
just
pause
and
reflect
and
thank
our
essential
workers
out
there
on
the
front
lines
are
not
just
our
health
care
workers
who
have
done
magnificent
job,
our
first
responders,
police
and
fire,
but
also
those
on
the
front
lines
like
our
grocers
farmworkers
and
others
that
are
making
sure
that
our
essential
needs
are
met
at
this
very
important
moment.
It's
right
to
pause
and
reflect,
and
thank
each
and
every
one
of
them.
B
We
talked
yesterday
about
a
new
portal
for
child
care,
but
again
you
can't
talk
about
the
workforce,
those
needs
of
the
essential
workers
and
those
that
are
active
and
searching
for
job
opportunities
that
have
been
displaced
without
talking
about
the
need
to
take
care
of
their
children.
Some
20,000
vouchers
have
been
set
aside
in
our
efforts
to
address
the
childcare
needs
of
thousands
and
thousands
of
critical
frontline
employees.
We
also
put
that
site
up
that
identifies
over
28,000
slots
that
are
available
today.
B
If
you
go
to
that
side
in
Cove
in
nineteen
ca.gov,
you
could
just
type
in
your
zip
code
and
you
can
see
a
number
of
licensed
facilities
in
and
around
your
community
with
available
slots
and
information
about
health
and
safety
and
quality
assessments
that
our
team
has
put
together.
But
child
care
has
been
foundational
and
we've
got
more
work
to
do
in
that
space.
We'll
have
more
resources
to
invest
in
that
space.
B
Coming
from
the
federal
government,
some
350
million
dollars
that
we'll
be
working
with
the
legislature
to
distribute
as
quickly
as
we
can
but
again
very
grateful
for
the
work
at
the
apartment
of
social
services
and
their
emphasis
and
focus
on
child
care
in
this
state.
Accordingly,
we
focused
on
sick
leave.
There
was
a
gap
with
the
federal
cares,
Act
as
it
relates
to
sick
leave
or
subsequent
acts
of
Congress,
as
it
related
to
sick
leave,
protecting
smaller
employers
and
employees,
which
was
critical.
B
But
we
wanted
to
make
sure
that
those
in
the
food
chain,
from
our
farm
workers
to
those
that
are
packing,
those
that
are
preparing
those
that
are
distributing
those
that
are
there
in
the
frontlines
in
our
grocery
stores.
Larger
employers
also
had
sickly
protection,
those
employees
getting
that
protection,
and
so
that's
something
else,
we're
very
proud.
B
We
were
able
to
advance
an
agreement
in
that
space
and
again
just
want
to
applaud
the
grocer's
Association
working
with
the
US
DW
and
one
of
the
largest,
the
largest
grocers
union
in
the
United
States,
for
their
outstanding
willingness
to
contribute
and
put
aside
their
differences
and
contribute
to
the
needs
of
these
critical
employees.
We
also
announced
a
number,
a
series
of
other
things
that
we
wanted
to
do
for
our
frontline
health
care
workers
care
for
care.
Givers.
You
recall
a
few
weeks
back.
B
We
announced
efforts
to
provide
stipends
for
these
caregivers
people
at
skilled
nursing
facilities
that
we're
spending
the
night
in
their
cars
because
they
were
scared
of
going
home
in
potentially
contaminated
or
infecting
their
community
or
their
household.
We
wanted
to
address
through
stipends.
There
needs
to
address
just
day-to-day
necessities,
and
we
have
already
been
able
to
distribute
some
36,000
stipends
in
that
program.
B
We
have
the
capacity
to
do
up
to
50,000
and
we
have
more
people
signing
up
every
single
day,
but
over
36,000
stipends
have
been
distributed
just
in
that
program
alone,
and
that
again
was
in
partnership
with
philanthropy
and
we're
very
grateful.
The
private
sector
stepped
up
and
helped
supported
those
efforts.
Accordingly,
those
individuals
that
were
spending
the
night
in
their
cars,
many
of
them
no
longer
are
because
we've
been
able
to
book
over
78,000
room
nights.
B
Seventy
eight
thousand
room
nights
free
or
deeply
discounted
hotel
rooms
for
our
caregivers
for
our
frontline
workers
across
the
spectrum
in
the
healthcare
delivery
system,
and
we're
very
proud
of
that.
Thousands
and
thousands
of
individuals
being
able
to
take
a
shower,
isolate
in
a
room,
go
back
to
work,
come
back
and
just
have
a
place.
They
can
call
our
home
their
own
before
they
get
home
and
back
into
their
communities,
and
that
programs
really
just
taken
off
and
has
really
delivered
on
the
promise
that
we
promoted
I
recognize.
B
We
can
always
do
more
and
we're
trying
to
do
more
still,
but
over.
Seventy
eight
thousand
room
nights
is
a
wonderful
start.
The
program
just
started
ramping
up
a
few
weeks
back.
We've
also
been
pushing
a
series
of
other
efforts
to
take
care
of
people,
particularly
in
our
skilled
nursing
facilities,
working
with
caregivers
with
our
ia
IHSS
workers
as
well.
We've
been
doing
these
wellness
checks,
not
just
its
nest,
but
in
the
IHSS
system
we've
been
able
to
do
173,000
wellness
checks.
B
So
they
can
live
in
dignity
and
live
in
place,
so
they
don't
have
to
end
up
in
our
adult
facilities,
our
assisted
living
in
facilities,
in
some
cases,
even
our
sniffs,
and
so
that
was
a
foundational
principle
and
effort
and
I'm
very
pleased
by
the
incredible
work
of
those
teams
and
people
all
up
and
down
the
state
to
be
able
to
check
in
on
177
thousand
people.
