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Description
Governor Gavin Newsom provides an update on the statewide wildfires and on the state's response to the COVID-19 outbreak.
Recorded October 12, 2020 in Sacramento, California.
For more information regarding the impact of the COVID-19 outbreak in Cupertino, please visit https://www.cupertino.org/coronavirus
C
C
After
all,
we
have
more
startups
more
engineers,
more
scientists,
more
researchers,
more
venture
capital
and
more
nobel
laureates
in
california
than
any
other
work
in
the
nation,
and
that
trend,
not
surprisingly,
continues
again
this
year.
Just
this
morning,
two
stanford
professors,
dr
paul
milgram
and
dr
robert
wilson,
were
awarded
the
nobel
memorial
prize
for
economic
sciences.
Their
pioneering
research
and
auctions
has
had
practical
impacts
on
the
best
way
to
allocate
scarce
resources.
They
joined
several
other
nobel
prize
winners
from
our
state
who
recently
were
announced.
C
Products
of
uc
system
here
are,
by
the
way,
some
fun
selfies
of
those
californians
the
moment
that
they
received
the
news,
dr
andrea
guess
of
ucla
won
the
nobel
prize
for
physics
by
providing,
or
rather
proving,
the
existence
of
a
super
massive
black
hole
at
the
center
of
the
milky
way.
She
shared
this
prize
with
dr
reinhard
genzel,
a
professor
emeritus
at
uc
berkeley,
who
also
did
his
post
doctorate
work
there.
C
Most
recently,
it's
been
applied
to
covet
19
diagnostics.
It
may
in
fact
be
the
key
to
scaling
low
cost
high
accuracy
testing,
it's
also
using
crispr
technology
to
well
start
to
develop
testing
and
perhaps
more
importantly,
treatment
for
covet
and
for
dr
doudna,
the
nobel
came
with
something
perhaps
more
valuable
than
the
one
million
dollar
prize.
It
came
with
a
free
parking
spot
for
life
on
the
uc
berkeley
campus,
congratulations
to
her
and
all
of
the
outstanding
californians
we
honor
here
today
look
battling
covet
19.
C
It
requires
close
collaboration
between
the
state
and
local
government
and
throughout
our
fight
against
kova
19.
The
status
work
closely
with
local
governments
to
slow
the
spread,
fill
the
gaps
and
let
locals
lead
in
their
communities.
Together.
We've
made
important
progress
in
helping
to
stop
the
spread
of
the
virus
by
building
a
contact,
tracing
army
and
expanding
and
speeding
up
testing.
Today,
I
wanted
to
update
you
on
some
of
those
efforts,
notably
the
efforts
to
increase
testing,
which
now
we're
averaging
over
125
000
daily
tests.
C
Over
this
weekend,
we
were
averaging
little
north
of
150
000
tests,
169
000
on
saturday
about
144
000
tests.
Just
yesterday
we're
getting
those
test
results
back
within
24
to
48
hours.
In
fact,
90
plus
percent
of
all
the
tests
that
are
being
conducted
are
getting
back
within
that
time
frame
and
as
a
consequence
of
that
timeliness
to
test
results,
it
enables
our
local
contact
tracers
to
get
to
work
immediately.
C
I
wanted
to
update
you
on
the
total
number
of
trained
staff,
the
total
number
of
contact
tracers
now
that
we
have
assembled
here
in
the
state
of
california
just
shy
of
11
000.
Now
trade
staff,
10
892,
1800
plus
bilingual
staff,
and
I'm
gonna
ask
dr
gally
to
come
up
here
in
just
a
second
and
talk
about
some
of
the
remote
support.
That
is
also
part
of
our
contact
tracing
efforts.
D
Thank
you
governor
and
yes,
it's
good
to
be
with
you
to
talk
about
our
developments
on
contact,
tracing
and
and
really
where
the
governor
started,
that
testing
piece.
That
starts
us
with
case
identification,
finding
out
who's
positive,
and
then
we
go
into
the
disease
investigation,
part
of
the
endeavor
and
identifying
close
contacts
of
people
who
are
positive.
So
we
can
then
provide
the
support
and
reminders
to
isolate
appropriately.
D
So
we
can
actually
cut
down
transmission
from
each
case
that
isn't
a
new
set
of
strategies
for
covit.
