►
From YouTube: Governor Newsom's COVID-19 Update - June 24, 2020
Description
Governor Gavin Newsom provides an update on the state's response to the COVID-19 outbreak.
Recorded June 24, 2020 in Sacramento.
For more information regarding the impact of the COVID-19 outbreak in Cupertino, please visit https://www.cupertino.org/coronavirus
C
Good
after
Oh
good
morning,
everybody,
if
we
didn't
need
to
be
reminded
Mother
Nature,
made
sure
we
were
reminded
of
her
fury.
Almost
a
year
ago,
in
two
weeks
we
had
a
major
earthquake
in
the
state
of
California
Ridgecrest.
Just
about
20
minutes
ago
we
experienced
another
trembler,
just
5.8
on
the
Richter
scale,
but
enough
to
remind
all
of
us
of
our
responsibilities
as
Californians.
Our
vulnerabilities
as
Californians
as
it
relates
to
the
issue
of
earthquakes.
C
I
want
to
remind
folks
that
it
is
important
if
you
have
not
to
take
advantage
of
new
technology,
that
the
state
of
California
has
advanced
earthquake
early
warning
system.
This
is
one
of
the
first
in
our
nation
and
one
of
the
most
technologically
advanced
in
the
world.
We
have
an
app
or
47
thousand
people,
20
minutes
or
so
ago
were
alerted
the
my
shake
app.
You
can
just
go
online.
Google,
my
shape
shake
app
and
avail
yourself
to
download
this
app,
which
does
provide
a
modest
early
warning
about
seismic
activity
in
and
around
your
area.
C
47
again
thousand
people
were
alerted
under
this
app.
The
5.8
earthquake
occurred
in
Inyo
County,
not
very
far
from
Ridgecrest.
More
information
will
be
forthcoming,
but
I
wanted.
Just
to
the
top
of
my
remarks,
just
remind
everybody
of
the
importance
that
we
all
place.
The
vigilance
that
we
must
advance
in
our
personal
professional
lives
to
be
prepared
not
only
to
protect
ourselves
as
it
relates
to
the
spread
of
the
virus.
Kovin
19,
but
to
be
vigilant
around
earthquakes
and
there
remind
everybody-
are
also
entering
into
wildfire
season.
This
is
California
after
all,
credibly
resilient
state.
C
None
of
these
are
necessarily
novel
challenges.
Stacking
them
all
together,
of
course,
creates
some
different
environment
of
stress
and
I'm.
Deeply
appreciative
that
everybody
is
being
vigilant,
the
extent
they
can
and
being
prepared
as
much
as
they
can
for
all
of
these
multiple
challenges
that
we
face
as
we
move
forward
together
as
a
state
I
want
to
update
everybody
on
where
we
are,
as
it
relates
to
the
state
of
covin
19
here
in
California
or
own
mind,
people
that
we
are
still
in
the
first
wave
of
this
pandemic.
C
As
individuals
of
the
importance
of
practicing
safe
physical
distancing
but
also
wearing
face
coverings,
which,
as
many
know,
is
a
mandate
in
the
state
of
California
I
want
to
just
offer,
though,
for
the
purpose
of
emphasis,
a
number
of
slides
that
will
illustrate
some
concerns.
We
have,
as
it
relates
to
case
numbers
in
the
state
of
California.
Just
a
few
days
ago,
on
Monday
I
released
our
new
case
numbers
four
thousand
two
hundred
and
thirty
new
cases
of
people
that
were
identified
as
positive
for
kovat
nineteen
on
Monday
you'll
see
from
this
chart.
C
Just
in
the
last
few
days,
those
numbers
have
increased
some
sixty
nine
percent
to
seventy
one
hundred
and
forty
nine
individuals
over
seven
thousand
individuals,
a
record
number
here
in
the
state
of
California
that
have
tested
positive
for
kovat
nineteen.
Now
a
lot
has
been
said
about
not
only
the
increase
in
the
total
numbers,
but
the
increase
in
the
total
number
of
tests,
and,
while
that's
absolutely
true,
we
not
only
had
a
record
number
of
positive
cases.
Yesterday
of
over
seventy
one
hundred,
we
also
had
a
record
number
of
tests.
C
Ninety
six
thousand
tests
were
conducted
in
the
last
24
hours,
so
one
would
assume-
and
it's
been
stated
by
many-
regardless
of
your
ideology-
political
stripes
or-
where
you
land
on
this
pandemic-
that
as
you
increase,
the
total
number
of
tests,
invariably
you're
going
to
increase
the
total
number
of
cases,
and
that's
certainly
demonstrable
in
the
example
that
we
are
providing
here
today.
But
what
is
fundamental
and
so
important
and
I
cannot
emphasize
it
enough.
Is
those
numbers
can
be
misleading?
The
number
that
is
incredibly
important.
C
The
number
we've
tried
to
socialize
with
you,
and
increasingly
people
all
across
the
country
are
doing
the
same
in
their
respective
states,
and
that
is
the
positivity
rate.
That's
the
total
number
of
tests
you
see
on
this
slide
versus
total
number
of
people
that
have
tested
positive,
and
we
put
those
in
percentage
terms
remind
you
when
we
did
the
first
14
day
track
on
our
positivity
rate,
going
back
into
April.
We
had
an
experience
of
quite
remarkable
forty
point.
C
Eight
percent
of
those
that
were
tested
over
a
14
day
period
in
the
beginning
of
this
pandemic
had
a
positivity
that
rate
that
showed
a
staggering
40.8%
today
on
the
14
day
average.
That
positivity
rate
is
about
4.1
percent.
Now
I
caution,
you
or
excuse
me,
5.1
percent,
from
40.8%
to
5.1
percent,
but
I
caution.
You
each
decimal
point
is
profoundly
impactful
and
so
I
provided
this
additional
slide.
That
gives
you
a
sense
of
where
we've
been
not
since
April
again.
Remember
those
April
numbers.
C
We
were
testing
primarily
people
that
were
symptomatic,
not
people
that
were
asymptomatic
or
pre-symptomatic.
As
you
increase
the
total
number
of
cases,
you
get
a
better
sense
of
the
community
spread
in
the
positivity
rate
in
the
general
population.
