►
Description
Governor Gavin Newsom provides an update on the state's response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Recorded December 21, 2020 in Sacramento, California.
For more information regarding the impact of the COVID-19 outbreak in Cupertino, please visit https://www.cupertino.org/coronavirus
C
Well,
good
afternoon,
everybody
and
forgive
a
little
bit
of
the
delay,
we're
trying
out
some
new
technology
today,
I'm
back
in
my
home
office
back
into
a
10-day
quarantine
period,
but
I
wanted
to
update
all
of
you
on
where
we
are
in
state
and
what
we
are
looking
at
over
the
course
of
the
next
number
of
days
and
weeks.
C
We
continue
to
see
record-breaking
icu
capacity,
hospitals
that
are
getting
filled
up,
a
surge
that
we
are
experiencing
not
dissimilar
to
other
parts
of
the
country,
but
putting
real
challenges
on
our
staffing
here
in
the
state.
You
can
see
from
this
slide
the
staff
that
we
have
currently
deployed.
These
are
state
staff
specifically
to
now
75
facilities
in
24
counties.
C
You
can
see
the
kind
of
staff
that
we
are
utilizing,
our
health
corps
staff
and
the
california
national
guard,
as
well
as
contract
staff
and
our
combat
teams
very
familiar
and,
if
you've
tuned
into
these
presentations
over
the
course,
the
last
number
of
months
and
working
with
health
and
human
services
at
the
federal
level,
these
dmat
teams
and
I'll
talk
more
about
dmat
and
some
of
the
requests
we
have
in
with
federal
government
in
just
a
brief.
C
Second,
as
it
relates
to
the
federal
requests
specifically
around
dod
staffing,
as
well
as
that
dmat
staffing,
one
of
the
things
we're
trying
to
do
is
extend
the
dmat
staffing
that
we
currently
are
enjoying
down
in
imperial
county
they're,
due
to
redeploy
elsewhere.
C
In
the
middle
of
this
week,
I
had
a
very
good
call
with
the
vice
president.
I
want
to
thank
the
vice
president
for
his
responsiveness
for
reaching
out
to
get
those
dmat
support,
or
rather
get
that
dmacc
staffing
and
support
extended
through
january,
we're
just
waiting
for
the
final
determination
on
that,
but
it
looks
very,
very
favorable.
C
C
We
talked
yesterday
with
a
number
of
representatives
from
hhs
about
this
monoclonal
antibody
strategy
and
they're,
going
to
be
providing
some
resources
to
do
some
infusions,
what
they
refer
to
as
our
infusion
teams,
and
that
also
will
be
deployed
over
the
course
of
the
next
number
of
days
as
it
relates
to
what
we
currently
are
doing
in
alternative
care
sites.
The
alternative
care
sites
are
pre-identified.
We
have
11
of
them
all
up
and
down
the
state
of
california.
C
I
mentioned
on
friday
the
warm
status
on
a
number
of
sites
that
are
not
on
this
screen,
though
the
four
sites
that
are
up
on
the
screen
are
not
only
in
warm
status,
they're
now
an
active
status,
the
others
in
warm
status,
these
specifically
an
active
status.
We
now
have
62
patients
in
these
alternative
care
sites.
On
saturday,
I
was
out
there
at
the
sleep
train
arena
in
sacramento
they
had
17
patients
on
saturday.
They
have
16
covet
positive
patients.
Today,
not
all
of
the
patients.
C
Those
62
are
covet
positives,
the
ones
at
the
street
sleep
train
arena
are,
but
you
get
a
sense
imperial
valley,
college,
the
porterville
and
the
fairview
sites.
These
are
sites
that
are
currently
have
been
activated,
and
we
will
provide
more
staffing,
as
we
provide
more
staffing,
will
allow
for
more
patients
to
make
their
way
in
to
these
critical
facilities.
37
892
is
the
last
reporting
period,
total
number
of
cases
tracking
slightly
below
the
43
901
average
number
of
daily
positive
cases
that
we
have
experienced
over
the
last
seven
day
period.
C
Now
some
have
inquired
over
the
course
of
this
weekend,
the
last
number
of
days,
suggesting
or
or
at
least
inquiring
as
relates
to
what
they
perceive
based
upon
the
data.
That's
come
in
the
last
four
days
that
we
may
be
seeing
a
modest,
very
modest
decrease
in
the
growth
rate
total
case
growth
rate
still
too
early
to
tell-
and
I
caution
people
not
to
read
in
again
to
weekend
numbers
but
we'll
take
a
close
look
at
this
in
the
next
few
days
and
of
course
make
any
that
data
always
would
make
it
available.
C
But
to
give
you
our
assessment,
professional
assessment,
dr
galley,
will
talk
in
a
moment.
He
can
give
you
a
side
of
that
as
well
to
see
if
he
thinks
that
is
indeed
the
case
still
too
early
to
tell,
but
nonetheless
good
to
see
the
number,
the
last
24
hours
tracking
a
little
bit
below
that
seven
day.
Let's
take
a
look
at
the
seven
day,
testing
average
a
little
over,
or
rather
just
shy.
I
should
say
of
330
000
tests.
By
the
way.
C
Yesterday
we
reported
over
395
000
tests
so
close
to
400
000
tests
in
the
last
reporting
period,
but
you
take
a
look
over
a
seven
day.
Average
300,
roughly
330
000
tests
want
to
still
see
that
test
number
increase,
we're
starting
to
see
those
numbers
increase,
which
is
encouraging
news.
You
get
a
sense
of,
of
course,
the
positivity
rate
now
in
the
state,
12
percent
positivity
that's
over
14
day
band.
C
Let's
take
a
look
as
we
get
to
this
next
slide,
where
we
were
just
14
days
ago,
though
at
12
we
were
at
8.7
just
14
days
ago,
so
you
see
that
rate
of
growth
that
trajectory
growing
rather
acutely
hospitalizations,
not
surprisingly,
63
percent
increase
over
14
day
period
you're,
seeing
that
same
trend
line
17
190
individuals,
hospitalized
that
are
identified
as
covet
positive.
Currently
in
our
hospital
system,
the
icu's
tracking,
with
3
644
patients
now
in
the
icu,
is
a
51
increase
in
admissions
as
well
over
a
14-day
period.
C
The
death
rate
is
climbing,
as
well
sober
sober
reminder
of
how
deadly
this
disease
is
and
how
tragic
the
loss
of
every
life
is,
but
particularly
those
lies
that
are
lost
during
the
holiday
seasons,
with
loved
ones
and
family
members
torn
asunder,
because
they
don't
have
their
loved
ones
at
home,
or
even
the
ability
call,
and
so
I
just
remind
people
of
this
fundamental
point-
and
that
is
this.
C
Disease
remains
deadly
and
just
take
a
look
at
the
lies
that
have
been
lost
just
over
a
14-day
period,
2741
people
no
longer
with
us
just
over
a
14-day
period.
An
average
now
of
233
lives
lost
an
average
every
day
over
the
last
seven
days
again,
those
weekend
reporting
periods
often
lag.
C
The
83,
though
extraordinarily
high,
I
know,
looks
to
be
more
modest
compared
to
the
average,
but
that
often
is
misleading
on
a
monday,
and
the
reporting
period
is
really
the
average
daily
rates
that
we
should
be
very,
very
mindful
of
233
lives
lost
over
that
period.
Here's
a
chart
that
more
and
more
people
are
getting
familiar
with,
and
that's
the
regions
in
this
state
that
are
in
a
scarcity
frame.
Now,
in
a
surge
frame
as
it
relates
to
icu
capacity,
2.5
is
the
statewide
icu
capacity.
That's
in
the
aggregate.