We've
been
doing
this
in
public
health
for
decades
to
control
other
diseases
across
the
globe,
and
here
the
challenge
is
just
doing
it
at
the
scale
where
we
have
thousands
of
positive
test
results
coming
a
day
to
make
sure
those
thousands
stay
as
low
as
possible.
I
talked
to
you
many
weeks
ago
about
the
need
to
get
our
case
rate
down
and
our
infrastructure
of
contact,
tracing
and
disease
investigation
up.
D
Many
of
you
do
zoom
meetings
or
zoom
encounters
and
and
meet
friends
remotely
now,
via
your
iphone
and
other
phones.
We
also
have
employed
those
same
technologies,
providing
disease
investigation,
support
with
epidemiologists
that
might
be
in
one
county
supporting
another
county
hundreds
of
miles
away,
because
they
can
do
that
remotely.
Also
adding
a
virtual
agent
function
to
our
cal
connect.
That's
the
program
that
the
governor
really
pushed
us
to
create
statewide
to
organize
all
of
the
case,
information
and
the
contact
tracing
work.
D
Now
there
is
a
function
that
allows
us
to
do
an
initial
survey
of
individuals
who
tested
positive
or
who
may
have
been
exposed
so
that
health
departments
can
begin
to
prioritize
those
with
the
most
concerning
exposures.
So
all
of
that,
together
with
the
staff,
are
really
building
up
this
infrastructure
across
the
state.
So
we
can
continue
to
box
in
the
virus
as
much
as
we
can
and
make
sure
that
a
single
case
doesn't
turn
into
20
or
30
cases
from
that
single
one.
D
So
we
did
this
twice.
We
did
a
survey
many
months
ago
of
our
local
health
jurisdictions
to
find
out
how
successful
their
existing
infrastructure
was
to
contact
trace
all
the
cases
that
were
discovered
as
well
as
their
contacts
back
then
we
were
certainly
lower
than
we
are
now
and
today
we
are
finding
that
95
percent
of
our
local
health
departments
are
able
to
contact
all
of
the
new
cases
that
they
receive
results
for
on
that
same
day.
D
So
the
addition
of
quick
testing
with
quick
turnaround,
time
that
24
to
48
hours,
plus
information
in
the
hands
of
local
health
jurisdictions
and
the
staffing
sufficient
to
reach
all
of
those
positives
gives
us
a
better
chance
of
making
sure
somebody
who
is
positive
doesn't
transmit
to
others.
Similarly,
we
have
97
of
our
local
health
departments
who
are
able
to
contact
all
of
the
contacts
that
we
learn
about
on
that
same
day.
These
two
things
together
allow
us
to
have
a
better
chance
of
keeping
kovit
in
check.
D
Part
of
this
really
does
start
with
the
support
of
the
state
with
our
local
partners.
I
want
to
remind
you
that
contact
tracing
and
disease
investigation
is
a
tried
and
true
public
health
tool.
The
local
health
jurisdictions
across
the
state
have
been
doing
this
for
a
long
time.
They've
beefed
up
their
staff,
increased
their
staff
and
their
tools,
along
with
the
state's
support
to
do
this.
D
The
need
for
counties
to
use
state
funds
that
were
provided
to
the
counties
to
do
testing,
contact,
racing
and
isolation
to
make
sure
those
dollars
are
invested
in
those
communities
where
we've
seen
a
disproportionate
impact
on
covid
those
dollars
are
there
in
part
to
support
the
last
piece
of
this
three-legged
school
that
stool,
that
part
that
focuses
on
isolation
and
supporting
individuals
who
learn
that
they're
positive
or
may
have
been
exposed
to
either
quarantine
or
isolate,
whichever
is
appropriate
and
to
make
sure
that
they
do
it
in
a
supported
way.
D
We
know
so
many
people
fear
not
being
able
to
return
to
work
not
being
able
to
support
their
families.
There
are
many
tools
that
the
state,
along
with
our
local
partners,
along
with
our
philanthropic
partners,
have
put
into
place
in
order
to
support
those
isolations
to
not
just
happen,
but
to
happen
in
the
most
complete
way,
so
we
box
in
the
virus
and
reduce
transmission.
C
Thank
you,
dr
galley,
and
so
the
key
is
the
issue
of
isolating
individuals
that
have
come
into
contact
or
have
the
transmission
of
the
disease
made
positive,
meaning.