So
in
this
slide
we
take
a
closer
look
at
the
test,
positivity
rate,
and
this
slide
goes
back
just
a
few
weeks.
You
see
we're
about
four
point:
six
percent.
C
C
It's
now
up
to
five
point:
six
percent,
and
so
we
are
tracking
these
very
very
closely
and
it's
a
point
of
consideration
for
each
and
every
one
of
us
to
consider
a
number
of
events
that
have
occurred
over
the
course
last,
not
just
few
weeks,
but
over
the
course
of
the
last
number
of
months
as
we
begun
to
meaningfully
reopen
the
economy.
We
also
had
some
important
milestones:
Memorial
Day,
roughly
a
month
or
so
ago,
start
experienced
demonstrations
and
protests
roughly
two
and
a
half
three
weeks
ago.
C
So
we
should
start
anticipating
one
would
assume
it
could
anticipate
an
increase
of
the
positivity
rate,
as
we
do
more
and
more
testing
throughout
the
state
of
California.
That
said,
these
numbers
do
beg
the
question,
and
that
is
what
can
we
do
more
to
keep
you
safe
from
the
spread
of
this
virus
and
I'm
going
to
get
to
that
just
in
a
brief
moment.
So
the
positivity
rate
is
up
total
testing
up
at
unprecedented
numbers.
C
96
thousand
total
number
of
positive
cases
over
7,000
that
we
have
not
experienced
yet
and
we
are
seeing
hospitalizations
not
surprisingly
begin
to
increase.
This
is
the
number
that
is
also
one
we
should
be
deeply
attuned
to.
Hospitalization
numbers
have
increased.
This
slide
reflects
just
again.
Two
weeks
or
so
ago,
3177
individuals
were
hospitalized
for
kovat
19
today
over
at
least
24
hour,
porting
period,
4095
so
from
3177
to
4095.
In
simple
terms,
that
represents
just
in
14
days
a
29%
increase
in
hospitalizations,
but
it
also
doesn't
tell
the
entire
story.
C
You
may
recall
those
that
watch
closely.
Some
of
these
updates
that
on
Monday
just
a
few
days
ago,
our
14
day
increase
in
hospitalizations
was
at
16
percent,
so
we
have
experienced
an
increase
over
the
last
few
days
in
terms
of
total
number
of
individuals
and
hospitals.
That
I
think
deserves
a
little
bit
more
attention
than
even
that
longer
trend
line
that
you
see
reflected
in
this
chart.
That
said-
and
this
is
where
I
want
to
come
any
nerves.
C
That
said
all
throughout
the
last
number
of
months
we
have
been
preparing,
we
haven't
been
sitting
on
our
hands.
We
haven't
been
describing
ourselves
as
victims
of
fate.
We
have
been
preparing
to
reopen
the
economy
preparing
as
we
increase
the
community
outreach
and
testing
community
spread
preparing
for
an
increase
in
the
community,
spread
that
we
would
need
to
prepare
for
an
increase
in
hospitalizations.
C
Accordingly,
as
I've
noted
on
many
many
occasions,
we've
identified
over
52,000
beds
that
can
be
made
available
as
part
of
our
surge
event
capacity
in
the
state
of
California,
as
I
said
the
other
day.
That
does
not
include
our
alternative
air
share
sites.
These
are
healthcare
system
capacity.
Again
within
the
existing
hospital
system,
we
have,
in
addition
to
the
50
2745
surge
beds.
C
We
have
roughly
1,500
alternative
care
beds,
but
even
within
the
surge
capacity
of
our
hospital
system,
when
you
put
that
number
4095
individuals
that
are
Kovan
19,
that
we've
identified
as
positive
in
a
hospital
system
in
a
graph
along
these
lines
of
a
pie
chart
like
this,
it
represents
about
7.8,
roughly
8
percent
or
so
of
our
capacity.
So
why
don't
we
mark
that?
Specifically?
8
percent
of
our
total
hospital
capacity,
just
based
on
our
surge
beds,
are
currently
being
occupied.
C
C
It
has
increased
to
18%
just
over
a
very
short
period,
so
again,
points
of
caution,
points
of
consideration
always
for
us
a
point
of
concern
again
one.
We
anticipate
in
terms
of
our
overall
inventory
of
capacity
in
this
next
slide.
We'll
give
you
a
sense
of
that
1268
individuals
in
our
ICU
critical
care
system.
Our
total
capacity
today
is
four
thousand
and
thirty.
Four,
so
a
few
days
ago,
I
estimated
or
roughly,
we
stated
that
rarely
twenty-eight
percent
of
our
total
ICU
capacity
was
being
utilized.
C
It's
about
thirty
percent
now
so
eight
percent
on
hospitalizations
I've
being
utilized
about
30%
of
our
ICU
capacity,
statewide
ventilators,
roughly
the
same
number
of
ventilators
just
down
a
hundred
or
so
from
Monday,
are
available
over
11,500
ventilators
are
available
within
our
system
within
the
hospital
system
and
our
cash
that
we
have
at
the
state
operation
the
center
again.
These
are
just
numbers
we
all
should
be
mindful
of
and
focused
on
on
a
day-in
day-out
basis,
so
they
have
a
pre-show
modestly
increased
over
the
last
number
of
days.
C
But
again
we
are
confident
our
capacity
in
the
short
run
to
meet
the
needs
of
those
most
in
need
in
the
state
of
California.
Our
contact
tracing
a
big
part
of
our
efforts,
increase
testing
in
the
state
and
also
increase
our
capacity
to
trace
and
connect
with
those
that
may
have
been
exposed
to
Kovan
19
have
been
tested,
positive
and
make
sure
we
trace
those
that
they've
come
into
contact
with.
As
you
know,
our
phase
1
goal
of
training
10,000
individuals
by
July
1st.
We
are
within
a
margin
close
to
meeting
that
goal.
C
We
have
a
few
a
week
or
so
more
of
training
to
do,
but
we'll
get
a
cohort,
that's
close
to
that
number,
get
them
into
the
cities
and
counties
again.
These
are
County
Health
directed
operations
bottom
up,
not
top
down
we're
building
on
an
existing
staffing
that
that
has
predated
the
köppen
19
crisis.
I
want
to
remind
people.
Contact
tracing
is
not
novel,
it's
not
new!