C
C
Numbers
that
may
appear
to
be
doesn't
mean
much
if
you
don't
live
in
a
region
that
is
also
detailed
and
exampled
here
and
that's
why
we
include
not
just
the
state
number
which
could
be
misleading,
but
if
you're
in
the
bay
area
at
13.7
percent,
icu
capacity,
greater
sacramento
region,
16.2
northern
part
of
the
state,
the
northern
regions
of
the
state
a
little
higher
at
28.7,
but
you
can
see
the
real
hot
spots
right
now:
san
joaquin
valley,
san
joaquin
valley,
it's
zero
percent
and
in
southern
california
the
most
populous
part
of
our
state
is
zero
percent.
C
Now,
in
the
surge
phrase
of
the
icu
planning
so
again,
just
because
it's
at
zero
doesn't
mean
there's
no
icu
available.
It
means
we're
now
in
the
surge
plan.
20,
plus
or
minus
is
the
surge
capacity
pursuant
to
the
plans
that
we
have
socialized
and
are
now
being
utilized
and
advanced
in
those
critical
regions.
Here
in
our
state,
take
a
look
at
the
regional
state
home
map
98.
C
Now
the
population
in
the
state
are
represented
in
the
update
san
joaquin
valley,
southern
california,
greater
sacramento
and
bay
area
against
just
the
northern
part
of
the
state.
That's
not
in
that
stay
at
home.
You
can
see,
as
it
relates
to
the
stay
at
home
that
we
are
likely.
I
think
it's
pretty
self-evident,
going
to
need
to
extend
those
original
dates.
C
You
may
recall
that
the
expiration
in
san
joaquin
county
was
on
the
28th
of
this
month
in
southern
california,
the
30th
of
this
month,
based
upon
all
the
data
and
based
upon
all
these
trend
lines,
it's
very
likely
based
on
those
current
trends
that
we'll
need
to
extend
that
stay-at-home
order.
You
recall
was
a
three-week
order
when
we
announced
it
a
few
weeks
back
just
previewing
the
likelihood
of
those
stay-at-homes
being
extended,
certainly
in
those
two
regions
as
it
relates
to
preparation.
C
We've
talked
a
lot
about
ppe
and
the
600
plus
million
units
of
procedure,
mass
surgical
masks,
as
well
as
n95
masks
that
have
been
distributed.
We've
talked
a
lot
about,
what's
in
our
inventory,
still
over
half
a
billion
units,
ppe
specific
to
just
face
coverings
and
masks
that
are
still
in
our
inventory,
just
because
it's
important
to
remind
folks
the
critical
nature
of
ventilators
as
it
relates
to
the
issues
associated
with
the
scarcity
of
icus.
We
still
are
in
possession
of
an
ample
supply
of
ventilators.
C
You
can
see
here
over
20
000,
not
just
in
the
state
inventory
close
to
14
000
events,
but
also
events
still
available
within
our
hospital
system.
C
Good
news
on
moderna
as
of
well
as
of
this
moment,
I
can
report
to
you
we'll
update
you
in
an
hourly
basis,
or
at
least
in
over
the
course
of
the
next
few
hours,
we'll
update
you
at
the
end
of
the
day,
but
as
I
speak,
21
of
the
31
sites
that
we
identified
for
moderna
to
have
vaccines,
delivered
and
remember
we're
working
with
mckesson
to
do
the
delivery.
They
are
the
intermediary
working
for
moderna
in
terms
of
the
distribution
of
these
doses
of
vaccines.
C
That
first
phase
has
arrived
in
california,
110
000
doses
of
the
372
600
or
672
000.
Forgive
me,
672
000
have
already
arrived.
110
000
of
the
672
000
have
arrived
21
out
of
31
sites.
As
I
speak,
the
reason
why
is
not
only
did
they
get
emergency
authorization
from
fda?
We
also
had
our
western
states
scientific
safety
review
work
group,
a
complement
of
17
members,
six
from
nevada
washington
state
oregon
11
from
the
state
of
california,
again
similar
to
what
they
did
with
the
pfizer
vaccine.
C
They
unanimously
approve
the
safety
and
the
efficacy
of
the
moderna
vaccine.
They
did
so
over
the
weekend
formally
announced
it
sunday
morning
put
a
letter
that
we
received
late
saturday
night,
so
the
modern
vaccine
has
arrived,
and
that
is
indeed
good
news.
672
600
to
be
exact
is
what
we
anticipate
receiving
this
week,
the
110
000
we
already
have,
as
we've
said
many
many
times.
This
is
storage,
for
this
vaccine
is
much
easier
than
the
ultra
cold
storage
of
pfizer.
C
This
is
just
cold
storage,
which
is
the
equivalent
of
freezer
storage
for
the
modern
vaccine.
It's
a
22
dose
regimen,
like
the
pfizer
vaccine,
is
a
two
dose
resume
21
days,
bizarre
28
on
the
moderna,
and
we,
of
course
are
encouraged
by
the
mederna
vaccine
in
relationship
to
the
storage
needs
in
terms
of
our
distribution
in
terms
of
our
logistics.
We're
now
able
to
get
these
shipments
into
rural
parts
of
the
state
into
parts
of
the
state
that
are
more
remote,
and
that
is
indeed
encouraging.
C
There's
also
some
other
advantages
in
terms
of
the
doses
in
each
vial
and
the
total
number
that
you
have
to
order
975
versus
100,
pfizer
orders
versus
modern
orders.
If
I've
lost
you
happy
to
clarify
any
of
that
in
the
q,
a
but
nonetheless
just
some
advantages,
not
on
safety
and
efficacy
per
se,
but
real
advantages
on
logistics
for
the
moment
with
the
moderna
vaccine,
which
is
indeed
very,
very
encouraging
pfizer.
Here's
just
the
update,
560
625
doses
have
arrived
in
the
state
of
california.
C
We
got
that
first
dose
of
the
doses
all
in
327
600.
All
of
that
arrived
last
week
in
the
state
and
that
560
anticipates
for
clarification
purposes.
C
The
three
233
025,
the
233
000
that
we
anticipate
arriving
this
week,
they're
already
starting
to
arrive,
which
is
good
and
will
update
you
as
to
the
status
of
all
of
that
remaining
233
000.
As
you
know,
it's
40
below
what
was
originally
anticipated,
and
I
appreciate
the
clarification
coming
from
the
federal
government,
the
department
of
defense
in
terms
of
their
logistics,
mistake
and
and
owning
up
to
that
again,
no
reason
to
have
a
closed
fist.
In
this
moment.
C
All
of
us
need
to
be
humble
at
this
moment
everyone's
doing
their
best,
and
I
still
maintain
this
is
an
extraordinary
extraordinary
accomplishment
for
this
country
for
our
nation,
for
the
world
that
these
vaccines
are
even
going
into
people's
arms
that
they
have
arrived,
and
I
want
to
compliment
everybody.
It
was
part
of
operation,
war,
speed,
they
deserve
credit.
The
administration
deserves
credit
president
and
vice
president
deserve
credit
for
working
hard
over
the
course
last
number
of
months
to
get
these
vaccines
out
and
to
get
them
in
these
states.
C
We
are
so
often
too
quick
to
be
judgmental,
and
while
we
were
disappointed
in
not
receiving
40
more
of
the
pfizer
vaccine,
we
are
still
very
pleased.
560,
000
doses
of
vaccine
will
arrive
in
the
state
of
california
and
what
we
are
told
very
clearly-
and
I
have
confidence
in
this
based
upon
the
conversations
we've
had
over
the
weekend
and
including
conversations
that
my
staff
had
today
we're
going
to
see
a
stable
of
the
pfizer
vaccine
come
on
a
more
consistent
basis.
C
We
don't
know
the
exact
number
yet
and
when
we
do
we'll,
let
you
know
right
away,
but
we
now
have
confidence
in
that
cadence
and
so
for
our
planning
purposes.
That
will
allow
us
a
little
bit
more
constancy,
a
little
bit
more
ability
to
phase
in
and
distribute
these
vaccines
on
a
protocol
that
was
anticipated
based
upon
the
plans
of
our
guidelines,
work
group
and
our
community
advisory
group
I'll
talk
about
them
in
just
a
moment.