We
talked
about
augmenting
the
workforce
and
we
had
some
remarkable
numbers.
This
Health
Corps
announcement
we
made
a
number
of
weeks
back.
B
It
was
all
around
focusing
on
the
surge.
Remember
we
talked
about
the
surge
and
the
need
not
just
to
find
physical
beds,
alternative
care
sites
to
hospitals
and
the
like,
but
enough
PPE,
which
I'll
get
to
in
a
moment
and
enough
personnel
that
we
can
surge
in
to
help
support
those
alternative
care
sites.
We
had
a
universe
that
was
quite
large
of
a
potential
work
group.
We
fortunately
to
this
date,
haven't
needed
them.
Tens
of
thousands
of
people
filled
out
applications
on
the
site.
I
mentioned
a
few
weeks
back
some
of
our
duplicates.
B
Some
of
them
didn't
necessarily
work
to
meet
our
needs,
but
there
are
hundreds
and
hundreds
of
people
that
were
hired
through
that
healthcare,
or
rather
Health
Corps
effort
and
I
just
want
to
acknowledge
their
incredible
work.
We
primarily
focused
on
the
skilled
nursing
facilities.
We
have
just
as
an
example.
This
is
a
modest
example,
but
impactful
example:
we've
been
talking
about
these
strike
teams.
These
efforts
on
infectious
control
infection
control
in
our
skilled
nursing
facilities.
B
If
we
need
more
people,
will
access
more
people,
tens
of
thousand
people
applied,
not
everybody
fits
a
need
or
appropriately
applied,
but
the
reality
is
that
response
was
overwhelming
and
humbling,
and
it
may
be
critical
moving
forward
that
we,
as
we
begin
to
toggle
back
and
make
meaningful
augmentations
to
our
stay
at
home
order.
If
we
do
start
to
see
some
community
spread
and
we
start
seeing
the
numbers
grow,
having
the
physical
assets
in
place
already
and
having
this
work
group
that
we're
still
vetting
will
provide
an
incredibly
important
resource
for
us.
B
If
that
personnel
is
needed.
I
mentioned
PPE.
It's
always
important
to
remind
people
of
PPE,
because
that's
a
worker
safety
issue
and
goes
deep
to
the
spirit
of
May
Day
in
International
Workers
day
we
got
to
protect
these
frontline
employees
and
not
just
provide
paid
sick
leave
in
stipends
and
hotel
rooms
and
make
sure
that
we
have
a
health
corps
that
can
help
support
the
most
vulnerable,
but
also
make
sure
that
we
have
their
protective
gear.
We
are
really
pleased
this
week,
I
announced
earlier
this
week.
B
B
The
fact
that
they've
already
come
in
is
a
very
encouraging
sign
and,
as
I
said
as
soon
as
they
come
in,
we
try
to
get
these
things
out.
I
recognize
in
95s
our
big
part
of
the
future
orders
coming
in,
and
we
have
responsibilities
for
gloves
and
shields
and
gowns
and
all
the
rest
of
the
protective
gear.
That
is
also
important
not
only
for
our
essential
workforce,
but
to
broaden,
as
we
begin
to
reopen
our
economy
by
the
way.
B
Just
on
that,
this
PPE
question:
we
talk
a
lot
about
testing
Monday,
we'll
talk
about
tracing
Kien
and
isolation
issues,
a
quarantine
update
you
on
our
contracts
there
and
our
workforce
efforts
there
and
some
of
the
technology
we'll
use
to
guide
those
operations.
But
PPE
is
fundamental
terms
of
reopening
our
economy
sooner
so
that
we
can
make
sure
when
we
have
new
guidelines,
those
that
are
coming
up
organically
at
the
local
level
or
those
that
were
mandating
from
the
state
level.
B
Those
guidelines
always
include
protective
gear
that
are
essential
for
businesses
to
reopen
and
provide
customers
the
option
on
face
coverings
as
providing
as
well
as
providing
workers
that
protection
they
deserve.
Ppe
is
foundational
in
that
it's
just
another
reason.
We
have
to
be
really
deliberative
on
how
we
reopen
this
economy.
I
I
know
it's
May
Day
and
on
May
Day
every
year
since
my
birth,
that's
a
day
to
express
yourself,
which
I
think
is
a
wonderful
tradition
in
this
country,
and
people
protesting
the
status
quo,
which
is
also
a
wonderful
point
of
privilege.
B
We
have
in
the
United
States,
and
we
should
celebrate
that,
and
we
should
thank
people
for
expressing
themselves,
but
that
expression.
Obviously
this
year,
is
one
of
frustration
and
concern
and
deeply
understandable
anxiety
about
the
economy
and
the
fate
and
future
their
families,
and
this
state
in
our
nation
in
the
world
collectively
we're
trying
to
build,
and
so
I
just
want
folks
to
know
we're
getting
very
close
to
making
really
meaningful
augmentations
to
that
stay
at
home
order.
We
are,
you
know,
I
always
said
weeks,
not
months
about
four
or
five
days
ago.
B
But
that's
a
good
sign
issue
as
well
of
training
becomes
really
important
in
the
efforts
to
identify
the
needs
of
our
workers,
both
those
that
are
essential
that
need
to
be
retrained
and
get
recalibrated
in
terms
of
opportunities
within
the
existing
workforce
and
change
their
previous
job
description
to
meet
the
needs
at
the
moment,
but
also
those
that
have
been
displaced.
We
were
able
to
get
17
point.