C
It's
been
around
for
decades,
TB,
measles,
HIV
and
AIDS
hepatitis
and
the
like
STDs,
so
existing
tracers
have
operated
pre
kovat
throughout
the
state
of
California
through
County
operations,
County
Hospital
systems
we're
building
on
that
existing
capacity,
and
the
goal
again
is
to
get
10,000
people
trained
in
this
first
phase
and
we
have
counties
that
are
onboarding
to
our
new
platform.
Again,
the
whole
idea
is
take
58
counties,
these
400,
80s
or
so
cities
in
the
state
of
California
connect,
the
dots
make
sure
we're
all
connected
to
the
extent
we
can.
C
On
one
platform,
we
have
31
of
our
counties
that
are
already
on
board
it
into
our
new
platforms,
five
counties,
quite
literally
today
that
are
coming
online
and
then
15
that
are
in
the
process.
So
we
are
moving
forward.
This
doesn't
mean
by
the
way
that
they
are
not
taking
their
existing
data
and
aggregating
and
managing
their
data.
They
are
we're
just
trying
to
get
everybody
on
one
statewide
platform,
so
that
should
mislead
anybody,
that
we
are
still
not
being
vigilant
at
the
local
level
in
terms
of
our
training
protocols
and
training
capacity.
C
I
want
to
just
remind
people,
as
I
said
a
moment
ago.
There's
an
old
adage
continue
to
do
what
you've
done.
You'll
get
what
you've
got.
We
cannot
continue
to
do
what
we
have
done
over
the
last
number
of
weeks.
Many
of
us
understandably
developed
a
little
cabin
fever.
Some
I
would
argue,
have
developed
a
little
amnesia.
C
All
of
a
sudden
you're
mixing
not
in
the
same
family
or
household
cohorts
that
you
were
in
the
past.
The
question
is:
are
you
practicing
physical
distancing
when
you
are
inviting
family
members
over
or
when
you're
having
a
barbecue?
And
you
want
to
say
you
know
what
I
miss
you
to
your
neighbors,
your
friends,
not
just
your
family
members
and
you
invite
them
over,
and
you
say,
alright.
We're
gonna
do
our
best
to
practice
physical,
distancing
and
all
of
a
sudden
two
cousins
see
each
other
and
they
run
and
hug.
C
And
you
say
boys,
you
got
to
practice
social
distancing
and
they
then
run
away
with
the
soccer
ball
and
all
of
a
sudden
you're
back
having
a
conversation
and
we're
trying
to
all
manage
this.
The
reality
is
I'm,
not
naive.
People
are
mixing,
and
that
is
increasing
the
spread
of
this
virus.
It
surprised
anybody
as
we
not
only
reopen,
not
only
reopen
our
economy,
but
we
begin
to
reopen
our
households
and
we
begin
to
go
back
to
our
old
ways
and
our
old
habits.
C
A
consequence
is,
we
are
spreading
this
virus
and
it
is
incumbent
upon
us
to
recognize
that
as
individuals
as
communities
as
leaders
in
our
own
households,
our
own
communities,
to
recognize
that
it
is
our
behaviors
that
are
leading
to
these
numbers
and
we
are
putting
people's
lives
at
risk.
I
don't
mean
to
say
that
to
be
maudlin
to
be
hyperbolic,
but
we
lost
52
individuals
again
in
the
last
24
hours,
65
on
Tuesday.
They
lost
their
lives
in
the
last
reporting
period.
C
There
is
a
sense
that
a
lot
of
young
people
or
well
you're
young,
and
so
you
feel
a
little
bit
more
invincible,
but
respectfully
often
that
can
be
a
selfish
mindset
and
I
say
that
not
to
be
pointed
not
to
be
patronizing,
but
to
emphasize
that
people,
regardless
of
their
age
that
have
kovat
19,
are
vectors.
They
can
spread
the
virus
and
they
can
spread
it
to
people
that
simply
cannot
handle
the
virus
as
younger
healthier
people
can.
These
are
our
seniors.
C
These
are
people
that
have
comorbidities
people
with
other
symptoms
that
have
predated
this
pandemic.
What
often
referred
to
as
pre-existing
conditions
and
those
could
be
young
people,
young
child
with
leukemia-
can
be
impacted
by
your
proximity
and
your
unwillingness
to
wear
a
mask
or
physically
distance
people.
That
would
seem
healthy.
That
may
have
an
underlying
condition
that
may
react
to
this
disease
much
more
unfavorably
and
that's
why
all
of
us
can
do
more
to
slow
the
spread
of
this
virus
by
simply
wearing
a
face
covering
I
can't
say
this
enough.
C
You
know
what's
interesting
a
number
of
months
ago
we
were
all
struggling
to
get
face,
masks
to
get
n95
respirator
masks
to
our
health
law,
health
care
workers,
our
nurses,
our
doctors,
our
frontline
workers.
We
were
searching
high
and
low
to
provide
for
more
cohorts
to
receive
masks
and
our
grocery
stores
and
our
farm
workers
and
our
transportation
sector
and
the
like-
and
there
was
some
caution
and
hesitancy
around,
requiring
something
that
we
couldn't
even
provide
to
our
most
vulnerable
frontline
workers.
C
There's
no
excuse
to
wearing
a
face
covering
you
can
make
these
at
home
and
I
encourage
you
to
go
to
our
Cove
at
nineteen
ca.gov
website,
covin
nineteen
dot
ca.gov
website,
if
you
don't
have
the
means
to
to
get
a
face,
mask
at
the
store,
the
capacity
to
have
some
delivered
to
you.
If
you
aren't
of
means,
but
also
you
have
the
ability,
the
extent
you
can
and
you're
willing,
you're
able
to
do
it
yourself,
and
I
would
encourage
you
to
do
that.
But
regardless
do
what
you
can
to
protect
yourself.
C
Fundamentally,
I
be
a
little
selfish,
protect
yourself,
you're,
not
invincible
from
kovat
nineteen.
Quite
the
contrary.
This
is
a
disease
that
easily
spreads
very
easily
spreads
and
if
you're,
not
about
yourself,
because
she's
like
I
got
this
I'm
I'm
strong,
I'm,
young
I'm,
healthy,
don't
worry
about
me!
I'm,
tough!