C
But
briefly,
I
want
to
just
update
you
the
first
week
we
did
vaccinate
or
at
least
administer
the
first
dose
of
the
vaccine
to
seventy
thousand
two
hundred
and
fifty
eight
individuals.
Seventy
thousand
two
hundred
fifty
eight
doses
of
vaccine
were
administered
last
week.
We'll
keep
updating
you,
these
numbers
like
just
a
day
or
two.
We
want
to
make
sure
we
get
them,
make
sure
they're
accurate.
C
So
all
those
doses
came
in
not
all
the
doses
were
administered
and
that's
why
again,
we
are,
I
think
again,
why
we're
being,
I
think,
generous
to
the
nature
of
this
unprecedented
distribution
all
across
this
country
and
respectful
of
how
hard
everybody
across
the
spectrum,
federal
state
and
local
are
working
to
do
justice
to
really
meet
this
moment
head
on,
as
it
relates
to
the
upcoming
meetings,
and
I
get
I
was
joking
with
my
staff
last
night
I
said
I
feel
like
a
full-time
red
carpet
concierge
for
everyone
that
does
have
access
to
my
direct
email
and
my
text
messages
asking
about
their
aunt
or
uncle
about
a
friend
or
family
member.
C
When
are
they
going
to
be
in
the
queue?
When
do
they
get
the
opportunity
to
be
vaccinated?
And
I
remind
them
as
all
reminds
you,
including
family
everybody,
that's
calling
staff,
everybody
that
calls
that
we
have
a
public
process
for
vaccinations.
C
C
The
drafting
guidelines
work
group
is
been
visibly
working
on
plan
one
b,
and
this
is
for
the
universe
above
three
million
individuals
that
we
broadly
I've
identified
for
plan,
1a,
prioritization,
those
that
are
currently
getting
vaccinated
and
those
are
healthcare
workers
that
have
direct
interface
and
interaction
with
patients
and
others,
as
well
as
those
in
congregate,
facilities,
skilled
nursing
facilities,
assisted
living
solace.
That's
the
first
phase
of
the
universe,
about
three
million
the
plan.
One
b
is
the
next
phase.
C
The
guidelines
working
group
has
been
working
on
that
phase
populations
as
well
as
sub
populations
for
prioritization.
That
includes
teachers
includes
food
workers.
It
includes
vulnerable
seniors,
cdc,
put
out
their
version
of
the
guidelines.
We
will
come
out
with
more
prescriptive
versions,
and
I
just
want
to
update
you
today.
The
drafting
guidelines
working
group
is
meeting
again
and
then
on
the
23rd,
and
this
is
why
I
wanted
to
make
you
aware
of
this.
C
Between
2
and
4,
the
60
member
community
advisory
committee
will
meet
with
the
16
member
drafting
guidelines,
work
group
and
they
will
work
through
details
and
nuances.
Answering
asking
all
the
questions
that
we're
all
asking
about:
subpopulations
and
exactly
who,
within
that
next
categorization
of
priorities
or
going
to
get
the
vaccines.
That's
a
public
meeting
two
to
four
this
week
on
december
23rd
and
you
can
watch
it
go
to
coven19.ca.gov
covet19.ca.gov
and
you
can
tune
in
in
real
time.
C
We
want
to
be
as
transparent
as
possible
and
by
the
way,
these
are
the
folks
that
are
contacting
me.
I'm
saying
here's
what
you
need
to
tune
in
on
these
are
not
political
decisions,
we're
making
top
down.
These
are
decisions
that
the
experts
are
making.
This
is
a
world-class
group.
C
This
guidelines
work
group,
16,
remarkable
individuals
that
are
putting
their
reputations
on
the
line
and
really
doing
justice
on
the
issue
of
inclusion
and
the
issue
of
equity,
and
then
this
advisory
committee,
truly,
we
believe,
represents
the
diversity
of
the
state
of
california,
not
just
racial
and
ethnic,
but
also
geographic
diversity.
To
really
think
about
those
subpopulations
that
are
so
often
left
behind
in
any
vaccine
drive
any
vaccine
distribution
plan
into
making
sure
that
we
do
justice
to
california
for
all
californians.
C
True
inclusion,
true
equity,
not
just
rhetorical
inclusion,
rhetorical
equity
that
we
deliver
on.
This
promise
please
tune
in
if
you're
interested
to
discuss,
or
rather
listen
in
on
the
discussion
of
plan
1b,
and
we
hope
to
get
those
guidelines
up
and
formalized
very
very
shortly,
but
again
on
the
23rd
you'll
hear
a
lot
more
about
that,
as
it
relates
to
the
conversation
we're
all
having
today
and
we're,
certainly
having
with
my
staff.
This
is
very
encouraging
news.
The
federal
covert
relief
bill
now
heading
to
the
president,
900
billion
dollars.
C
We
can
talk
about
the
merits
of
demerits,
is
it
enough
should
have
been
higher?
Let's
just
talk
about
what
it
is
for
the
purpose
of
planning,
and
so
I
put
three
slides
together.
I
will
present
to
you
and
I'll
just
walk
through
very
very
briefly,
and
I
I
want
to
caution.
We
have
initial
estimates,
and
so
anybody
watching
I
want
you
please
to
consider
the
asterisks
that
is
on
these
next
few
slides.
These
are
initial
estimates.
C
These
are
back
of
the
envelope
estimates,
but
I
wanted
to
at
least
get
people
a
sense
of
roughly
what
we
anticipate
here
in
california
to
be
the
benefits
of
the
federal
covet
relief.
They
are
significant.
They'll
need
to
do
more
in
the
future,
but
nonetheless
they
are
significant,
most
significant,
it's
money
directly
in
your
pocket.
That's
the
300
a
week
for
the
next
11
weeks
for
unemployment,
that's
20
billion
dollars.
We
believe
that
will
come
into
the
state
of
california
over
that
11
week
period,
600
direct
checks
to
help
lower
income
californians.
C
We
anticipate
an
additional
17
billion
dollars
to
be
infused
into
the
state.
We
got.
Some
good
language
on
cares,
act,
funding
the
15.3
billion
that
we
received
from
the
previous
cares
act.
There
were
some
limitations.
There
was
a
little
bit
of
lack
of
flexibility.
They
addressed
that
and
that's
very
significant
in
terms
of
helping
us
guide.
The
distributions
of
those
remaining
cares
act
dollars
325
billion
in
small
business
relief.
C
This
is
critical
at
this
moment
now
reminds
you
of
the
half
a
billion
dollars
we
put
up
in
grants
the
billions
of
dollars,
so
roughly
three
billion
dollars
in
sales
tax
float
without
fees
or
fines,
or
any
associated
burdens
to
small
businesses,
which
we
provided.
100
million
dollars
in
hiring
tax
credits,
we've
done
business,
that's
what
the
state's
done
and
my
budget.
That's
literally
at
the
printer,
a
budget
that
we'll
submit
to
the
legislature
to
become
the
state's
budget
after
we
work
with
legislative
leadership
will
also
have
some
some
very
significant
small
business
support.
C
So
this
is
in
addition
to
all
of
that,
but
we
need
to
scale
the
federal
government
and
325
billion
dollars
in
small
business.
Relief
coming
from
this
package
will
be
very,
very
helpful,
284
billion.
Just
in
the
ppp
program,
the
paycheck
protection
program,
rental
assistance.
We
were
all
waiting
baited
breath
about
the
need
to
see
something
big
and
bold
happen,
our
rental
assistance,
I'm
not
sure
this
is
as
big
and
bold
as
we
hoped
for,
but
it
is
nonetheless
significant.
C
Potentially
2
billion
of
the
25
billion
in
rental
assistance
will
come
to
help
californians
in
need.
That
is
very,
very
significant
and
important
relief
at
this
critical
juncture,
we're
working
with
the
legislature
we're
working
to
see
if
we
can
extend
beyond
february
1st
it's
a
partnership,
it's
collaborative
a
lot
of
work
was
done
to
work
to
get
the
original
moratorium
extended
to
february
1st.