We
want
to
make
sure
that
the
testing
leads
to
something
and
in
order
to
box
this
virus
in
order
to
mitigate
the
spread
of
this
virus.
Quarantine
and
isolation
become
essential,
and
I
just
want
to
remind
people
some
of
the
work
that's
been
done
in
the
state
of
california,
resources
that
we've
made
available
to
help
support
isolation.
C
One
of
them
dr
gali
alluded
to
is
these
job-protected
paid
sick
leave
that
we've
now
provided
to
california's
workers,
which
is
foundational
in
in
in
the
endeavor
of
isolating
and
quarantined
individuals.
We've
also
targeted,
very
specifically,
our
farm
workers
and
our
agricultural
workers
all
up
and
down
the
state
of
california,
a
program
called
housing
for
harvest.
We
had
highlighted
it
on
multiple
occasions
in
the
past,
in
these
updates
a
program
that
now
is
operational
and
we
hope
to
do
more
and
better
still
to
expand
the
scale
and
scope
of
that
effort.
C
Project
room
key,
which
we've
highlighted
on
a
consistent
basis,
is
foundational
in
terms
of
isolating
individuals
that
are
high
risk
of
coven
19,
particularly
those
out
on
the
streets
and
sidewalks
in
congregate,
facilities
and
shelters
all
throughout
the
state
of
california
and,
of
course,
the
federal
government,
no
substitute
for
the
support
we
get
from
the
federal
government.
150
million
dollars
of
federal
support
is
provided
not
just
to
the
state,
but
also
supporting
those
county
efforts
in
addition
to
those
county
efforts
and
federal
dollars.
C
It's
that
leverage
of
philanthropic
support
reference
a
moment
ago,
but
kaiser
has
provided
other
philanthropic
supports,
but
some
83
million
dollars
in
philanthropic
funds
have
been
generated
and
recognizably
deservingly
need
to
be
highlighted
in
the
effort
to
again
support
our
isolations
and
quarantine
efforts.
So
that's
just
a
brief
update
on
some
of
the
contact
tracing
work,
some
of
the
isolation
quarantine
work,
the
testing
continue.
We
continue
to
make
progress.
We
will
very
shortly.
C
In
the
next
couple
of
weeks,
we
will
be
announcing
an
update
on
our
partnership
with
birkenhelmer
and
the
efforts
to
more
than
double
the
capacity
of
testing
here
in
the
state
of
california.
Real
progress
is
being
made
in
that
space
and
we
look
forward
to
making
that
announcement
very
very
shortly.
We
are
not
going
to
slip
backwards
on
testing.
C
We
are
going
to
forge
forward
and
be
much
more
aggressive,
we're
not
ashamed
of
testing
people,
we're
not
ashamed
of
identifying
individuals
that
have
been
tested
positive,
but
we
must
make
that
meaningful
testing
for
testing's
sake
is
not
in
and
of
itself
significant
save
the
patient
that
can
learn
about
their
own
health
and
health
risk
from
a
community
spread
and
a
transmission
perspective.
We
need
to
make
sure
we
go
further
than
that
and
that's
the
contact
tracing.
That's
the
education
know
your
rights
campaign
among
many
other
efforts
that
we've
advanced
through
psas.
C
That
will
allow
people
to
support,
so
they
can
isolate.
They
can
quarantine
not
only
taking
care
of
themselves
but
their
own
recovery,
but
mitigating
the
spread
to
people
they
love
and
more
broadly,
the
community
spread,
and
so
all
of
those
efforts
are
being
accelerated.
All
those
efforts
are
being
reinforced
and
again
news
very
shortly
on
the
very
exciting
and
significant
increase
in
lower
cost.
Much
more
timely
testing
that
we
have
advanced
in
this
historic
partnership
here
in
the
state
of
california.
C
Let's
talk
about
our
case
rates
here
in
the
state.
A
new
number
we
announced
today
3449
cases
this
from
october,
11th
yesterday
tracks
slightly
higher
than
our
seven
day
average
of
three
thousand
321
cases.
You
can
see
the
positivity
rate
based
on
the
127
000
average
daily
tests
over
the
last
seven
days.
It's
dropped
to
2.6
percent.
That's
a
14-day
positivity
rate.
C
The
seven-day
positivity
rate
is
consistent
with
the
14-day
positivity
rate.