B
Eight
million
dollars
out
in
these
training
grants
there
42
workforce
boards
and
just
in
Southern
California
that
were
beneficiary
of
10
million
of
that
17
point:
8
million
the
rest
distributed
throughout
the
rest
of
the
state
of
California.
So
those
training
dollars
also
our
foundational
important
in
these
efforts,
and
so
all
these
things
sort
of
build
up.
The
wage,
Garden
garnishment
work
that
we
did
to
make
sure
that
any
of
the
federal
dollars
that
were
being
draw
down
that
you
can't
have
those
dollars
re
distributed
to
a
debt
collector
still
have
to
pay
child
support.
B
You
still
have
other
obligations
to
victims,
if
indeed
you're
responsible,
but
the
garnishment
was
another
example
of
an
effort
that
we
hope
softens
the
edge.
The
most
important,
though,
and
didn't
mean
to
use
this
or
as
a
point
of
emphasis,
the
last
point,
but
it's
important
point
most
important.
It's
the
issue
of
unemployment
insurance,
3.9
million
folks,
since
just
March
12th
have
filed
for
unemployment
insurance,
we've
been
able
to
street
7.5
billion
dollars,
7.5
billion
dollars
now
has
been
distributed
to
people
in
need.
B
B
Thirteen
hundred
forty
people
was
not
enough
to
redeploy
to
help
the
call
volume
and
distribute
these
benefits.
We
added
an
additional
six
hundred
people,
just
the
last
number
of
days
that
are
being
retrained
and
redeployed
as
we
speak,
they're
not
all
there
yet
but
they're
in
the
process
and
the
queue
talked
about
the
chat.
Bots
we
put
up
the
new
texting
technology.
New
eligibility
changes,
we're
starting
to
see
I
know.
I
may
not
feel
this
way
for
some
of
you
that
have
called
in
you're
deeply
frustrated,
particularly
cuz.
B
So
that's
the
update
on
the
unemployment
side,
the
PUA
side,
good
work
in
progress
in
terms
of
of
getting
support
to
our
frontline
workers.
We
can't
thank
you
enough
for
the
incredible
work
that
you
have
done
through
very
challenging
and
difficult
times.
I've
said
this
on
many
occasions:
it's
not
just
those
frontline
workers
that
we
think
about
in
the
healthcare
industry,
but
also
in
the
food
industry,
but
that
also
includes
our
truckers
and
our
logistics
folks,
the
folks
that
are
in
the
meatpacking
plants,
the
folks
that
are
in
manufacturing
facilities.
They
are
also
unsung
heroes.
B
In
this
effort
and
I
know,
this
may
not
sound
like
a
big
thing,
but
I
thought
it
might
be
important.
We
want
to
take
care
of
our
truckers
at
some
of
these
truck
stops
up
and
down
the
the
highways
they
have
a
hard
time
getting
food,
and
so
one
of
the
things
we
were
able
to
do
at
least
at
14
sites.
We
want
to
get
more
of
these
up.
I
just
offer
it
its
point
of
consideration.
We
got
these
food
trucks
that
was
not
legal.
We
made
some
amendments
through
an
executive
order.
B
Make
that
legal
inappropriate,
but
we
got
these
food
trucks
up
to
help
support
our
truckers.
A
lot
of
Teamsters,
a
lot
of
others.
Independent
I,
just
want
to
also
acknowledge
all
of
you
for
the
incredible
work.
You're
doing
you're
moving
things
around
you're,
keeping
things
open,
keeping
things
going.
All
those
early
supply
chain
concerns
you
substantially
mitigated
and
I
just
want.
You
know
we
can't
thank
you
enough.
B
B
Everybody
has
worth
that
all
of
us
should
celebrate
whatever
vocation
you
have
whatever
profession,
you
have
chosen
to
sum
total
of
millions
and
millions
of
acts
of
individual
generosity
and
spirit
and
expertise
that
keep
a
society
together
and
whole
and
make
an
economy
buzz,
and
so
I
just
want
to
thank
you
for
building
our
economy
and
allowing
us
to
work
hard
to
get
through
this
difficult
time.
So
we
can
get
the
economic
conditions
back
where
you
deserve
them
to
be.
B
Let
me
briefly
before
I
transition
and
close
and
answer
any
questions
just
make
some
additional
comments
on
that.
Earlier
this
week
we
talked
about
new,
phased
approach
to
getting
people
back
to
work
with
meaningful
modifications.
As
you
know,
we
made
some
modifications
that
I'm
not
Sur,
got
a
lot
of
attention,
but
deserve
some
attention
and
relates
to
faith-based
services,
as
it
relates
to
ability
to
sell
cars
with
conditions
and
work,
to
open
up
bike
stores
and
to
continue
our
efforts
to
begin
to
modify
a
reopening
of
the
economy.
Those
have
already
taken
shape.
B
We
talked
yesterday
about
some
expansion,
as
it
relates
to
outdoor
activities,
clarification
around
issues
of
golf
and
tennis
and
issues
around
rollerblading,
and
you
know,
kicking
the
soccer
ball
with
your
family
and
and
others
all
with
an
eye
on
a
public
health
frame
and
public
safety
first
mindset.
Those
will
continue
to
update
on
a
consistent
basis,
but
I
know
you
are
all
very,
very
eager
to
hear
about
the
larger
sector
and
potentially,
regional,
not
just
potentially
and
regional
changes
that
we
are
working
very
hard
day
in
and
day
out
to
advance.
B
I
can
only
say
this
we're
getting
very,
very
close
to
making
some
announcements
that
I
think
will
be
very
meaningful
to
people
in
retail
sector
hospitality
sector
this.