If
we're
going
to
extend
it,
we're
going
to
continue
to
have
to
work
in
that
same
spirit
of
collaboration.
We
are
in
that
process
as
we
speak.
C
That
obviously
can
be
complementary,
potentially
any
moratorium
or
eviction
or
forbearance
foreclosure
mortgages
across
board
spectrum,
not
just
rental,
but
also
commercial,
but
this
direct
rental
assistance,
2
billion
potential
infusion.
California
can't
happen
too
soon.
Testing
tracing
tracking
issues
related
to
vaccine
distribution,
very
significant
69
billion
dollars
for
the
country,
1.3
billion
that
we
expect
here
in
the
state
that's
going
to
help
with
all
of
our
efforts:
advertising
marketing
distribution,
the
planning
logistics
all
of
those
issues,
and
we
were
we
were
operating
under
a
a
you
know.
B
C
Mindset
now
we
can
operate
with
a
more
abundant
mindset.
This
is
a
very,
very
healthy
infusion
of
support.
Eight
billion
dollars
8.5.
We
anticipate
to
help
us
with
k-14,
also
with
uc
and
csu.
C
I
I
can
tell
you,
as
a
former
uc
well
still
in
the
uc
board
of
regents
csu
board
of
trustees
spent
eight
years
lieutenant
governor
in
those
roles
more
formally
more
actively.
This
is
significant
relief
for
csu
and
uc,
and
very
very
timely
and
helpful
relief
through
our
k-14.
That
includes
community
college
system,
we'll
be
talking
a
lot
more
about
how
that
allocation
is
distributed,
but
again,
plus
or
minus.
These
are
estimates.
8.5
billion
dollars
will
be
infused
to
help
those
their
educational
system
here
in
the
state.
C
Child
care
got
four
kids
myself
they're
all
here.
If
you
hear
them
in
the
background
in
the
other
room,
child
care
can't
get
people
back
to
work.
Unless
we
have
child
care,
we
keep
our
care
workers
safe.
Keep
them
healthy,
keep
those
cohorts
that
we've
allowed
in
terms
of
the
central
workforce
going,
but
this
billion
dollars.
We
anticipate
of
that
10
billion
nationally
will
be
very,
very
timely
and
helpful
as
well
broadband.
We
talk
a
lot
about
broadband.
C
We're
going
to
be
talking
a
lot
more
about
it,
love
the
enthusiasm
of
the
california
legislature.
I
can
assure
you
we
share
that
enthusiasm
and
it's
going
to
be
a
top
agenda
for
our
administration
in
january.
It's
reflected
in
a
lot
of
strategies,
legislative
as
well
as
budgetary
strategies.
Also
now
reflected
enthusiastically
by
the
federal
government.
7
billion
may
seem
like
a
lot
of
money,
federally
not
close
to
what
needs
to
be,
but
nonetheless
it's
helpful
and
includes
73.2
billion
for
low-income
families.
So
it's
additive,
it's
complementary.
C
It
will
help
with
our
efforts.
It
will
help
with
all
the
distance
all
the
things
on
telework
everything
we've
been
talking
about
very
encouraging
transportation
sector,
2
billion
potential
infusion
into
the
state
of
california,
45
billion
for
the
nation,
and
then
the
snap
issues,
the
issues
related:
food
scarcity,
food
security,
food
assistance,
agricultural
assistance,
nutrition
assistance,
26
billion
in
that
space,
13
billion
just
on
the
snap
benefits
again.
That
cannot
happen
soon
enough,
particularly
during
these
holidays.
When
we
highlight
these
issues,
we've
done
some
supplements
in
the
last
number
of
months.
C
I
want
to
thank
the
legislative
leaders
for
their
insistence
on
some
supplemental
supports
to
our
food
banks,
90
million
recently,
on
top
of
the
money
we
put
in
the
budget
over
100
million
of
additional
resources,
we've
been
monitoring
the
availability
of
those
resources,
we're
going
to
be
very
mindful
of
what
is
needed
as
it
relates
to
food
distribution
up
and
down
the
state,
but
this
is
indeed
encouraging
as
well.
So
that's
it
broadly
on
the
covid
relief.
C
Let's
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
two,
just
two,
two
specific
issues
I
want
to
just
bring
out
before
we
close
out
and
answer
any
questions.
We've
talked
a
lot.
I
think
all
of
us
are
talking
a
lot
about
this
new
covet
strain
that
we're
reading
about
out
of
the
united
kingdom
and
just
full
disclosure.
We've
been
having
conversations
the
last
48
hours
with
the
airlines
having
conversations
with
our
stakeholders
all
up
and
down
the
state,
we're
looking
just
preview,
nothing
landed
yet
they
say.
C
Landed
emphasis
landed
yet
as
it
relates
to
new
protocols
that
we
are
pursuing
potential
quarantine
protocols,
requirement
of
quarantine
protocols
for
uk
visitors.
I
hope
the
federal
government
takes
action
in
this
space.
They
should
we've
seen
canada,
we've
seen
so
many
other
jurisdictions
around
the
world
that
have,
in
the
absence
of
that
we'll
be
pursuing
different
strategies
on
testing
and
quarantine,
and
those
have
been
activated
in
terms
of
those
conversations
and
as
soon
as
I
have
more
information
I'll
share
that
information
with
you.
But
I
wanted
to
share
this
information.
C
C
We
do
that
in
partnership,
just
as
an
example
in
northern
california,
with
with
ccu
biohub,
which
is
in
partnership,
that's
chan,
zuckerberg
and
ucsf,
so
upwards
of
10
000
samples,
we
haven't
seen
anything
related
to
a
new
strain
yet
and
that's
constant
monitoring
that
is
very
active,
very
proactive
in
terms
of
the
noaa
genomics
space.
Here
in
the
state
of
california,
so
no
evidence
of
this
strain
yet
into
the
state
of
california.
We've
seen
reports
in
other
parts
of
the
globe.
C
South
africa,
obviously
some
european
nations,
but
we
are
not
seeing
that
here,
but
it
under
pins
and
under
well
just
underscores
the
importance
of
our
continued
surveillance
and
these
incredible
partnerships
that
we
have
and
in
a
moment
I'm
going
to
ask
dr
galley
to
talk
more
a
little
bit
more
about
this
space
in
particular.
But
first
I
just
wanted
to
update
you
on
the
california
notify
app,
which
is
again
just
another
tool
in
the
toolkit.
C
It
doesn't
supply,
it
doesn't
substitute
it's
just
additive,
but
7.35
million
people
have
activated
this
new
opt-in
technology,
and
I
remind
you,
if
you're
willing,
able
desirous
to
get
this
notification
app
completely
private,
opt-in
don't
have
to
do
it,
but
seven,
almost
seven
and
a
half
million
people
have
already
you
can
go
to
the
google
android
platform
and
you
can
just
download
under
google
play
their
app
or
you
can
just
go
on
your
iphone
and
simple
open
of
the
settings,
and
you
just
go
to
the
exposure
notification
section
in
the
settings
and
you
can
activate
this.
C
I
did
this
right
away,
one
of
those
7.35
million
californians
to
do
that
doing
this,
the
more
people
that
do
it,
the
more
effective
this
notification
tool
will
become,
and
so
I
hope,
you'll
consider
doing
that
very
encouraged
by
the
seven
plus
million
that
already
have-
and
I
hope,
you'll
consider
the
same.
California
notify
go
to
android
and
go
to
google
play
and
you
can
pull
download
the
app
you
can
pull
it
down
as
well
on
your
iphone
the
ios
platform.
With
that.
C
Let
me
just
turn
this
platform
over
to
dr
galley
and
dr
geller.
If
you
could,
just
briefly,
because
we've
been
talking
a
lot
over
the
last
over
the
weekend,
you
and
I
are
talking
the
team
today
about
this
uk
strain
and
what
you're
seeing
what
we're
not
seeing
give
a
sense
of
of
where
you
think
that's
going,
what
it
means
in
terms
of
of
virulence
and
what
it
means
to
everybody
watching
and
why
we
should
be
concerned
about
it.