Well,
consider
others!
I
know
everybody
I,
don't
care
what
your
political
stripe
is:
I,
don't
care
what
your
background
is.
Everybody
needs
to
be
loved
and
everybody
loves,
and
so
you
know
what
everybody
cares
about.
Somebody
and
somebody
else.
C
If
that's
the
case
demonstrate
it
prove
it
protect
others
by
wearing
a
face
covering,
if
not
just
yourself,
consider
others
in
your
life
and
strangers
love
the
neighbors
like
yourself,
please
just
be
thoughtful
and
in
so
doing
you'll
set
an
example.
Good
ideas
spread
success.
It
leaves
clues
good
behavior
can
be
scaled
and
replicated
and
will
more
and
more
people
see
people
doing
something
not
just
for
themselves
but
for
others
they're
more
likely
to
want
to
do
the
same,
and
so
please,
please
wear
a
face
covering.
C
We
can
slow
down
the
spread
by
doing
that,
we've
mandated
in
the
state.
We
want
to
see
it
in
force,
but
we
don't
want
to
see
punitive
Lee
done.
We
don't
want
to
see
people
find,
we
don't
want
to
see
people
feed,
but
we
do
want
people
to
encourage
others
to
be
safe,
not
only
for
yourself
but
for
others
as
well.
Wash
your
hands,
I
I
know
I
can't
say
this
enough:
when
again
you
have
four
children,
my
oldest
is
10.
You
cannot
repeat
this
enough.
C
Even
before
this
pandemic
wash
your
hands,
you
don't
want
to
get
rid
of
those
sniffles
wash
your
hands.
You
want
a
boy
getting
cold,
wash
your
hands.
You
worried
about
it,
wash
your
hands.
You
worried
about
getting
copa90
wash
your
hands.
Some
of
you
may
have
forgotten
how
to
wash
your
hands.
Forgive
me
back
to
my
kids.
I,
don't
think
I
ever
really
taught
them
how
to
wash
their
hands.
They
saw
this
and
they
were
honor.
What's
the
orange
I
said,
that's
the
part
of
your
hand.
You're
not
washing.
C
You
know,
wash
your
hand
is
not
just
putting
your
damn
hands,
forgive
my
language
under
the
faucet
for
two
seconds
and
calling
it
a
day.
We've
all
seen
that
many
have
done
that
yours
included,
but
in
this
pandemic
come
on,
we
can
do
a
little
more
do
a
little
bit
better.
You
can
focus
in
between
the
fingers
and
focus
on
the
thumbs,
which
are
often
overlooked
in
the
back
of
the
hands.
The
nails
forgive
me
for
having
to
put
this
up,
but
it
did
very
well
at
home.
C
It
scored
a
hundred
on
my
focus
group
out
of
my
four
kids
I,
don't
know
if
it's
the
colors
or
the
fact
that
I
never
show
them
an
image
of
actually
how
to
wash
your
hands.
You
want
to
slow
down
the
spread
of
the
virus
besides
just
wearing
a
mask
again,
one
of
the
most
profound
and
significant
non-pharmaceutical
interventions.
Obviously
it's
physically
distancing
yourself
from
other
six
feet.
We
talked
about
but
remember
a
couple
days
ago,
I
talked
about
the
fact
that
if
you
sneeze
droplets
can
go
as
far
as
26
feet.
C
Cough
is
about
six
feet.
Even
a
deep
exhale
is
a
few
feet.
So
please,
if
you're,
going
to
mix
with
other
strangers,
that
may
appear
healthy,
but
maybe
pre-symptomatic
or
asymptomatic
just
be
thoughtful.
We
want
to
slow
the
spread
of
the
disease.
We've
got
a
physically
distance
when
you're
not
at
home,
and
you
have
gone
to
the
office
or
your
back
in
a
retail
environment
or
any
other
environment.
C
That's
indoors,
as
you
go
about
doing
your
day-to-day
necessities
minimize
the
time
you
are
indoors
with
multiple
people
again
when
you're
not
at
home
minimize
the
time,
but
your
indoor
with
multiple
people,
to
the
extent
you
possibly
can.
If
you're
gonna
have
dinner
with
extended
family
members-
and
you
are
practicing
physical
disk
scene,
you're
biting
by
the
rules,
move
as
many
of
those
activities
you
possibly
can
outdoors
again,
better
ventilation
and
a
movement
of
the
air,
a
greater
likelihood
that
we'll
see
a
decrease
in
the
transmission
of
the
disease.
C
So
when
not
at
home
minimize
the
time
indoors,
when
you're
with
many
many
different
people
do
the
same
kind
of
common-sense.
Thinking
as
it
relates
to
moving
activities
outside
to
the
extent
possible
that
obviously
can
mitigate
the
need,
or
rather
the
likelihood
of
transferability,
don't
go
in
to
cry
heard.
Dr.
Fauci
say
this
yesterday
it
was
just
clear
and
you
know
just
made
sense:
don't
go
into
big
crowds,
don't
go
into
big
cross
if
you
want
to
slow
the
spread
of
the
virus.
C
If
you
want
to
decrease
the
likely
you're
gonna
get
the
virus,
don't
go
into
a
crowd,
and
it's
doctor
foul.
She
said
yesterday.
If
you
do
wear
a
mask:
it's
not
that
complex,
don't
go
into
crowds.
If
you
do
and
people
have
a
constitutional
right.
We've
made
that
clear.
You
want
a
protest.
There
are
crowds
that
are
out
there
that
have
constitutional
protection.
We
respect
that.
C
Wear
a
mask
cannot
impress
upon
you
enough
again,
not
for
yourself
but
for
others,
so
we
can
mitigate
the
spread
of
this
disease
and
just
in
closing
before
we
offer
it
up
to
any
questions,
I
cannot
impress
upon
you
more.
When
we
talk
about
being
asymptomatic,
pre-symptomatic,
we
talk
about
being
young
and
helping,
and
we
believe
that
we're
invincible,
you
know-
or
maybe
we
are
young
and
healthy,
and
we
just
don't
feel
that
way.
C
Well
and
mom
and
dad
are
there
to
take
care
of
you
as
often
is
the
case,
be
careful
about
mom
and
dad
be
careful
about
your
mother-in-law,
your
father-in-law,
your
grandparents,
because
they
remain
vulnerable
if
you're,
65
and
older
again,
the
data
is
overwhelming
on
how
deadly
the
disease
is.