That
includes
in
that
second
phase,
restaurants,
again
with
serious
modifications,
we've
got
teams
of
people
working
not
just
internally
but
externally,
to
look
at
each
type
of
business
within
each
type
of
industry
and
looking
at
sectoral
and
individual
augmentation
and
guidelines
that
will
be
necessary
and
a
requirement
of
any
meaningful
reopening.
And
yes
I'll,
say
it
again.
B
I
deeply
understand
the
rural
differentiation
between
some
of
the
dense
urban
differentiation.
We
hear
you
we're
paying
attention
to
you.
We
are
engaging
many
many
of
you
very
directly,
your
health
Directors
in
particular,
and
working
not
just
individual
by
individual
basis,
city
by
city,
we're
also
working
with
the
League
of
Cities,
representing
all
480
plus
cities
in
the
state
and
SESAC,
which
is
our
County
arm
and
all
58
counties,
and
so
those
conversations
continue
we're
processing
them
I.
B
Just
again,
I
want
to
be
crystal
clear,
know
that
and
know
that
I'm
looking
forward
to
answering
your
call
dressing,
your
anxiety
and
and
and
it's
not
lost
on
me-
we're
not
turning
our
back
to
those
concerns.
We
recognize
the
economic
pain
we
recognize
how
that
manifests
in
health
issues
as
well.
We
said
this
in
the
beginning
of
the
week
when
we
put
out
our
principles
and
our
guidelines
there's
the
health
consequence
we
have
to
address
with
c19
with
Kovan
19,
but
there's
also
a
health
consequence
of
an
economy.
B
I
don't
want
to
over
promise,
but
I
just
want
to
assure
you
that
if
we
can
hold
the
line
and
continue
to
do
good
work
and
just
avoid
the
temptation
get
back
and
congregate
with
us
with
people,
ways
where
we
can
see
an
increase
in
the
spread
we'll
get
there
much
sooner
than
many
people,
perhaps
think.
Let
me
just
make
this
point
on
the
basis
of
the
data
that
allows
me
to
make
that
point,
and
the
data
today
was
was
slightly
encouraging
and
same
time.
B
Deadly
and
discouraging-
and
let
me
explain
both-
we
reached
two
milestones
number
one.
We
tragically
have
now
lost
the
lives
of
over
2000
people
in
the
state
of
California.
The
number
of
deaths
in
the
last
24
hours
were
not
encouraging,
but
were
part
of
that
bucket
of
discouraging
and
devastating
to
the
families
that
have
been
torn
apart
because
of
a
loss
of
a
loved
one
and
the
communities
impacted
by
the
loss
of
one's
life
that
was
integral
in
to
the
quality
of
life.
For
so
many
ninety-one
people
lost
their
lives
last
24
hours.
B
That
number
yesterday
was
up
today
in
similar
vein.
We're
now
over
2,000
people
lost
their
lives.
Don't
think
this
virus
has
disappeared.
Just
ask
the
family
members
of
those
that
have
tragically
lost
loved
ones.
We
also
reached
the
second
milestone
over
50,000
50,000
cases
of
positive
test
results.
They'll
come
back
for
Kovan
19
over
50,000.
Now
numbers
went
up
again
now.
The
good
news
is
so.
B
Did
our
testing
over
650
5,000
tests
now
been
conducted
still
not
close
to
where
we
need
to
be,
but
by
the
way
it's
May
1st
I
wanted
to
get
here
by
May
1st
and
we've
been
averaging
over
25,000
tests
every
single
day,
just
as
we
said,
we
would
I
say
that
not
spiking
the
ball
I'm,
not
naive,
that
that
number
can
be
fleeting
and
challenging
to
paste
on
supplies
and
based
upon
many
different
factors,
but
yesterday
was
close
to
30
thousand
tests
that
were
reported.
I
just
remind
you
that
were
reported
in.
B
We
still
believe
there
many
tested
or
not
being
reported
we're
doing
everything
we
can
to
get
to
everybody,
but
there
are
a
lot
of
individuals
out
of
groups
that
are
doing
testing
that
we
just
need
to
get
in
the
system,
but
that's
encouraging,
but
the
testing
comes
with
those
discouraging
numbers
of
more
positives
and
I.
Just
want
to
remind
you,
deaths
and
positives
reached
some
very
important
milestones.
We're
not
out
of
the
woods,
but
the
good
news
I
mentioned
good
and
discouraging
is
our
ICU
numbers
were
flat.
B
Yesterday,
our
hospitalizations
actually
went
down
two
percent
yesterday
and
then
that
Pui
I
know
I
said
PUA.
This
is
all
confusing
and
I
understand
that
and
appreciate
it.
The
Pui
number
in
relationship
to
icy
use,
tents
of
care
units
and
hospitalizations
in
the
state
is
an
important
number
and
that's
people
under
investigation
for
potential
kovat
that
are
the
process
of
getting
test
results
and
the
like.
We
saw
a
significant
decline.
B
Thirteen
point:
nine
percent
in
both
categories
I,
see
use
in
hospitalization
yesterday
in
the
Pui
space
so
flat
in
terms
of
total
ICU
beds,
but
drop
in
PU
is
a
modest
decrease
in
Australasian,
but
a
nice
drop
in
the
py.
So
though,
it's
good
news,
bad
news,
positives
deaths,
good
news,
stable
line
that
you
have
provided
us
the
opportunity
to
announce
because
of
your
individual
behavior
and
the
physical
distancing
that
you
have
done
it's
scale
in
this
state.
B
That's
why
I
feel
some
confidence
that,
over
the
course,
the
next
week,
we're
gonna
be
able
to
make
some
announcements
that
will
give
people
some
more
confidence
in
the
ability
for
California
get
back
on
its
economic
feet.