C
Why,
though,
you're
not
yet
alarmed
by
it,
but
nonetheless
we
are
monitoring
things
very
very
closely.
Doctor.
D
Yeah,
thank
you,
governor
and
good
afternoon.
So
indeed,
as
you
said,
the
concern
over
the
past
many
days
is
this
new
strain
of
covid.
Let
me
be
a
little
bit
more
specific.
D
We
know
that
viruses,
especially
new
viruses,
are
always
prone
to
mutations,
meaning
that
its
genetic
code
changes
a
little
bit
and
sometimes
those
changes
are
not
have
no
impact
and
other
times.
The
change
is
material
and
important,
and
this
is
a
change
that
was
noticed
over
the
past
many
weeks
in
the
uk,
also
in
south
africa
and
seen
in
a
few
other
countries
in
europe,
where
essentially
the
covid
virus
that
we're
finding
in
some
individuals
who
test
positive.
D
The
way
I
like
to
think
of
it
is
it's
a
little
bit
more
sticky
than
the
covet
virus
that
we've
been
seeing
to
date,
and
what
I
mean
by
that
is.
We
know
that
for
covid
to
enter
a
human
cell,
it
needs
to
bind
to
a
receptor,
a
sort
of
front
door
on
a
human
cell,
and
the
new
mutated
covid
virus
seems
to
bind
a
little
tighter
a
little
more
easily
and
enter
the
cell
of
the
human
body
easier
than
our
current
covid
virus
that
we
have
here
primarily
in
california
in
the
united
states.
D
So
what
does
that
mean
exactly?
It
means
that,
in
exposure
to
somebody
with
the
new
strain
may
mean
you're
more
likely
to
get
infected
than
if
you
were
exposed
to
the
current
strain,
and
that
is
why
we're
worried.
We
haven't
yet
seen
what
we
call
increased
virulence,
meaning
that
people
necessarily
get
sicker
with
this
new
strain.
But
the
fact
that
it
infects
more
easily,
it
seems,
is
what
we
are
worried
about.
So
because
of
this,
we're
of
course
working
with
our
partners
across
the
state
across
the
nation
to
do
exactly
what
the
governor
said.
D
Make
sure
that
if
we
do
see
it
here
in
california
that
we're
able
to
react
to
it
very
quickly,
if
we
see
it
in
the
other
parts
of
the
nation
that
we're.
Similarly,
able
to
react,
we
do
on
a
daily
basis
over
the
course
of
a
month
check
thousands
of
specimens
to
see
if
the
genetic
code
of
the
virus
is
changing
at
all.
So
we
are
watching
closely
for
this
specific
mutation
and
there's
a
lot
of
reasons
why
we're
concerned
a
bit.
D
I've
already
addressed,
but
frankly,
we're
concerned
because
of
the
unknowns
we're
concerned
that
we
aren't
sure
how
this
impacts
the
broad
scale,
efforts
to
contain
and
mitigate
the
virus
as
it
exists
now,
and
so
that
is
why
we're
looking
to
make
some
recommendations
at
further
monitoring
people
who
travel
in
from
these
impacted
areas,
particularly
the
uk,
and
having
those
conversations
now,
because
the
last
thing
we
want
to
do
is
let
a
new
strain
of
covid
come
and
spread
more
rapidly
or
easily
across
the
state.
We
can
we've
done
it
before.
D
E
Thank
you
really.
During
the
pandemic,
there
are
a
lot
of
the
authority
for
making
decisions
arrested
with
county
public
health
department
and
when
it
came
to
testing
there
were
really
spotty
a
real
password
response.
If
you
could
get
a
task
based
on
what
part
of
password
you
were
in.
E
And
we
are
coming
up
with
guidelines
right
now
on
that
scene,
but
we're
already
seeing
some
counties
making
their
own
decisions.
Are
you
worried
about
any
kind
of
fractured
authority
here
on
vaccines
will
replicate
some
of
the
problems
we
saw
with
testing
when
it
came
to
equitable
allocation
standards
statewide,
so
we
could
get.
You
can
get.
C
E
C
Hopefully
you
heard
a
little
bit
more
about
that,
but
I
believe
that
the
question
was
around
localism
and
making
that
we're
monitoring
in
terms
of
the
safety
net,
not
just
safety,
but
the
the
the
directives
that
our
guidelines
working
group
has
put
out
in
terms
of
our
expectation
in
terms
of
the
prioritization
of
sub-populations
and
holding
folks
accountable
providers
in
our
network
of
of
health
professionals,
accountable
to
making
sure
that
these
priorities
are
being
met
in
those
that
are
being
directed
from
the
state
and
dr
gali.
C
That
is
indeed
the
case
and
maybe
heard
more
clearly
the
question.
Perhaps
you
can
talk
a
little
bit
more
because
we've
we've
exchanged
some
memos
around
the
issue
of
enforcing
those
rules
and
regulations,
including,
dare
I
say,
making
sure
that
doctors
are
living
up
to
the
hippocratic
oath
as
it
relates
to
making
sure
no
one's
cutting
in
the
line,
particularly
well-known
individuals
or
well-resourced
individuals
in
the
state
as
well
doctor.
D
Yes,
governor
and
and
just
to
underscore
the
fundamental
platform
that
california's
vaccine
distribution
plan
is
based
on
is
prioritization,
based
on
risk
factors
and
making
sure
that
it's
an
equitable
distribution
across
the
state
and,
as
you
know,
our
priority
group
1a,
which
we
are
actively
working.
All
of
the
doses
that
the
governor
is
mentioning
of
both
pfizer
and
moderna,
are
tracking
to
be
given,
provided
to
that
priority
group
1a.
D
D
Those
tiers
are
in
order
tier
one
two
and
three
and
certain
healthcare
professionals
who
are
on
the
front
lines
are
in
tier
one
and
others
are
in
tier
three
and
we
expect
and
are
watching
closely,
that
our
counties
and
those
who
are
receiving
the
vaccine
stick
by
those
priority
groups
and
that
tiering
system,
it's
all
there
to
make
sure
that,
based
on
risk
and
prioritization
that
people
do
get
the
vaccine
and
the
order
that
the
state
and
all
of
these
different
groups
coming
together
have
decided
make
sense.
In
california.
D
We
are
working
to
make
sure
that
we're
able
to
track
this
part
of
the
effort
on
understanding,
not
just
how
many
doses
are
being
administered
but
where
those
doses
are
being
administered
and
tracking
that,
through
our
various
it
systems
as
part
of
our
strategy,
but
then
also
working
with
the
various
bodies
that
work
to
enforce
clinical
practice.
D
Individual
practice,
making
sure
that
we
are
watching
closely
so
that
if
there
are
any
flagrant,
ignoring
our
prioritization,
that
we
can
act
swiftly
so
that
those
who
should
be
receiving
the
vaccine
now
are
able
to
that.
The
supply
is
sufficient
based
on
our
plans
and
that
those
who
are
just
eager
to
get
it
and
looked
either
innocently
or
not.
So
an
instantly
cut
the
line
that
we're
able
to
monitor
that
and
make
some
enforcement
action.
So
we
as.
D
Or
available
or
other
clinical
settings
that
are
up
first
to
distribute
that
we're
able
to
communicate
with
them
very
clearly
on
not
just
these
prioritizations,
but
how
we
expect
to
monitor
and
watch
that
they
are
indeed,
you
know,
adhere
to.
If
there
are
cases
where
we
are
worried
about
that,
the
somebody
is
doing
doing
this
out
of
order
that
we
will
reach
out
to
those
community
and
county
partners
that
have
agreed
to
follow
this
prioritization.
C
And
I
should
just
know
we
have
a
well-established
I.t
backbone,
windowing
system
that
comes
you
know.
Not
surprisingly,
we've
been
for
some
time
related
to
the
19
million
flu
vaccines
that
we
distribute
on
an
annual
basis
and
that's
typically
done
over
60
90,
maybe
100
day
period,
each
in
every
year
in
a
concentrated
focused
way.