For
you,
particularly
if
you're
older
than
65,
but
if
you
have
those
underlying
health
conditions,
we
encourage
you
still
to
to
stay
at
home
to
the
extent
possible
and
I
understand
what
we're
asking
boy
do.
C
Please
please,
please
be
thoughtful
and
for
those
family
members,
you
love
your
parents,
you
love
your
grandparents,
encourage
them
to
take
care
of
themselves
and
as
much
as
you
want
to
bring
the
entire
family
over
for
a
family
reunion.
People
traveling
from
other
states
or
other
parts
of
this
state
do
so
cautiously
and
eyes
wide
open.
It
cannot
practice
physical
distancing.
Then,
are
you
practicing
love?
C
What's
the
point
bringing
everyone
together?
If
you
can
honestly
can't
honestly,
if
you
can't
honestly
look
them
in
the
eye
and
say
I
love,
you
so
much
that
I'm
looking
out
for
you
when
in
fact,
you
may
not
be
when
you're
putting
them
but
potentially
increasing
risk
for
this
virus,
again
more
information,
as
always
on
all
of
the
information
that
we
have
not
only
provided
today
in
terms
of
the
new
data,
the
new
stats,
but
information
across
the
panoply
of
issues.
C
You
can
see
where
you
are
county
by
county
in
this
state
again
still
targeting
11
counties
with
technical
assistance.
Remember
I've
said
to
some
multiple
occasions:
all
the
information
I
provided
today
is
in
the
aggregate,
but
none
of
us
live
in
the
aggregate,
and
it's
a
way
of
expressing
this.
That
California
is
larger
than
many
many
states
combined,
and
so
we
have
to
have
a
local
prism
to
which
we
make
decision
making.
C
Many
of
you
watching
live
in
different
parts
of
the
state,
some
in
rural
parts
of
the
state,
some
in
dense
urban
parts
of
the
state
in
the
well
on
the
coast.
Many
of
you
know
in
the
inland
part
of
California
and
so
I
encourage
you
to
take
a
look
at
the
conditions
in
your
part
of
the
state.
Go
to
Coba
19
dot,
CA
gov
website
go
to
the
kovat
19.0
website.
C
You
can
learn
more
about
how
your
community
is
doing,
how
your
attestation
process
is
going,
whether
or
not
your
county
health
directors
are
moving
forward
or
whether
they're
holding
back,
as
is
the
case
in
many
parts
of
the
state.
Let
me
just
close
with
a
point
of
reference
and
consideration.
The
number
we've
seen
the
increased
numbers
we've
seen.
A
lot
of
those
numbers
are
reflected
and
increases
in
the
bay
area
and
that's
part
of
the
state
that
smooths
the
last
into
this
new
phase.
C
They
have
moved
more
slowly
and
now
have
experienced
an
increase
in
the
last
number
of
days
in
cases
and
it's
Alameda
Marin
San,
Francisco,
San
Mateo.
We've
also
seen
an
increase
in
San,
Bernardino
and
areas.
Riverside
continue
to
be
very
concerned
about
what's
happening
in
Imperial
County,
Kings
County.
There's
concern
LA
County,
because
the
size,
scope
and
scale
remains
a
point
of
focus
and
emphasis
that
those
counties
are
reflected
in
the
data
and
the
increase
that
we're
seeing
in
the
total
number
of
those
positive
tested
positive
in
this
state.
So
we
continue
to
be
mindful.
C
We
continue
to
be
vigilant.
We
continue
to
prepare
and
I
just
want
to
underscore
that
before
I
open
it
up
officially
now
to
questions,
we
are
not
only
doing
more
testing
we're,
not
only
training,
this
cohort
of
tracers
and
activating
our
tracing
core.
We
are
also
not
only
procuring
more
PPE,
but
we're
distributing
an
unprecedented
amount.
C
We
have
received
over
22
million
and
95
masks
just
in
the
last
week,
or
so.
Tens
of
millions,
more
100-plus
million
and
95
masks
will
be
coming
into
the
state
of
California.
Over
the
next
couple
weeks,
we
actually
were
able
to
help
a
neighboring
state
Arizona
with
over
14
million
masks.
Recently
we
want
to
get
these
masks
out.
C
We
want
to
be
as
supportive
as
we
can
be
to
meet
the
needs
throughout
our
healthcare
delivery
system
in
the
state
to
meet
the
needs
of
those
sectors
of
our
economy
that
are
reopening
that
need
personal
protective
gear.
We
continue
to
be
very
grateful
for
FEMA
for
their
partnership
and
their
demonstrable
leadership
and
helping
us
secure
this
PPE
and
helping
also
identify
needs
for
some
of
our
neighboring
states.
C
We
continue
to
focus
like
a
laser
on
the
data
and
continue
always
to
consider,
as
is
I'm
sure,
likely
question
in
a
moment
to
consider
this
data
in
relationship
to
the
stay
at
home
order
itself.
We've
given
enormous
amount
of
power,
control
and
authority
to
local
government,
but
what
we're
now
looking
for
is
accountability
at
the
local
level.
I
just
did
a
budget
deal
with
the
California
Legislature
2.5
billion
dollars
in
that
budget
two
and
a
billion
dollars
is
conditioned
on
counties
meeting
their
criteria
under
the
emergency
declaration
related
to
kovin,
19
and
I.
C
C
We
believe
I,
believe
the
legislative
leadership
certainly
concurred
that
we
cannot
support
bad
behavior,
but
we
want
to
encourage
and
reward
good
behavior
and,
if
counties
simply
are
gonna
flaunt
the
rules
and
regulations
that
they
attested
to
information
that
they
put
online
said.
We
agree
to
this
criteria.
Here's
what
we
agree
together
to
monitor
that
criteria,
we'll
provide
technical
support,
technical
assistance
do
what
we
can
to
be
helpful
and
informative
if
they
decide
well,
you
know
what,
even
though
the
numbers
are
going
up,
we're
done.
We
got
this
and
we're
just
going
to
you
know.
D
C
Gonna
dismiss
these
new
rules
and
regulations.