So
I
know
no
one
wants
to
hear
the
word
patience,
so
I
won't
use
that
word.
I'll
just
reflect
on
the
fact.
No
one
wants
to
hear
that
word.
B
Their
sacrifice
and
again
I
just
wanted
to
thank,
in
particular
all
of
the
the
folks
that
also
are
not
part
of
that
list,
but
are
more
essential,
perhaps
than
any
other
of
those
are
the
parents
out
there
and
all
the
uncompensated
care
that
mothers
in
particular,
do
every
single
day
is
a
special
month.
For
other
reason
and
I've
said
this
can't
say
it
enough:
we
owe
particular
debt
to
all
our
mothers.
B
All
the
women
out
there
that
disproportionately
are
in
this
care
economy
that
just
done
heroic
work
so
often
unrecognized,
undervalued,
I,
hope
no
more,
but
we
cannot
impress
upon
I
think
all
all
of
us
cannot
I
think
express
enough
our
deep
gratitude
and
respect
to
those
mothers,
those
parents
out
there
that
are
doing
double
duty
right
now,
with
these
schools
being
closed
and
all
the
extra
work
that
is,
that
we're
all
under
in
terms
of
heavy
burdens.
So
thank
you
as
well
that
group
and
with
that
happy
answer,
any
questions.
Marissa.
D
Hi
thanks
governor
I
know
that
there
has
been
a
lawsuit
filed
by
Orange
County
against
the
beach
quote
or
by
some
residents
down
there
and
I
wanted
to
see
your
reaction
there
and
if
you
have
time,
I'm,
also
curious
about
sterilizations
of
masks,
which
you
authorized
in
April
I'm
hearing
in
San
Francisco
there's
some
pushback
from
the
unions
who
are
concerned
about
the
safety
of
that
yeah.
B
I,
don't
I,
don't
know
specifically
about
a
particular
issue
of
what
San
Francisco's
doing.
I
can
just
tell
you
what
we
announced
a
few
weeks
ago
and
thank
you
for
prompting
this.
We
made
a
deal
with
a
company
called
Patel
to
put
together
sterilization
unit
of
n95
masks
the
first
one
went
up
and
is
operational
in
and
around
Burbank
in
Southern
California
there's
a
second
unit.
B
B
These
n95
masks,
I
she's,
just
know
we
have
distributed
I,
don't
know
another
state
that
can
claim
this,
though
I
hope
I'm
wrong,
cuz
and
be
encouraging
to
hear
of
other
states
distributing
over
forty
four
million
and
ninety-five
mass
44
million,
but
will
need
multiples
even
of
that
to
meet
the
needs
as
we
transition
into
the
future
in
a
post,
kovat
world
as
it
relates
to
the
lawsuit
all
I
can
say,
is
doesn't
surprise
me
and,
and
we'll
see.
Forgive
me
for
saying
this
we'll
see
what
happens
this
afternoon.
E
Hi
governor
a
couple
things
first
of
all,
obviously
you're
keenly
aware
of
protests
going
on
all
around
the
state
and
of
the
lawsuits
being
filed,
multiple
lawsuits.
You
know
these
folks
are
calling
you
a
tyrant
and
a
fascist
and
you're
being
driven
by
ego,
not
by
data.
Can
you
make
the
case
that
you
are,
in
fact
being
the
decisions
you're
making
are,
in
fact
being
driven
by
data
and
science
and
the
posture
we're
seeing
from
you
today,
where
you're
being
more
optimistic
talking
about
days?
E
Not
weeks
is
still
driven
by
that,
as
opposed
to
by
the
political
pressure.
You
seem
possibly
to
be
feeling
today
and
then
second,
you
mentioned
two
days
ago
that
there
was
going
to
be
a
further
clarification
in
terms
of
the
bay
area,
this
coming
Monday,
allowing
groups
of
kids,
12
or
fewer
kids
to
gather
not
just
in
daycare,
but
in
some
additional
settings.
Have
you
gotten
that
clarification
is
that,
okay,
now
with
the
state
order
in
terms
of
what
the
Bears
plan
to
do
on
Monday,
yeah.
B
We're
in
fact,
across
the
spectrum,
not
just
in
terms
of
those
numbers,
our
team's
been
working
hand
in
glove
with
the
six
counties
and
one
individual
city,
so
we
are
in
line
and
we're
very
pleased
with
that
partnership
and
that
progress
as
it
relates
to
the
issue
of
data
every
single
day,
Doug
I
give
you
the
data
every
single
day
at
noon.
I
provide
information
every
single
week.
We
give
you
an
update
in
terms
of
the
indicators
we
laid
out
specific
indicators.
We've
been
highlighting
those
indicators
drawing
down
more
deeply
on
each
indicator.
B
We
did
one
on
testing
and
tracing
and
tracking
and
quarantine
in
isolation.
We
did
one
earlier
this
week
specific
to
businesses
and
sectoral
strategies,
even
regional
strategies,
and
then
I
update
you
on
the
number
of
deaths
every
day
update
you
and
the
number
P
you
eyes
and
not
just
number
of
high-school
ization
and
ICU
patients
and
you've
seen
those
lines
becoming
stable.
So
that's
giving
us
some
confidence
and-
and
that's
why,
earlier
this
week
on
Monday,
we
didn't
wait
to
respond
to
others.
B
Civilizations,
we
saw
a
significant
Cline
and
PU
is
both
for
hospitalizations
and
I.