So
we
are
able
to
monitor
in
a
much
very
formal
way.
Here's
something
though
I
just
in
the
purposes
of
maybe
over
answering
the
question
in
the
legitimate
query.
C
It's
important
to
note
that
we
we
have
our
populations
of
priority
plan,
one
a
and,
as
dr
galley
said,
we
talk
about
those
three
tiers
and
within
those
tiers,
they're
subpopulations,
but
when
it
gets
to,
for
example,
I
was
at
uc
davis
when
it
gets
literally
to
the
hospital
site.
There
is
some
autonomy
at
that
level
and
that
autonomy
would
include
as
a
specific
example,
if
you're
going
to
take
care
of
the
icu
staff,
that
staff
would
include
environmental
service
workers,
it
would
include
their
support
staff,
their
direct
contact
staff.
C
Now
that
may
not
be
obvious
when
you're
looking
at
the
tiers,
that
a
janitor
or
someone
that's
essential
to
the
operations
of
an
icu
is
also
part
of
that
priority.
So
we
have
some
flexibility
there,
allowing
folks
that
autonomy
to
make
judgment
calls
so
we're
not
prescribing
in
in
in
total
nuanced
terms,
but
we
are
in
terms
of
broad
equitable
equity
terms
and
terms
that
are
well
described
by
our
our
guidelines.
Working
group.
E
Hi
governor,
this
is
a
multi-part
question,
so
just
bear
with
me.
The
growth
model
that
you
referenced
last
week
now
is
projecting
99,
000
hospitalizations.
E
Which
is
nearly
six
times
the
current
level?
Do
you
think
that's
a
real
possibility
and
how
did
the
state
system
absorb
that
many
patients
and
then
beyond?
That
is
the
state
going
to
establish
protocols
for
rationing
of
care,
or
will
that
happen
county
by
county
and
do
you
think
we're
close
to
instituting
such
drastic
measures.
C
I
appreciate
the
questions
and-
and
I
can
assure
you-
we've
been
answering
those
questions
including
over
the
weekend,
and
I
should
note
one
of
the
things
that
was
missing
from
the
federal
request.
Slide
that
I
put
up
was
a
request
for
another
field:
medical
station,
a
full
medical
station
that
is
inclusive
of
staff
as
well.
So
look,
we
are
anticipating
a
substantial
increase
in
the
hospital
surge
you're
correct.
Some
of
the
modeling
suggests
in
that
90
plus
thousand
range.
C
D
Yeah
governor
and
thank
you
for
the
question
I
mean
indeed-
and
this
is
been
certainly
part
of
the
reason
even
before
we
see
the
hospitals
have
such
an
extreme
number
of
patients
that
we've
been
signaling
to
all
of
you
really
working,
not
just
with
our
county
leaders
but
individual
hospitals
on
what
we
see
coming
based
on
our
projections
simply
put
in
to
remind
people.
D
We
believe
that
12
of
today's
cases
will
be
hospitalized
12
days
from
now,
and
then
12
of
those
hospitalized
patients
will
be
admitted
to
the
icu
for
critical
care
needs.
And
with
that
in
mind,
looking
at
the
cases
day
over
day
and
the
trajection
that
we
trajectory
we
are
on,
we
are
worried
that
certain
regions
do
exceed
their
existing
capacity
and
even
may
go
beyond
the
existing
surge
capacity
that
they
currently
have
planned.
D
That
is
why,
in
part,
we
work
closely
with
those
hospitals
to
talk
about
not
just
the
theoretical
but
boots
on
the
ground,
what's
actually
happening
meetings
frequently
throughout
the
day,
to
make
sure
that
we're
able
to
do
as
much
as
we
can
to
support
each
facility
as
we
sort
of
day
over
day
increase
that
need
for
that
level
of
care.
D
Remember
we
have
a
well
exercised
mutual
aid
system
between
counties
between
regions
that
we
will
always
invoke
and
work
to
make
sure
people
who
are
in
one
facility
or
one
part
of
a
the
state
and
they're
not
able
to
get
the
level
of
care
that
we
need
them
to
get
in
a
timely
way
that
we
work
across
the
entirety
of
california's
health
care
system,
and
we
will
continue
to
do
that.
D
With
regards
to
your
question
about
care,
rationing,
california,
from
the
beginning
of
this
pandemic,
worked
with
stakeholders
not
just
in
the
health
care
delivery
system,
but
throughout
with
groups
of
advocates
for
seniors
those
with
disabilities,
a
number
of
different
groups
across
the
state
to
create
what
we
call
our
crisis
standards
of
care
guidelines.
These
are
guidelines
that
are
posted
on
on
the
cdph
website
that
explain
exactly
the
process
by
which
facilities
happens
locally
at
the
hospital
level
happens
regionally
between
healthcare
delivery
systems
in
a
certain
geography
and
every
hospital
should
be
prepared.
D
I
know
some
have
in
an
abundance
of
caution
and
to
be
well
prepared,
begun
to
have
conversations
about
how
they
stand
up
their
crisis
care
teams,
those
who
are
in
a
hospital
that
are
able
to
help
support
the
bedside
clinical
team
to
make
what
are
you
know,
challenging
decisions,
but
we
continue
to
build
up
our
capacity
so
that,
even
though
hospital
systems
may
be
preparing
along
those
lines
that
we
do
everything
we
can
to
make
sure
californians
receive
the
care
that
they
want.
C
I
should
just
note
on
the
crisis
standards
of
care.
That
was
a
process
that
unfolded
over
the
beginning
at
the
beginning
of
this
pandemic.
In
anticipation
of
a
moment
like
this,
so
we
worked
through,
there
were
some
bumps
in
the
road
in
terms
of
just
people's
reaction
when
the
draft
was
originally
submitted.
We
listened
to
those
concerns.
We
incorporated
and
amended
those
standards
and
we
now
have
them
distributed.
C
That
said,
we
also
over
the
course
of
the
last
many
many
months
have
been
preparing
for
a
significant
surge
as
it
relates
to
looking
at
footprints
and
existing
hospital
sites,
looking
at
the
capacity
to
expand
those
existing
footprints,
not
just
alternative
care
sites,
but
looking
at
expanding
the
healthcare
delivery
system
within
the
system
itself.
Clearly,
that's
already
taking
shape
in
place
in
many
parts
of
the
state,
but
I
remind
you
the
issue
at
hand
for
us
the
primary
issue
today
and
likely
for
the
upcoming
future.
C
At
least
the
immediate
future,
I
should
say,
is
staffing
and
that's
why
we're
being
particularly
aggressive
in
terms
of
the
federal
asks,
aggressive
in
terms
of
our
promotion
of
the
health
corps
program
and
I'll,
remind
folks
that
know
someone
or
maybe
they
themselves
have
recently
retired
or
have
a
particular
expertise
they
can
offer
to
go
to
the
covit19.ca.gov
website
to
learn
about
whether
or
not
they
are
needed
to
help
support.
Fellow
californians
at
this
remarkable
time
of
need.
That
program
has
been
effective.
C
We
just
need
to
scale
it
back
up
and
we
need
to
remind
people
of
its
purpose
and
its
potency
final
point,
because
it's
relevant
and
it's
a
question
I've
received
often-
and
that
is,
are
we
pursuing
the
usns
mercy?
Again,
as
you
recall,
we
were
the
beneficiary
of
one
of
the
large
medical
ships
east
coast
and
west
coast.
Currently
we
are
not
what
we,
however,
are
looking
for
is
personnel.
C
Folks,
that
are
those
that
often
are
deployed
on
the
usns
would
be
identified
as
a
top
priority
staffing.
Our
need
not
a
physical
structure,
yet
as
it
relates
to
our
immediate
needs,.
F
Thank
you,
governor
with
respect
to
the
regions
at
zero
percent
icu
capacity.