We're
gonna
attach
some
considerations
and
consequences
to
that
two
and
a
half
billion
dollars
in
this
budget
that
simply
will
not
flow
to
those
counties
that
do
that.
Now.
Here's
the
good
news
I
don't
expect
that
to
happen.
The
vast
majority,
the
overwhelming
majority
of
county
elected
officials,
health
officials,
have
been
extraordinary,
absolutely
extraordinary,
in
fact,
so
much
so
that
some
of
the
health
directors
have
literally
put
themselves
out
where
they're
getting
attacked,
getting
death,
threats,
they're
being
demeaned
and
demoralized.
C
And
let
me
just
say
this
crystal
clear:
you
know
I
appreciate
someone
feels
significant
when
they
threaten
other
people,
but
there's
no
nobility
in
that
you're,
not
a
bigger
person,
because
you
threaten
someone
else.
You're
a
weaker
person
and
I
just
want
to
apologize
to
all
those
health
directors
that
have
been
attacked
that
are
being
attacked
that
are
being
threatened.
Many
that
have
had
to
quit
their
jobs
because
all
they
want
to
do
is
keep
you
healthy
and
safe.
Using
data
using
science,
not
a
political
issue.
C
It's
not
I
get
the
same
emails
not
about
George,
though
I
mean
this
is
not
some.
You
know
ideological
issue,
it's
about
keeping
you
safe
and
your
loved
ones,
safe
and
so
I
just
want
to
thank
the
health
officers
in
the
state
for
doing
the
best
they
can
under
extraordinarily
difficult
circumstances
and
I
want
them
to
know
we
have
their
back
and
I
hope.
You'll
have
their
back
as
well
and
and
I
want
also
folks
to
know
that
we
have
a
pack
of
local
elected
officials.
A
C
Don't
have
to
always
agree
on
every
nuance
and
detail,
and
you
know
some
folks
are
just
saying:
I'm
not
going
to
do
this
or
that
again
I'm
not
here
to
we're
not
here,
to
threaten
anybody,
but
we
are
now
at
a
stage
in
this
pandemic,
where
we
have
to
demand
more
accountability
and
that's
why
we're
attaching
two
and
half
billion
dollars
to
that
pledge?
It's
not
rhetorical.
It
is
literal
and
what
I
mean
by
literal.
C
Let
me
extend
as
well
when
it
comes
to
the
appropriation
of
the
two
and
a
half
billion
dollars,
we're
not
going
to
do
it
on
an
annual
basis.
I
know
how
people
game
system
I'm
gonna,
do
it
on
a
monthly
basis,
so
we
mean
business
and
and
again
we're
just
trying
to
keep
people
in
business
in
a
responsible
and
safe
way.
We
focused
so
much
in
this
state
on
the
when
question.
All
of
us
have,
let's
be
candid,
on
the
win:
when
are
we
doing
that?
C
When
are
we
not
on
the
how
it
is
incumbent
that
we
get
back
to
the
how
question
how
to
safely
reopen
I
would
prefer
to
have
gone
earlier
safely
than
to
go
later
in
an
unsafe
manner?
It's
not
about
when
it's
about
how,
and
so
let
us
go
back
to
reading
these
guidelines,
monitoring
the
progress
related
to
these
guidelines.
C
Let
us
be
more
or
Thera
thorat
ativ
in
terms
of
advancing
and
promoting
those
guidelines
at
a
local
level
and
let
me
again
humbly
submit
that
localism
is
determinative
that
local
government
knows
best
a
state
as
large
as
ours.
I
recognize,
there's
so
many
different
nuance,
so
many
different
conditions,
so
many
different
environments,
so
much
information
at
the
local
level
that
we
are
not
privy
to
in
real
time
at
the
state.
We
have
a
dashboard.
We
have
a
prison,
but
not
like
local
authorities,
and
so
we
want
to
empower
local
authorities.
C
C
C
Don't
want
to
be
that
guy
that
one
talking
in
punitive
terms,
because
I
just
believe
we
all
have
with
a
wellspring
inside
of
us
that
connects
through
our
better
angels
and
if
we
can
just
rediscover
that-
and
we
could
re
commit
ourselves
to
a
cause
that
United
this
state
40
million
strong
just
a
few
months
ago,
and
that's
the
cause
of
public
health
and
public
safety
to
thoughtfully
and
judiciously
move
forward.
As
we
move
to
reopen
the
economy
we'll
get
through
the
summer
months,
but
remember,
kovat,
19
didn't
take
summer
recess,
didn't
take
the
summer.
C
Vacation
hasn't
gone
away.
I
know
a
lot
of
us
thought.
Well
kid
get
a
get
warm
once
it
gets
hot.
It
all
goes
away.
Look
what's
happened
in
some
of
those
states
that
are
experiencing
triple
digit
weather
consistently
and
are
experiencing
record
numbers
as
well.
We
have
to
sober
up
to
this
reality,
we're
still
in
the
first
wave
we're
not
in
a
second
wave
we're
still
in
the
first
wave
we'll
get
through
this.
There
will
be
a
vaccine.
C
We
will
get
to
a
point
where
we
could
substantially
go
back
to
the
way
things
were
with
modifications,
so
we
never
go
through
this
again.
There's
no
doubt
that
will
happen,
be
optimistic,
not
pessimistic,
but
let
us
be
responsible
at
this
moment
to
meet
it
head-on
with
the
new
reality
that
we're
seeing
an
increase
in
spread,
more
people
mix
as
the
economy
opens
up
as
more
people
are
out
and
about
wear
a
mask.
C
E
Yes,
governor,
given
the
numbers
that
you
were
reading
earlier,
do
you
think
perhaps
we
need
to
pause
the
process
of
reopening
in
some
way
and
given
I
understand
your
motto,
that
localism
is
determinative,
but
you
did
issue
that
statewide
mask
order
when
you
were
not
seeing
enough
people
wearing
masks.
Are
you
thinking
of
any
other
statewide
efforts
to
slow
these
numbers
down.
C
We're
just
encouraging
people
to
do
the
right
thing.
Wear
face
coverings
practice
physical
distancing,
read
the
guidelines
that
we
put
out
to
help
support
safely,
reopen
the
economy.