See
use
that's
even
more
encouraging,
based
upon
series
of
other
factors
all
around
the
frame
of
the
six
health
indicators
that
we've
been
very
public
about,
gives
me
confidence
moving
forward.
But
it
also
gives
me
a
point
about
to
reinforce
a
point
of
caution,
and
that
is
we
can
scroll
that
up.
We
can
settle
that
back
by
making
bad
decisions.
All
of
that
works,
because
people
have
done
an
incredible
job
in
their
physical
distancing.
B
We
have
that
with
our
staff
I'm,
a
I
believe
in
the
Socratic
method
means
different
points
of
views
and
perspectives
brought
to
bear
in
a
forum
of
trust
where
people
can
put
their
points
of
view
to
the
test
and
be
challenged
and
that's
the
way
we
conduct
ourselves
and
that's
another
way
of
saying
what
I
say.
Often
and
you've
heard
this-
that
we're
not
ideological.
C
So
what's
your
message
governor
to
those
rural
parts
of
California
that
are
still
facing
really
extreme
testing
problems
in
terms
of
the
site
and
supplies,
and
if
you
could
talk
about
how
Keith
Kountz
have
factored
into
the
state's
of
where
to
locate
from
a
bone
table
website
that
would
be
really
helpful.
Yeah.
B
So
all
I
can
say
is
what
I've
been
saying.
The
last
week
you
may
heard
earlier
this
week
announced
the
first
of
the
80
sites
that
we
have
have
well
committed
to
advancing
with
our
partnership
with
Optima
serve
80
additional
sites
disproportionally
not
exclusively,
but
disproportionately
focused
on
rural
California
I
mentioned
a
week
or
so
ago.
The
first
one
up
in
Humboldt
mention
the
one
up
in
Shasta
Sutter.
B
You
get
a
sense,
we're
trying
to
make
sure
we're
doing
justice
to
that
are
rich
there,
specifically
just
to
be
held
to
account
42
sites
that
will
be
up
additional
sites
by
Monday
and
will
substantially
have
incorporated
into
our
larger
task
force
strategy,
an
effort
to
implement
on
the
need
for
rural
Californians
that
have
been
under
tested
and
under
resourced
to
have
those
needs
met.
We
did
those
maps,
as
you
recall,
of
testing
deserts
in
the
state
and
making
sure
these
testing
sites
are
proximate
to
people
in
and
around
those
communities.
B
B
We
need
to
get
a
better
sense
of
what
the
community
spread
is
because
in
many
cases
we
just
don't
know
because
there
hasn't
been
adequate
testing
and
that's
why
this
partnership
with
optim
Sur
was
so
important
and
so
foundational,
and
it's
just
one
of
many
steps
to
increase
testing
and
a
very
targeted
in
strategic
way,
also
again
focusing
on
inner
city
inner
cities
all
up
and
down
in
the
state
of
California.
So
that's
that's
where
we
are.
We
have
a
testing
task
force
and
Angela.
Let
me
have
a
member
of
that
task.
B
F
Thank
You
governor
today
is
the
1st
of
the
month
and
there
are
elected
officials
and
organizations
across
the
state
calling
on
you
to
cancel
rent
and
mortgage
payments.
You
know
folks,
who
are
out
of
work,
are
worrying
about
eviction
and
debt
on
the
other
side
of
this,
especially
if
they're
going
to
be
responsible
for
back
pay.
So
will
you
cancel
rent
and
mortgage
payments,
or
will
you
make
any
policy
changes
at
the
state
level
regarding
rent
and
mortgages?
Well,.
B
As
you
know,
we've
made
very
substantial
progress
on
mortgages.
We
were
the
first
state
to
announce
a
partnership
with
the
largest
banks
in
the
United
States
on
mortgage
forbearance,
no
impact
on
your
credit
rating,
other
components
of
that
announcement,
including
debit
cards
and
other
issues
related
to
fees
and
fines.
We
were
very
vocal
about
that
and
very
proud
of
that
announcement
in
partnership.
B
As
you
know,
we
followed
up
at
scale
with
an
executive
order
in
the
state
of
California
relating
to
civil
proceedings
and
criminal
proceedings,
as
it
relates
to
evictions
and
providing
a
framework
of
time
and
little
relief.
The
stress
related
to
the
same.
We
also
provided
clarification
for
cities
and
counties
that
wanted
to
go
further
on
some
of
their
protections
for
tenants,
cities
like
San,
Francisco,
San,
Jose
LA
went
a
lot
further,
but
they
had
the
ability
to
do
so
with
them
clarification
based
on
it,
even
based
on
that
third
executive
order.
B
So
we've
done
a
lot
in
this
space,
we'll
continue
to
consider
doing
more,
but
it
extends
not
just
it
didn't
expire
last
night.
It
extends
into
this
next
month,
but
we'll
continue
our
vigilance
and
monitoring
conditions
in
real
time
and
it's
an
answer
to
your
question,
and
that
is
we're
looking
at
not
just
the
issues
of
evictions
and
the
agreements
on
moratorium,
forbearance
related
to
mortgages,
but
there
were
timelines
you're
correct
with
many
of
these
announcements,
and
we
are
constantly
looking
to
update
those
timelines
working
to
extend
these
partnerships
voluntarily
and
it
extend.
B
Our
legal
responsibilities
are
legal
thresholds
for
subsequent
and
further
actions
and
just
know
in
this
space,
obviously
with
so
many
renters
and
feeling
deep
anxiety
and
stress,
we're
going
to
be
very
sensitive
that,
but
but
through
may,
we
I
think
we'll
have
effects
few
weeks
to
really
put
together
something
if
we
do
feel.
We
need
to
do
more.