2.6
here
in
our
state,
hospitalizations
have
decreased
eight
percent
over
a
two-week
period
and
we're
seeing
a
decrease
in
icu
emissions
a
little
bit
more
substantial
13
over
14,
as
you
may
recall,
we're
seeing
a
bit
of
a
plateauing,
or
at
least
a
slowdown
in
the
rate
of
decrease
you've,
seen
20,
plus
percent
rates
of
decrease
in
hospitalizations
and
icus
over
the
course
of
many
many
weeks
slowing
down.
C
Modestly
again,
these
are
just
areas
of
caution,
sober
reminder
of
how
stubborn
this
disease
is
and
how
prevalent
and
would
spread.
This
disease
still
remains
here
in
the
state
of
california.
Always
a
reminder
of
the
imperative
and
importance
we
place
upon
practicing
the
physical
distancing,
social
distancing
and
the
critical
work
that
you
can
do
by
wearing
these
face
masks.
Accordingly,
we
have
made
progress
on
our
tiered
status.
Now
42
counties
of
a
58
have
moved
out
of
that
lower
tier
the
most
restrictive
tier,
the
purple
tier
24
counties.
C
You
see
in
the
red,
11
and
orange
yellow
counties
in
northern
part
of
the
state.
Primarily
though
some
in
the
central
part
of
the
state
represent
seven
of
our
58
counties.
This
county
update
the
tiered
status
update,
is
made
every
tuesday
tomorrow.
Dr
galley
will
be
updating
these
numbers
progress.
I
I
I
want
always
to
lean
in,
but
they're
always
adjusting
those
numbers
from
the
weekend,
and
so
I
have
to
be
careful,
but
we
will
make
progress
number
of
counties
now
moving
into
new
tears,
but
again
stubborn.
C
This
virus,
some
counties,
teetering,
and
so
that
will
be
made
public
tomorrow.
Some
of
the
latest
information
again
being
put
together
later
this
afternoon,
updated
every
tuesday
and
dr
galley's
presentation,
but
county-tiered
status
nonetheless,
moving
in
the
right
direction,
broadly
for
the
overwhelming
majority.
Now
42
counties
out
of
that
purple
status
into
these
other
tiered
status
speaking
of
status.
I
wanted
to
update
you
briefly
on
the
wildfire
season
which
continues.
This
is
around
the
peak
of
what
we
have
experienced
the
last
few
years,
at
least
of
wildfire
season
into
october.
C
The
diablo
winds
and
santa
ana
winds
start
to
present
themselves
still
hot
temperatures,
unseasonably
hot
we're
going
to
expect
up
to
20
degree
increases
in
temperatures
from
what
we
experienced
with
the
end
of
last
week
and
over
the
weekend
into
this
week.
We're
also
going
to
see
an
increase
in
winds
later
this
week,
wednesday
thursday
and
friday
in
northern
california,
in
particular.
C
Notification
protocols
that
have
improved
from
last
year
now
in
place
and
again
strengthening
partnerships
that
included
50,
plus
million
dollars
of
support
money
that
we
distributed
to
the
counties
and
to
ngos,
not
governmental
organizations
nonprofits,
as
well
as
state
agencies,
to
help
support
our
notification
and
support
vulnerable
communities
as
it
relates
to
those
that
may
be
impacted
by
psps
protocols.
C
I
want
to
just
update
you
about
the
impact
of
these
larger
wildfires
and
remind
you
in
the
aggregate,
some
4.1
million
acres
now
burned
in
the
state
of
california,
we're
currently
dealing
with
14,
major
wildfire
fires
and
or
fire
wildfire
complexes.
Some
12
000
firefighters.
You
saw
those
numbers
north
of
18
000
a
few
weeks
back
now
about
12,
000,
plus
firefighters,
working
to
battle
these
historic
fires.
Here
in
the
state,
tragically,
we
have
lost
31
lives.
C
That
number
has
remained
relatively
stable
and
I
caution
always
the
fatalities
and
structure
data
likely
to
increase.
As
we
repopulate
areas
some
parts
of
trinity
county.
They
have
been
evacuated
for
close
to
30
days,
some
cases
north
of
30
days
as
we
go
back
in
and
we
do
justice
to
this.
Well,
do
justice
to
the
repopulation
and
reconnection
to
friends,
families
and
communities,
we're
likely
to
see
higher
structures
damaged
and
destroyed
and
obviously
concerned
always
about
lives,
lost
the
glass
fire.