It's
not
a
binary
choice,
it's
not
about
shutting
down
the
world's
fifth
largest
economy
or
advancing
these
efforts.
We
can
do
both,
but
we
have
to
go
back
to
a
foundational
premise
that
so
much
of
our
focus
is
on
when
not
how
I
cannot
impress
upon
you
more
to
focus
on
how
to
safely
reopen.
C
We
took
a
great
deal
of
time
a
great
deal
of
time
working
with
county
health
officers
working
with
industry
leaders
looking
at
best
practices
around
the
globe
to
look
at
safe
ways
to
reopen
our
economy
by
sector.
We
put
all
of
those
guidelines
out.
The
guidelines
did
not
say
go.
They
focused
on
how
to
safely
move
when
local
conditions
presented
themselves.
As
you
know,
well,
there
are
a
number
of
counties
that
still
haven't
gone
as
far
as
other
counties
back
to
the
frame
we
recognize.
Local
conditions
are
different
through
the
state
of
California.
C
Eleven
counties
were
monitoring.
Eleven
counties
were
working
on
technical
assistance
and
they've
been
incredibly
responsive.
All
the
counties
are
working
with
us
and
as
long
as
we're
working
together
as
long
as
we're
attacking
these
issues
together
and
as
long
as
we
start
to
see
more
and
more
compliance
with
our
mask
mandate,
then
I
think
we
can
move
forward
more
safely
and
work
our
way
through
this,
without
having
to
toggle
back
without
having
to
answer
the
question
in
a
binary
frame.
F
I'm,
wondering
here
is
when
you
look
at
how
these
numbers
are
going
up,
there's
a
perception
that
California
was
leading
the
charge
and
was
ahead
and
now
has
slipped
behind
and
is
kind
of
lost
control.
So
if
you
could
address
that-
and
also
do
you
think
the
president's
refusal
to
wear
a
mask
and
the
politicization
of
that
is
that
also
playing
into
why
we're
seeing
the
numbers
grow
here.
Thank
you.
Yeah.
C
I
don't
know
about
this
horse.
Race
frame
California
led
the
nation's
the
first
step
state
to
do
a
stay
at
home
order.
We
we
crushed
the
curve,
and
we
made
it
crystal
clear
when
we
do
that.
We
never
experienced
the
big
spike
where
we
weren't
prepared
for
an
increase
in
hospitalizations
I,
see
use,
we
didn't
have
the
appropriate
protective
gear
and
the
like.
We
were
able
to
crush
that
curve,
but
we
made
it
crystal
clear
throughout.
C
We
were
extending
that
curve
in
so
many
ways,
that's
exactly
what
is
happening
and
the
reason
I'm
proud
of
the
fact
that
we
never
experienced
that
spike.
Is
it
allowed
us
all
this
time
to
build
the
inventory
of
assets
so
that
we
can
absorb
an
increase
in
the
total
number
of
positive
cases
that
may
manifest
and
needs
to
increase
hospitalization
increase,
support
and
Ric
use
increase
the
capacity
of
support
for
protective
gear?
All
of
that
is
in
place
and
in
play,
and
so
I
think
we
did
it
weight
best
way.
C
We
could
and
very
proud
of
that
and
we're
not
timid
I
mean
this
is
a
mandate
at
scale
that
is
equivalent
to
a
mandate
for
21
states
in
terms
of
population.
Forty
million
that
we
are
requesting
to
put
masks
on
and
and
again
a
real
framework
of
supporting
local
government
based
on
different
conditions
and
criteria
that
we
mutually
set
out
and
monitor
I.
G
Governor
two
questions:
one
governors
in
New,
York,
New,
Jersey
Connecticut,
are
now
considering
or
have
now
implemented,
14
day
quarantine
for
people
coming
from
states
that
are
hotspots.
Are
you
considering
that
in
California
and
more
broadly
I'm
wondering
about
what
you
think
this
state
has
learned
about
outdoor
transmission
from
the
protests,
because
there's
some
people
watching
this?
That
will
say
you're
telling
me
I
can't
hug
my
cousin
at
a
barbecue
when
tens
of
thousands
of
people
were
mixing
some
and
math
so
I'm
not
out
on
the
streets,
I'm
wondering
what
we
learned
scientifically
from
now.
C
We're
still
getting
that
data,
the
numbers
are
still
coming
in
again.
I
mentioned
the
outset
that
a
lot
of
these
protests
has
started
to
occur.
Different
parts
of
the
state,
a
different
size,
scope
scale
about
two
and
half
three
weeks
ago,
so
the
information
is
relates
to
those
that
are
getting
tested.
Those
are
developing
symptoms,
those
that
are
getting
tested
with
no
symptoms.
All
that
information
is
coming
in
again.
C
Hospitalizations
lag
deaths
like
even
further
all
I'm
saying
is
to
people
use
common
sense,
just
because
someone
else
did
something
that
wasn't
good
for
their
public
health
doesn't
mean
you
should
do
something:
that's
not
good
for
your
public
health,
that's
common
sense,
I'm,
telling
you
just
to
be
responsible
not
only
to
yourself
but
to
others.
Consider
that
when
you're
inviting
grandma
Jean
is
my
grandma
Jean.
You
know
over
just
think
about
that
that
not
because
you
saw
someone
on
TV
doing
it
now,
okay,
well,
they
did
it.
I
can
do
it.
C
We
know
better
than
that
use
common
sense
and
so
we're
learning
more
and
more
in
real
time.
I
can't
emphasize
this
enough.
We
have
used
our
time
wisely.
We
are
in
a
very
different
place
in
the
beginning
of
this
pandemic.
What
California
did
to
lead
on
a
statewide
state,
Homer,
save
lives
and
bought
us
time
to
build
out
our
infrastructure,
and
we
have
done
just
that.
C
Again,
it's
not
a
horse
race,
it's
about
dealing
with
conditions
as
they
manifest
and
we're
seeing
these
conditions
manifest
all
throughout
the
country
in
those
states
that
did
not
experience
the
peak
and
had
to
respond
and
react
to
that.
We
had
the
chance
to
learn
from
those
examples
to
the
question
of
what
are
we
learning
and
to
incorporate
strategies
to
prepare,
because
we
extended
that
curve,
and
we
mitigated
the
acuity
of
that
spike
to
prepare
for
this
moment
and
that's
what
we've
been
doing
for
many
many
months
and
that's
what
we
continue
to
do.