That
will
be
done
in
council
and
partnership
with
our
cities
counties
and
with
a
lot
of
these
organizations
that
we've
already
engaged
in
Marissa.
G
Hey
governor
thanks
for
the
taking
my
question
I'm
here
at
the
Capitol,
looking
at
hundreds,
if
not
a
South
here
on
the
Capitol
lawn,
not
practicing
social
distancing
by
any
means,
I'm,
also
looking
at
both
CHP
officers
as
well
as
Sacramento
police,
not
intervening
at
what
point
should
enforcement
come
into
play
here
and
at
what
point
should
you
get
involved?
That's.
B
A
good
question
I
got
involved
in
every
protest
up
and
down
the
state.
I
wouldn't
be
involving
myself
and
the
efforts
to
start
to
make
meaningful
modifications
to
our
state
home
order
and
really
attend
to
a
lot
of
the
issues
in
the
state.
I
count
and
defer
to
our
team
at
the
California
Highway
Patrol,
a
particularly
the
State
Capitol
I,
don't
get
involved
directly
in
permitting
decisions.
B
I
think
that
would
be
an
unfortunate
place
for
a
politician
or
elected
official
to
go,
but
what
I
care
deeply
about
as
a
foundational
issue
which
I
am
responsible
for
ultimately
is
public
health
and
public
safety
broadly
defined
I'll
defer
to
the
specifics,
there's
a
latest
enforcement
to
the
Commissioner
of
the
California
Highway
Patrol
and
hope
you
do
as
well
and
make
sure
they
are
responsive
to
you
in
terms
of
what
you're
seeing
I'm,
not
there
I'm
here
as
it
relates
to
the
protesters
all
I
ask
for
is
this.
That
is
take
care
of
yourself.
B
You
know
we're
face
covering
do
justice
to
physical
distancing.
You
don't
want
to
contract
this
disease.
I
just
mentioned
50,000
people
have
been
tested
positive.
Another
91
families
torn
apart
because
of
loss
of
life
2,000,
he
means
of
lost
their
life,
impacted
the
entire
state
rural,
not
just
urban.
This
disease
doesn't
know
if
you're
a
protester
Democrat
Republican.
B
If
you
support
the
election
of
one
candidate
or
the
out
stir
of
another,
it
just
knows
one
thing,
and
that
is
its
host
and
as
a
remarkable
ability,
people
with
asymptomatic
conditions
to
transport
to
someone
else,
and
so
just
protect
yourself.
Protect
your
family,
protect
your
kids,
your
your
parents,
your
grandparents,
your
friends,
your
neighbors
people
that
you're
protesting
with
that's
all
I
would
say
to
them,
and
and
thank
them
for
their
expression
of
a
free
speech.
H
H
B
Could
do
to
change
it
at
this
point:
I'm
working
overtime
to
rise
above
the
politics,
the
finger-pointing,
the
bickering
back
and
forth
I
think
you've
seen
that
I
hope
folks
noticed
that
trying
to
do
my
best
in
that
space
working
cooperatives
we
possibly
can
with
the
administration
and
at
all
levels,
incredible
work,
partnerships
with
CDC
and
HHS
and
work
we're
doing
their
organization
called
a
spur
and
credible
work
above
fen
and
FEMA
administrative
representatives.
So
we
are
very
very
pleased
by
that
partnership
and
in
the
progress
we've
made
together
in
this
space.
B
Again,
this
knows
no
boundaries.
It
knows
no
lines.
You
look
at
some
of
the
more
conservative
parts
politically
in
the
state.
They
have
been
impacted
by
this
virus,
particularly
in
skilled
nursing
facilities.
A
lot
of
seniors
lost
their
lives.
I,
don't
think
death
certificates
after
your
democrat
or
republican,
but
I
can
assure
you
if
you
look
at
those
death
certificates.
All
americans
are
represented
in
in
terms
of
that
tragic
loss
of
life,
regardless
of
their
political
stripe,
and
so
we
we're
we're
human
beings
and
we're
all,
as
dr.
B
King
said,
bound
together
by
a
web
of
mutuality.
We're
all
in
this
together
and
so
I
I
hope
we
can
maintain
that
spirit,
but
but
the
spirit
also
of
participatory
democracy
is
also
alive
and
well
I'm
passionate
about
participatory
democracy.
Democracy
is
not
about
just
standing
still
and
standing
pat.
It's
also
about
free
expression,
and
so
I
also
applaud
that
and
thank
everybody
for
their
willing
to
do
it
all
I
ask
is
just
do
it
safely.
B
Do
it
thoughtfully,
not
just
for
yourself
but
for
your
neighbors
and
for
others
and
be
an
example
in
that
respect
and
and
and
I
know,
sometimes
that's
more
difficult
than
other
times,
and
so
I
would
just
offer
that
as
a
pointing
consideration.
Let
me
be
very
specific
with
you,
though,
on
the
first
part
of
your
question
we
haven't
been
passive.
We
haven't
been
just
waiting
for
the
right
moment.
We
were
one
of
the
first.
B
In
fact,
I
think
we
were
the
first
state
to
formally
request
one
trillion
dollars
of
support
to
help
the
state
states
cities
across
this
country
and
counties
all
across
this
country.
We
believe,
a
few
weeks
back
in
a
letter
that
we
made
public
to
Speaker
Nancy
Pelosi,
that
we
believe
this
country
in
the
next
3
to
4
years
is
going
to
need
the
kind
of
support
around
a
trillion
dollars.