Are
those
regions
still
transferring
patients
to
other
areas
of
the
state
that
have
more
capacity
we've
heard
from
some
bay
area
counties
that
they
are
no
longer
accepting
transfers
because
they're
concerned
they
might
need
their
bets
for
their
own
counties?
What
can
you
provide
on
that
update.
C
No,
it's
a
great
question.
Of
course:
we've
seen
that
in
the
past
you
saw
from
imperial
folks
coming
up
the
bay
area
to
decompress
that
system
a
number
of
months
back,
but
as
it
relates
to
how
we've
organized
these
broader
regions
we've
done
so
intentionally,
and
with
that,
let
me
ask
the
person
that
architected
that
strategy
to
answer
the
question
with
more
nuance
and
specificity
doctor.
D
Yes,
we
continue
to
work
to
ensure
that
patients
who
do
need
to
be
transferred.
We
do
our
best
to
make
sure
that
those
transfers
happen
in
a
timely
way.
D
As
the
governor
appropriately
pointed
out,
the
number
one
strategy
is
to
work
to
increase
the
staff,
the
supplies
and
the
space
in
the
existing
hospitals,
where
patients
are
now
because
we
know
that
over
time,
as
not
just
one
or
two
areas
of
the
state
get
deeply
impacted
with
covet,
and
they,
those
regions,
see
their
own
icu
capacity,
go
down
quite
a
bit
that
we
will
not
be
able
to
as
easily
move
patients
from
one
region
to
another.
D
You'll
recall,
as
the
governor
reminded
us
that
in
the
summer
we
did
move
patients
from
imperial
through
imperial
county
throughout
the
state.
Today
that
is
more
challenging,
because
those
hospitals
that
had
room
to
accept
those
patients
from
imperial
today
have
their
own
surge
challenges.
D
So
again,
number
one
strategy
is
to
support
hospitals
where
the
patients
are
today
to
make
sure,
either
through
expansions
on
the
hospital
footprints
themselves
or
through
alternative
care
sites
or
transferring
not
across
the
entire
state,
but
maybe
to
nearby
counties
where
they
have
some
of
those
alternative
care
sites
set
up
as
well.
So
we
are
seeking
to
do
that.
D
Even
if
a
county
is
said
one
day
that
they're
not
able
to
take
a
transfer,
we
constantly
check
in
because
we
try,
as
every
hospital
does
every
county
does
every
region
does
to
make
sure
we
do
all
we
can
for
every
single
patient
within
the
state,
and
I
would
be
negligent
to
not
point
out
that
in
the
prior
question,
when
we
looked
forward
to
the
forecasts
of
quite
a
few
patients
in
our
hospitals
to
down
the
road
in
january
towards
the
end
of
january,
that
we
should
remind
you
that
that
is
not
a
story
that
is
already
written.
D
C
Appreciate
dr
galley,
reminding
all
of
us
that
we
have
agency
that
we're
not
victims
of
fate,
and
I
say
this
often
I'll
repeat
it.
The
future
is
not
just
something
to
experience
something
to
manifest
decisions.
The
end
of
the
day,
our
decisions,
individual
decisions,
the
sum
total,
the
collective
making
of
40
million
californians
strong,
will
determine
that
fate
and
future,
and
so
it
is
really
important
to
take
heed
this
moment,
we're
in
in
so
many
ways
reflected
of
the
surge
that
we're
experiencing
coming
from
that
thanksgiving
holiday.
C
Now,
as
we
move
into
this
week
in
christmas
and
new
year's,
it
is
incumbent
upon
all
of
us
to
just
consider
in
contemporary
terms
the
experience
that
we
are
reflecting
today
and
how
that
experience
was
manifested
a
few
weeks
back
by
decisions
where
we
were
seeing
activity
and
movement
that
ultimately
a
nerd
to
putting
this
kind
of
pressure
on
our
icus
and
hospitals.
C
We
can
avoid
that
in
the
next
week
the
next
days,
and
we
could
substantially
impact
those
projections
bend
that
curve
and
work
quickly
get
this
third
wave
behind
us
and
get
out
of
this
in
some.
In
a
way
that
I
think
this
state
is
uniquely
capable
of.
F
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
governor
and
dr
daley
for
the
update
today.
Maybe
a
slight
tangent
here
from
such
a
sobering.
F
Wonder
I'm
calling
from
pasadena
where,
obviously
the
rose
gold,
you
know
obviously
a
huge
deal.
Can
you
elaborate
a
little
bit
more
on
the
state's
position
as
it
relates
to
the
2021
rose
bowl
game?
Perhaps
taking
a
bit
talking
a
bit
on
on
why
it
was
important
to
push
back
against
these
efforts
to
make
an
exemption
for
player
guests
and
perhaps
elaborating
a
bit
on
just
your
general
reaction
to
the
game
relocating
to
texas
this
year
or
next
year.
C
We
love,
we
love
the
rose
ball.
It's
part
of
you
know
it's
it's.
I
don't
know
how
best
to
describe
it
as
a
fifth
generation.
California,
I
feel
like
you
know
there
was
a
gold
rush
and
then
there
was
a
rose
ball,
and
so
it's
been
a
big
part
of
our
lives.
The
rose
ball
parade
the
game
itself,
I'm
an
avid
sports
fan,
so
I
I
am
eager
to
watch
the
rose
ball.
C
That
said,
look
I,
I
think
the
question
in
so
many
respects
and-
and
I
appreciate
the
tone
and
tenor
the
way
you
even
asked
it
answers
itself
right,
I
mean
when
you're
in
southern
california
you're
zero
percent
icu
capacity.
C
We
can't
make
exceptions,
we
have
to
be
stringent
in
terms
of
our
rules
and
our
regulations.
We've
got
to
do
everything
in
our
power
to
mitigate
spread
and
to
mitigate
mixing,
and
so
what
they
asked
for
was
contrary
to
that
determination
into
our
medium
and
long-term
goals,
and
so
obviously,
I'm
disappointed
we're
disappointed
that
we
had
to
make
that
call.
C
But
boy
hear
me
loudly
our
reverence
our
respect,
our
admiration,
our
pride
that
comes
from
the
rose
ball
and
obviously
the
impact
it's
had
on
pasadena,
the
entire
region,
the
international
identity
that
we
receive
every
single
year
here
from
it
economic
vibrancy
that
comes
out
of
it,
the
brand
I
mean
everything
about
it,
and
so
just
know
that
none
of
this
is
what
we
want
to
do
it's
what
we
have
to
do
in
order
to
mitigate
the
spread
and
be
responsible
at
this
moment
at
peril
of
regretting
the
decision
and
putting
people's
lives.
G
Thank
you
governor.
You
earlier
in
this
event
hinted
that
the
the
stay-at-home
orders
will
probably
be
extended
beyond
the
current
times
in
the
various
regions,
how's
that
going
to
roll
out
in
terms
of
how
people
are
going
to
know
when
that
happens,
and
how
long
that
is.
That
may
be
something
you
want
dr
golly
to
talk
about
and
then
quickly,
just
because
you
referenced
it
at
the
top,
but
I
don't
think
the
rest
of
the
public
understands
you
are
in
quarantine
right
now.
G
C
C
Anomalous
just
shows
the
virulence
of
this
disease
so
how
easily
transmittable
this
disease
is,
and
so
very
few
people
in
the
staff
environment
we
were
you
know
we
we,
the
only
contact
we've
had,
was
in
preparation
for
some
of
the
events
that
we're
doing
right
now
in
terms
of
just
trying
to
communicate
with
you
trying
to
be
accessible
to
you
trying
to
be
transparent
to
you
and
some
cases.
C
There
are
a
few
extra
people
in
the
room,
but
everybody
wearing
masks
up
until
literally
when
you
see
us
take
them
off
to
communicate
with
you
and
others.
So
it's
unfortunate
and
we
wish
speedy
recovery
for
the
individual
that
tested
positive.
That
was
proximate
to
me
a
number
of
days
ago.
I
think
it
was
on
friday
to
be
exact.