We
talked
a
lot
about
last
week
around
napa
lake
and
sonoma
counties.
C
Last
week,
30
percent
contained
stubborn
fire
up
in
the
wine
country,
some
65
000
acres
impacted
today.
It's
95
percent
contained
real
progress
over
the
last
week
and
notably
over
the
last
weekend
and
couldn't
come
too
soon,
particularly
with
the
higher
winds
and
around
that
area.
Coming
into
that
part
of
the
state
again
wednesday,
thursday
and
friday.
Additionally,
real
progress,
in
fact
not
just
real
progress,
substantial
progress
on
the
zog
fire
now
99
contained
I'm
told
within
a
few
hours
later
this
afternoon
they
will
officially
put
out
100
percent
containment
figure
on
the
zog
fire.
C
C
It's
the
northern
part
of
the
august
complex
u.s
forest
service
battling
hard,
that's
the
most
stubborn,
and
while
there
is
some
concern
around
wind
conditions
that
could
impact
the
northern
part
as
it
relates
to
containment,
we've
been
anticipating
that
the
weather
service
again
working
collaboratively
with
the
state
pre-positioning
assets
and
really
building
the
conditions
to
hold
the
line
in
the
northern
part.
So
we
can
hold
this
one
plus
million
acre
fire
in
not
only
containment
but
hold
the
line.
C
C
Here
in
the
state
of
california,
you
recall
a
drought
between
2011
and
2017,
about
163
million
and
by
the
way,
that's
just
an
estimate,
163
million
trees
that
fell
because
of
the
drought
and
historic,
unprecedented
recent,
the
historic
and
unprecedented
conditions
that
led
to
conditions
that
make
it
even
more
challenging
in
and
around
fresno
and
madera
area,
and
this
unified
command
complex
again
working
with
the
federal
government.
A
lot
of
federal
acreage
being
burned
here,
as
well
as
state
acres
being
burned
here,
48
contained
last
week.
C
C
So,
as
always,
we
want
to
maintain
our
vigilance
as
it
relates
to
heating
the
warnings
of
those
who
call
for
evacuations
related
to
these
wildfires.
I
want
to
remind
people
of
the
importance
imperative
of
being
even
more
vigilant
in
these
dry
and
hot
conditions
where
we
start
to
see
these
winds
whip
back
up.
It
was
this
time,
in
october
and
november,
in
17
and
19
that
we
had
some
of
these
very
damaging
and
deadly
wildfires.
Please
maintain
your
vigilance.
C
All
the
hard
work
that's
been
done,
including
local
mutual
aid
that
has
been
working
overtime,
weeks
and
weeks
and
weeks,
little
rest,
putting
their
lives
on
the
line
to
protect,
not
only
lives
themselves
but
property
and
obviously
our
wild
lands
in
this
state.
Accordingly.
In
closing,
I
just
want
to
remind
all
of
you,
the
inheritance
imperative
of
continuing
to
maintain
your
vigilance
in
terms
of
the
actions
you
can
take
to
spread
and
mitigate,
not
wildfires
in
this
case,
but
of
coven
19..
That
2.6
positivity
rate
is
encouraging.
C
Number
of
deaths
is
beginning
to
decline,
which
is
also
encouraging.
Still,
though,
stubbornly
at
about
60
and
69
deaths,
that's
the
7
and
14
day,
average
total
number
of
deaths.
It's
just
a
reminder,
sober
reminder.
The
average
of
69
deaths
a
day
still
because
of
covet
19,
don't
be
misled
that
this
disease
is
any
less
deadly.
C
Quite
the
contrary,
it's
as
much
more
deadly
than
it's
ever
been
in
the
context
of
those
that
are
high
risk,
and,
despite
so
much
of
the
improvements
we've
seen
in
therapeutics
and
how
we've
managed
the
disease
again,
people
are
still
losing
their
lives.
What
you
can
do,
as
always,
is
practice
that
physical
distancing,
that
social,
distancing
wear
those
masks
wash
your
hands.
It's
flu
season,
wash
your
hands
just
on
the
natural
will
mitigate
the
spread
of
the
flu
as
well
and
minimize
mixing
to
the
extent
possible
tomorrow.
C
C
Dr
galley
will
also
be
updating
on
some
other
guidelines,
including
the
guidelines
we
put
out
on
friday,
related
to
minimizing,
mixing
and
cohorting
friends,
family
or
outside
of
your
household.