B
It's
significant
and
wonderfully
you
saw
speaker
Pelosi
just
a
few
days
ago,
assess
similarly
that
that's
about
the
number
that
will
be
needed
to
help
support
states,
counties
and
cities
that
have
been
ravaged
by
covin
19,
and
so
we
have
been
the
answer.
Your
question
is
yes
very
aggressive.
In
that
space
we
didn't
just
throw
out
a
number.
We
broke
it
down
in
health
and
education,
workforce
development
across
the
spectrum
of
needs
and
supports,
as
you
know,
well
I'm.
B
In
the
process
of
doing
a
may
revise
last
year,
I
did
a
may
revise
with
a
21
point.
Four
billion
dollar
budget
surplus
we
were
debating
this
year,
I'll
be
doing
a
may
revise
looking
at
tens
of
billions
of
dollars
in
deficit.
We
just
won
like
that
billions
in
surplus
in
just
weeks,
tens
of
billions
and
deficit,
so
I'm
gonna
do
everything
I
can
to
work
with
these
cities
and
counties.
But
I
can
assure
you
this.
B
We
are
not
going
to
be
in
a
position
even
as
a
nation's
fifth
largest
economy,
to
provide
for
the
needs
of
all
the
cities
and
the
counties
without
federal
support,
and
that's
why
the
federal
support
is
the
foundational
framework
that
we
are
hoping
to
advance
and
successfully
so
to
help
us
bridge
these
deficits,
which
we
anticipate
not
just
this
year,
but
over
the
course
of
the
next
few
years.
So
we
can
come
back
stronger
than
ever,
which
I
don't
think
we
will
I
know.
We
will
final.
I
Thanks
for
taking
our
question,
my
question
is
one
of
enforcement
for
Orange
County,
trying
to
figure
out
you
know
it
looks
like
some
police
departments
are
still
allowing
people
on
the
beaches
like
Huntington
Beach.
There's
pictures
right
now.
Not
only
is
there
put
this,
but
also
people
on
the
beach.
Sometimes
you
figure
out.
You
know
how
the
state
is
going
to
approach
this,
especially
if
some
of
these
police
departments
aren't
helping
enforce
it.
Yeah.
B
I
confidence
and
local
law
enforcement,
incredible
confidence
that
was
a
wonderful
statement,
police
chiefs,
Association
put
out
yesterday,
the
California
sheriff's
have
been
incredible.
We
have
wonderful
partnerships,
particularly
with
our
team
here
at
the
office
Emergency
Services,
coordinating
those
actions
and
activities.
It's
not
just
an
enforcement
Minds.
It's
also
an
encouragement
mindset
in
this
respect,
its
notifications,
it's
communication.
It's
state
park,
personnel,
doing
the
same
uniform
to
non-uniformed
its
PSAs
that
are
up
it's
the
signs,
the
signage
you're
seen
everywhere.
B
It's
the
parking
lot
closures
in
and
around
those
areas,
and-
and
so
look
we'll
see,
we'll
see
what
happens
over
the
course
this
weekend
and
look
if
we
have
kind
of
weekend
that
I
hope
and
expect
we
will,
where
we
don't
see
those
huge
crowds
to
send,
then
we're
going
to
be
in
a
position
as
early
as
Monday,
Tuesday
I
hope
to
make
some
announcements
of
new
strategies
and
partnerships
that
were
working
on
in
real
time
to
address
these
large
crowds.
Again,
the
only
thing
I
mean
it.
B
The
only
thing
that's
going
to
hold
us
back
is
a
spread
of
this
virus
and
the
only
thing
that
is
assured
to
advance
the
spread
of
the
virus
is
thousands
of
people
congregating
together,
not
practicing
social,
distancing
or
physical
distancing.
If
we
can
avoid
that,
then
we're
gonna
get
to
the
other
side
of
this
with
modifications.
A
lot
quicker
and
III
just
hope.
People
will
consider
that,
because
I
don't
want
to
I,
don't
want
to
be
here
up
here
a
month.
B
Two
three
four
months
from
now
saying
the
same
old
things
I
want
to
be
here
every
week,
every
month
announcing
new
things
that
give
people
more
confidence,
more
optimism
about
their
future
and
their
family's
future
and
I'm.
Confident
we'll
get
there
and
I'm
confident,
because
I
really
believe
in
this
state
and
its
people
and
they're
exceptions.
But
this
is
a
state
of
40
million
people
and
you've
done
a
magnificent
job
to
each
and
every
one
of
you
may
be
watching.
B
Thank
you
for
taking
care
of
yourself
taking
care
of
your
family,
taking
care
of
your
neighbors,
taking
care
of
your
communities
taking
care
of
our
regions.
Taking
care
of
this
state
and
in
turn
taking
care
of
this
nation,
that's
patriotism,
that's
the
American
spirit,
alive
and
well
bottom
up,
it's
not
always
top
down
it's
bottom
up
and
and
I
know
it's
percolating
up
in
terms
of
people's
anxieties
and
stresses
and
I
also
want
to
just
acknowledge
that.
But
I
also
wanted
to
signal
Jew
and
thank
you,
as
always,
for
incredible
work.
B
You've
done
to
flatten
the
curve
in
the
state
of
California
get
us
where
we're
this,
this
close
to
starting
to
make
some
meaningful
announcements
in
terms
of
modifications.
Already
this
week,
we've
made
a
lot
of
I
think
important
modifications
to
open
things
up,
but
even
more
in
the
next
few
weeks.
As
long
as
we
continue
practice,
social,
distancing,
physical,
distancing,
abide
by
those
local
county,
stay
at
home
orders
and
continue
to
be
safe
and
to
always
look
out
for
one
another,
take
care
everybody
and
have
a
wonderful
weekend.