I
was
tested
yesterday
tested
negative,
but
you
got
to
walk
you're
talking
in
terms
of
protocols
that
we
put
out
established
relates
to
quarantine,
which
we
did
in
that
14-day
quarantine.
C
A
few
weeks
back
and
now
with
the
10-day
quarantine,
look
as
it
relates
to
the
issue
of
next
statements,
or
rather
when
we
will
be
making
announcements
based
upon
trends
based
upon
these
guidances
that
we
put
out
that
expire
on
the
28th
of
this
month
and
the
30th
this
month.
I
appreciate
john
you're
referencing
dr
galley,
in
the
context
of
I've,
been
able
to
more
specifically
answer
that
and
I'll
turn
it
over
to
dr
galley.
Who
will
do
just
that
moment.
D
Yeah
john
thanks
for
the
question,
and
indeed
we
are
preparing
over
this
week
to
really
roll
out
exactly
how
those
determinations
will
happen.
We
expect
to
run
this
whether
it's
at
the
end
of
this
upcoming
weekend
or
early
next
week,
indeed
for
that
first
region,
so
that
we
can
anticipate
and
I'll
remind
you
what
we
said
we'll
be
looking
at
icu
capacity
projections.
D
Four
weeks
after
four
weeks
after
we
have
the
first
day
when
that
regional
stay-at-home
order
could
be
lifted.
So
if
you're,
looking
at
the
28th
of
december
you're,
looking
somewhere
around
what
our
icu
projections
are
about
the
25th
of
january,
so
we
have
tools,
as
we
have
in
so
many
areas,
to
make
these
projections.
D
What
will
we
be
looking
at
we'll
be
looking
at
current
icu
capacity,
we'll
be
looking
at
the
number
of
new
cases
on
average
over
a
seven
day
period
and
we'll
be
looking
at
that
sort
of
transmission
rate
factor,
not
just
what
the
transmission
rate
is.
But
how
fast
is
it
either
accelerating
or
decelerating,
so
those
different
aspects
will
come
together
to
help
us
make
that
projection,
and
so
it's
not
just
well.
What
is
my
icu
number
in
my
region
today?
D
It's
actually
a
lot
about
the
various
individual
decisions
and
behaviors
that
have
manifested
in
the
case
number
and
that
are
effective
value
that
some
of
you
have
been
tracking
with
us
since
the
beginning
we'll
be
looking
at
all
of
that,
bringing
it
together,
socializing
it
with
many,
so
that
they
can
track
it
on
a
very
regular
basis,
starting
early
next
week,
sharing
that
about
the
san
joaquin
valley
and
then
quickly
after
that,
the
southern
california
region
and,
as
the
governor
said
given
where
we
are
today-
and
we,
of
course
only
will
reveal
this
when
we
are
done
with
the
calculations
at
the
time
that
they
need
to
be
done.
D
E
Oh
yeah,
thank
you
for
the
question
two
questions
here,
one
governor:
what
would
be
your
takeaway
to
businesses
and
everyone
now
that
he's
not
guaranteed
twice
within
a
month
and
doesn't
change
your
outlook
on
any
future
decisions
surrounding
kovit
and
the
second
question
here:
are
you
quarantining
with
your
family?
Are
you
separate
from
your
family
and
how
is
this
going
to
affect
your
holiday?
Are
you
guys
going
to
have
to
stay
in
california?
Are
you
going
on
vacation
to
quarantine.
C
C
We
have
a
separate
little
little
small
room
that
they
put
me
in
and
so
I'll
be
here
for
the
next
number
of
days
and
hopefully
we'll
keep
getting
tested,
negative
and,
and
that
should
calm
the
nerves,
my
wife
and
my
four
kids,
but
we
we
hope
to
be
doing
our
best
like
everybody
else
to
to
safely
stay
at
home
and
and
enjoy
what
we
can
of
of
the
holidays
I'll
be
working,
but
but
my
family
will
try
to
create
conditions
where
this
can
be
as
normal
as
it
possibly
can
for
your
family
for
my
family
for
all
our
families.
C
Look
these
quarantines
aren't
easy
on
anybody
and
we're
mindful
of
that.
C
It's
why
we
did
a
lot
of
things
over
the
course
last
number
of
months
on
providing
people
presumption
so
that
they're
eligible
for
for
resources,
if
indeed
they
have
come
into
contact
with
someone
that
tested
positives,
they
could
do
so
safely
and
can
afford
to
do
so
as
well
that
they
have
economic
supports
and
they
have
the
ability
to
be
isolated
and
get
the
opportunity
to
to
be
separated
for
a
period
of
time
if
they
must
from
their
family
and
have
the
resource.
C
So
there's
been
a
lot
of
tenants
of
support
in
that
space,
but
I
cannot
impress
upon
you
more
the
importance
of
doing
a
lot
more
in
scaling
those
efforts.
That's
why
I
was
very
encouraged
to
see
what
is
coming
from
the
new
stimulus
and
while
it's
lower
number
than
we
had
hoped
for,
it
is
nonetheless
significant.
Let
me
just
say
this
because
I
I
didn't
say
this.
Thank
you.
Nancy
pelosi.
C
C
I
just
want
to
you
know,
make
the
case
not
just
for
what
was
accomplished,
but
for
what
she
in
particular
accomplished
with
this
new
stimulus
and
how
impactful
it's
going
to
be
to
people
directly
all
up
and
down
the
state.
Let
me
just
close
by
reminding
people
that
what
comes
from
the
federal
government
does
not
end
the
story.
It's
the
beginning
of
the
support
of
support,
including
the
small
business,
supports.
C
The
medium-sized
business,
supports
rental
assistance,
eviction,
assistance,
all
of
that
which
we
are
responsible
for,
as
well
as
a
nation-state,
at
least
a
state
as
large
as
ours,
and
so
we'll
be
hearing
a
lot
more
about
that.
The
coming
weeks,
we
have
outstanding
legislative
leadership
that
is
very
focused
on
this
very
committed
to
this,
and
we
are
working
over
time
to
see
if
we
can
advance
some
early
decisions
and
make
some
pointed
movement.
C
So
we're
not
waiting
months
and
months
and
months
for
the
traditional
legislative
cycle,
meaning
we
hope
to
take
some
early
action,
long-winded
way
of
saying
some
early
action
on
all
of
these
fronts.
We'll
update
you
in
the
next
hours
and
days
on
issues
related
to
the
uk,
we'll
continue
to
update
you
on
vaccination
plans,
we'll
update
you
as
well
on
any
news
we
hear
from
the
federal
government
in
terms
of
additional
support
of
staff
from
the
department
of
defense
from
hhs.
C
I
want
to
thank
hhs
for
providing
additional
supports
for
the
monoclonal
trials
and
the
infusions
which
we'll
be
doing
very
shortly
when
those
resources
arrive.
I
want
to
thank
the
team
at
department
of
public
health
and
all
of
those
in
the
scientific
safety
review
committee,
the
vaccine
distribution
plan
planning
and
work
groups
for
their
diligence.
I
encourage
people
to
tune
in
on
the
23rd
a
couple
days
to
see
where
that
progress
is
on
the
plan.
One
be,
I
think
again,
all
of
those
are
responsible
for
operation
warp
speed.
C
I
just
you
know
it's
just
wrong
that
we
don't
say
this
enough.
It's
an
extraordinary
accomplishment
that
we're
even
in
this
position,
to
have
the
ability
to
get
doses
of
vaccines
in
people's
arms,
and
I
cannot
impress
people.
C
I
press
upon
people
enough
our
gratitude,
my
gratitude
on
behalf
of
the
state
for
the
millions
of
people
that
will
benefit
because
of
the
urgency
and
the
deliberative
speed
that
was
advanced
that
has
been
advanced
through
operation
warp
speed
with
that
look
forward
to
updating
you
tomorrow,
updating
you
wednesday
and
hopefully
doing
the
same,
may
spare
you
on
christmas
friday
as
well.
Take
care.