Those
updates
have
been
made
this
week,
just
preview
we'll
be
visiting
with
some
of
the
larger
theme
parks.
Continuing
those
conversations
back
and
forth.
We
continue
in
good
faith
to
try
to
work
to
get
where
I
know
everybody
wants
to
go
and
that's
to
get
people
back
to
work
and
also
create
more
entertainment
options,
but
we
need
to
do
so
in
a
safe
way.
C
We
need
to
do
so
with
a
health
first
frame
and
we
are
going
to
continue
that
hard
work
and
a
lot
of
that
work
will
be
advanced
even
further
later
this
week,
with
some
insight
visits
and
some
deeper
collaboration
even
beyond
some
of
the
larger
theme
parks,
but
many
of
the
smaller
theme
parks
that
want
to
maintain
some
distinction
from
those
larger
those
larger,
well-known
brands
here
in
the
states.
So
that's
it
for
the
update
today
and,
of
course
now
happy
to
answer
any
questions.
C
Patrick
an
outstanding
question:
perhaps
we'll
get
you
back
on
and
figure
out
what
the.
F
C
Yeah,
patrick
and
forgive
me
I'll
I'll,
we'll
see
if
we
can
pull
you
back,
but
I
want
to
just
bring
up
dr
galley.
I
believe
you
referenced
something
about
tattoo
parlors
and
guidance,
and
so
forgive
me
you
were
breaking
up,
but
dr
galley
was
getting
out
of
his
seat,
so
that
may
be
encouraging
that
he
may
know
a
little
bit
more.
Perhaps
he
may
have
heard
you
a
little
better
than
I
did
dr
gallagher.
D
Thanks
governor
and
thanks
for
the
question,
I
I
think
the
question
was
about
tattoo
parlors
and
weather
we
are
considering
like
we
have
with
nail
salons
and
barber
shops
moving
tattoo
parlors
into
the
purple
tier.
We
are
considering
that
we're
working
closely
with
the
industry
and
determining
if
that
is
appropriate
and
hope
to
make
an
announcement
on
that
very
very
soon.
E
Don
thompson
app
good
afternoon,
governor
the
public
health
department
on
friday
released
new
guidelines
for
up
to
three
households
to
gather
outdoors,
but
we're
wondering
why
now
what
changed?
Permit
this
new
guidance,
which
comes
as
we
enter
the
flu
season,
as
you
and
dr
gally,
have
been
warning
about
concerning
signs
of
coronavirus
case
increases
in
many
areas.
C
D
Yes,
thanks
again
for
the
question
as
we
approach
so
many
traditional
days
and
activities,
and
we
expect
people
asking
the
question:
how
do
we
in
a
lower
risk
way
come
together
with
people,
maybe
that
we
haven't
seen
in
a
long
time
and
the
purpose
of
the
small
gatherings
guidance
that
is
now
posted
on
the
california
department
of
public
health
website
is
really
to
not
say
it's.
It's
a
good
idea
or
appropriate
to
gather
with
three
families
but
to
really
say
more
than
three
households.
D
You
really
are
increasing
your
risk,
and
so
we
tried
to
put
together
a
set
of
guidance
that
allows
people
to
have
a
what
we
in
public
health
talk
about
a
harm
reduction
framework,
really
reducing
risk
and
minimizing
the
chance
of
the
spread
of
the
disease.
So
we
did
put
that
out
as
a
way
to
tee
up
future
guidance
around
how
to
minimize
our
risk.
In
some
activities
we
know
many
californians
are
considering
the
first
of
which
is
coming
up
with
halloween.
D
Then
we
have
things
with
election
day
and
and
the
traditions
of
coming
together
around
that
and
then
thanksgiving
and
then
the
other
traditional
winter
holidays.
So
all
of
that
is
coming
out
now
to
support
our
endeavors
and
to
support
local
partners,
local
health
jurisdictions,
putting
out
similar
guidance
for
those
events.
C
So
you'll
be
getting
more
and
more
or
should
anticipate
more
and
more
updates
to
existing
guidance
as
well
as
new
guidance,
and
I
just
want
to
remind
people
and-
and
this
may
also
be
a
subtext
of
a
way
of
answering
your
question.
Guidance
doesn't
mean
go
in
the
past.
We
have
seen
when
we
put
out
guidance
and
we
make
it
clear
that
the
pace
and
the
protocols
related
to
seeing
that
guidance
applied.
C
We
want
to
caution
against
that,
but
we
are
entering
in
to
the
holidays,
but
also
we're
entering
into
part
of
the
year
where
things
cool
down
and
people
are
more
likely
to
congrate
back
indoors
and
in
settings
that
put
the
well
put
their
physical
proximity
and
likelihood
of
transmission
and
transmitting
disease
at
higher
risk,
and
that's
why
you'll
again
be
seen
more
in
this
space
over
the
coming
days
and
weeks.
H
Thank
you,
governor
two
quick
questions.
One
is
there
a
safe
way
to
do
any
sort
of
lakers
championship
parade
and
thank
you
for
giving
us
a
shout
out
last
night
on
twitter
and
two?
You
know
this
isn't
all
happening
in
a
vacuum
and
I'm
wondering
what
you're
learning
from
other
states
say
disney
world
is
open.
Are
they
having
a
big
outbreak
in
florida?
What
does
that
teach
us
about
what's
happening
potentially
here
in
california?
H
C
No,
it's
a
good
question
and
I
have
a
whole
team
that
spends
their
time
not
only
getting
the
answer
to
that
question,
but
asking
those
same
questions,
and
so
this
week.
As
a
proof
point
of
that,
we
have
supported
an
effort
to
actually
find
out
directly
by
sending
our
own
team
to
these
sites,
as
it
relates
to
theme
parks
to
get
a
better
sense
of.
What's
going
on.
C
While
we
absolutely
take
people's
word
for
information
that
they
provide
us,
we
want
to
see
things
for
ourselves,
and
so
that's
just
one
example
of
some
of
the
work
that
we
do.
We
share
information,
24
7
back
and
forth,
not
only
between
counties
and
county
health
officers,
but
respective
team
members,
particularly
in
this
west
coast
collaborative
that
include
our
chiefs
of
staff,
are
constantly
sharing
information
about,
what's
worked
in
their
states
and
what
hasn't
worked
in
their
states
as
it
relates
to
guidance
as
it
relates
to
mandates
as
it
relates
to
messaging.
C
C
Learning
the
incredible
importance
that
we
place
on
all
of
that
at
the
same
time,
and
so
hope
that
gives
you
a
sense
of
of
the
work
that
is
currently
being
conducted
as
it
relates
to
the
lakers.
Yes,
I
am
a
northern
california
resident,
but
I
am
a
laker
fan.
I
can
say
that
without
fear
of
any
ambiguity,
and
if
you
saw
our
household
last
night,
my
wife-
I
don't
think
I
don't
think
she'll
speak
for
another
three
or
four
or
five
days.
C
She
lost
her
voice
in
enthusiasm
after
that
first
quarter,
and
then
things
calmed
down
for
her
in
that
second
half,
as
it
appeared
that
the
outcome
was
now
determined.
But
anyway
I
I
I
get
off
base.
You
asked
a
more
substantive
question
and
that
is:
is
there
a
safe
way
to
have
a
a
parade
of
sorts
or
celebrate
a
victory?
C
C
If
that's
not
the
case,
and
we
saw
some
images
last
night,
that
is
a
point
of
obvious
concern
as
it
relates
to
the
transmission
of
the
virus,
and
so
we
just
ask
people
to
be
cautious
to
be
mindful
as
the
same
time,
they
celebrate
this
historic
victory
and
and
celebrate
one
of
the
greatest
basketball
players
that
has
ever
lived.
Lebron.
G
C
I'll
have
to
do
the
analysis
and
I'll
provide
that
data
across
the
spectrum
of
hundreds
of
thousands
of
employees,
but
look
at
your
inbox
and
we
should
have
that
information
to
you
hopefully
later
this
afternoon.
I
can't
imagine
that
information
will
take
more
time
than
that.
I
C
Theme
parks,
their
own
experience,
their
own
insight,
we're
trying
to
get
a
better
handle
on
what
we're
being
told,
what
we're
reading
about
and
our
own
concerns
and
our
own
environment
as
it
relates
to
what
makes
our
theme
parks,
distinctive
and
unique,
and
one
of
the
things
that's
self-evident,
that
makes
them
distinct
and
unique,
is
location
in
and
around
areas
where
there's
background
transmission
rates
that
are
remaining
very,
relatively
stable
in
some
cases,
stubborn
in
other
cases.
C
But
the
answer
to
your
previous
question
is
yes,
I
I'm
very
mindful,
for
example,
if
you
have
in
a
park
in
a
city
a
ferris
wheel,
that
that's
not
a
theme
park
in
the
sense
that
so
many
of
us
consider,
and
so
one
has
to
distinguish
between
the
two.
And
so
that's
a
nuance
here.
This
is,
I
mean
this
is
as
almost
you're
putting
entire
a
new
set
of
guidelines
and
starting
from
scratch
across
the
board
and
there's
there's
conference
facilities.
C
There's
there's
parades
in
these
theme
parks,
there's,
there's
cities,
they're
small
cities
and
they're
people
from
all
around
the
world
that
descend,
not
just
people
that
are
proximate
to
these
theme
parks
that
come
together
and
mix.
You
could
say
five
percent
of
the
theme
park,
that's
thousands
and
thousands
of
people
a
large
theme
park
if
you
say
that
it's
something
on
a
pier
in
a
smaller
community,
it's
a
few
hundred,
and
so
all
of
this
has
to
be
considered.
C
All
of
that
is
distinctive
and
all
that
requires
nuance,
and
so
we're
going
back
and
forth.
We've
had
guidelines
we
put
out
drafts.
We
got
a
lot
of
feedback
on
those
draft
guidelines.
Folks
asked
us
for
more
time.
They
asked
us
for
more
deliberation,
engagement,
we're
doing
just
that,
we're
seeking
to
understand
ourselves
directly
without
the
intermediaries,
and
that
was
the
frame
that
I
was
focusing
on
a
moment
ago
that
we're
doing
our
own
stubborn
research
and
going
across
states
to
learn
more
and
not
just
making
this
an
academic
exercise.
C
I
want
to
see
more
businesses
reopen,
and
I
want
to
see
more
kids
back
in
school
but
safely
and
the
way
to
avoid
a
setback
is
creating
conditions
where
we're
encouraging
a
massive
amount
of
mixing
and
encouraging
a
conditioned
environment
where
you're
more
likely
not
less
likely
to
come
into
contact
with
someone
who
may
have
been
exposed
to
this
virus,
or
maybe
asymptomatic
and
is
positive
with
this
virus,
and
so
I
am
very,
very
sober
about
the
responsibility
and
the
expectation
that
is
placed
upon
this
administration
and
administrations
across
this
state
to
keep
people
safe.
C
The
same
time
balance
economic
imperative
of
reopening
with
modifications,
but
mindful
of
trend
lines
you're,
seeing
across
the
country
for
that
matter,
around
the
world,
from
germany
to
uk
to
other
parts
of
the
globe
that
have
had
setbacks
as
they
enter
in
to
the
winter
months,
and
I
want
to
make
sure
we
get
this
right
and
so
forgive
the
long-windedness
of
the
answer.
C
I
just
want
you
to
know
that
we
are
very
mindful
of
many
of
these
nuances
and
we
want
to
be
responsive
at
the
same
time
to
the
concerns
many
have
raised
based
upon
the
draft
guidelines
that
we
did
provide
people
last
week.
So
with
that,
I
just
want
to
mind
all
of
you
to
maintain
your
vigilance
continue
to
be
mindful
of
others
as
you
mix
and
as
you
go
about
your
day-to-day
routines
may
thank
again,
the
men
and
women
of
cal
fire
and
all
our
mutual
aid
for
extraordinary
job.
C
They've
done
battling
this
historic
wildfires,
the
folks,
the
office
of
emergency
services
for
helping
coordinate
all
that
local
law
enforcement
county
health
officers
for
extraordinary
work.
They've
done
to
maintain
the
vigilance
and
mitigate
the
spread
and
transmission
of
this
virus
continuing
to
stay
this
course.
We
can
just
continue
to
hold
the
line,
we're
going
to
get
our
businesses
back
open
sooner
we're
going
to
get
our
kids
back
in
school,
even
quicker.
So
with
that,
thank
you
all
very,
very
much
look
forward
to
dr
galley.
C
I
hope
you
look
forward
to
dr
galley's
update
tomorrow
on
the
new,
tiered
progress,
and
we
look
forward
to
updating
you
later
this
week
on
a
myriad
of
other
issues,
including,
as
always,
an
update
on
transmission
rates
and
positivity
rates
covet
19.
take
care.