C
H
Oh
hi,
governor,
actually
kaiser
Health
News
no
big
deal
I
want
to
ask
you
about
testing.
Some
counties
are
telling
me
that
they're
still
having
trouble
testing
all
of
their
residents
and
getting
to
everyone.
Are
there
plans
or
are
there
funds
available
to
expand
testing
and
create
more
right,
yeah.
C
We
want
to
continue
to
increase
testing
again
a
ninety
six
thousand
tests
that
we
conduct
our
last
24-hour
period.
Eighty
five
thousand
in
the
previous
reporting
period.
We
are
now
exceeding
our
goal
of
sixty
thousand
tests
on
a
daily
basis,
remind
people
these
tests,
and
this
shouldn't
be
a
factor,
but
it's
an
important
consideration.
These
tests
average
about
$100
just
consider.
C
We've
done
3.6
million
tests
through
the
math
on
that
and
by
the
way
average
one
hundred
dollars
some
of
the
tests
when
it
includes
Diagnostics
the
media
transport
media,
getting
the
swabs
doing
the
whole
thing
it's
north
of
a
hundred
and
thirty
dollars.
In
many
instances
we
have
mobile
testing
capacity.
We,
these
are
by
the
way
the
PCR
tests
I'm,
referring
to
not
the
antibody
tests
that
got
a
lot
of
attention,
but
don't
have
the
kind
of
specificity
of
results
that
give
us
confidence.
Pcr
tests
are
the
backbone
of
our
testing.
C
We
have
substantially
increased
access.
We,
however,
have
a
lot
more
work.
To
do.
I
would
encourage
and
I'm
going
to
get
back
to
your
question.
Those
of
you
haven't
been
tested
that
want
to
be
tested.
Go
to
the
Cova
19
site:
go
vat19.com,
Cobin,
19,
CA
Jakob,
there's
a
testing
bar
on
that
site,
and
then
you
could
type
in
your
zip
code
and
determine
the
most
proximate
testing
site
in
your
area.
C
The
goal
is
to
get
to
rural
Californians
and
to
go
deeper
in
the
inner
cities,
so
we're
testing,
diverse
communities
and
testing
people
all
throughout
the
state
of
California.
We've
made
a
lot
of
improvement
in
that
space,
but
if
you
go
to
that
site,
you'll
also
see
there
are
some
testing
deserts
in
this
state
and
it's
a
way
of
acknowledged
in
the
frame
of
your
question.
We
have
more
work
to
do
a
certain
point.
C
What
you're
seeing
happening
is
the
cities
and
counties
are
saying
we're
dealing
with
unprecedented
shortfalls
least
in
modern
terms
on
our
budgets.
We
have
competing
responsibilities,
demands
we
have
to
make
investments
at
the
same
time
we're
making
cuts
and
they're
putting
more
and
more
on
the
testing
under
the
state
problem
woods
we
have
limited
capacity
ourselves,
and
so
it's
incumbent
upon
the
federal
government
not
to
let
the
states
down
not
to
let
the
cities
and
counties
down
not
to
let
the
people
this
country
down
by
pulling
back
from
testing
here's
the
good
news.
C
I
have
all
the
confidence
in
the
world
that
Speaker
Nancy
Pelosi
gets
that
and
they
will
get
something
done.
It
doesn't
matter
to
me
what
one
individual
may
be
saying
about
testing
and
their
personal
opinions
about
it.
I
think,
moreover,
there's
collective
wisdom
and
resolve
across
the
political
spectrum
across
this
country
of
the
power
potency
and
importance
of
doing
more
testing,
so
we
get
a
handle
on
community
spread,
so
our
interventions
come
in
real
time,
not
too
late.
C
So
we
can
mitigate
the
spread
of
this
disease,
prepare
not
just
to
get
through
the
next
few
months
in
the
first
way,
but
prepare
for
a
second
wave
and
potentially
a
third
wave
as
we
get
to
the
immunization
process,
and
so
I
am
confident
that
we
ultimately
will
get
that
federal
support
to
help
amplify
the
efforts.
But
we've
made
tremendous
progress,
a
ninety
six
thousand
tests
again
the
last
reporting
period,
but
we
have
you're
right
more
work
to
do.
I.
I
Thank
you
very
much
governor
good
morning,
I
wonder
if
you
could
address
the
competing
science
out
there
or
this
quote-unquote
science.
Some
of
the
problem
is
that
you
can
find
someone
on
the
radio,
someone
on
television
or
an
elected
official,
to
tell
you
what
you
want
to
hear.
If
you
don't
want
to
do
something,
and
if
you
don't
want
to
wear
a
mask,
you'll
find
someone
that
can
tell
you
they
don't
work.
You
can
find
someone
to
tell
you
the
sunlight
and
the
heat
is
making
the
corona
virus
weaker.
I
C
God
bless
you
I
mean
that's
a
question
that
transcends
this
issue.
Doesn't
it
I
mean
that's
a
foundational
question
around
a?
Can:
a
democracy
survive,
let
alone
thrive
when
all
of
us
come
to
each
other
with
their
own
different
sets
of
facts.
I
never
knew
him,
but
I
miss
Walter,
Cronkite,
I
wish
beginning
at
the
beginning,
and
at
least
adjudicating
the
veracity
the
facts
presented,
but
at
least
sharing
those
same
sets
of
facts
to
which
we
then
can
begin
to
debate.
We
live
in
a
filter,
bubble,
you're,
absolutely
right.
C
Good
news
is
I,
don't
trust
me!
I
live
in
a
world
where
people
have
ample
access
and
and
are
able
to
communicate
to
me
their
pleasure
and
displeasure,
and
so
I
have
been
privileged
personally
to
see
those
points
of
view
that
you
are
referencing
I
also
go
to
great
lengths
personally
to
watch
different
news
outlets
and
also
absorb
different
blogs
and
different
perspectives.
So
you're
absolutely
right.
Nothing
about
your
question,
surprised
me
because
you're
a
hundred
percent
accurate.
C
We
are
nothing
but
a
mirror.
I've
said
this:
before
of
your
consistent
thoughts
are
consistent
thoughts.
Whatever
we
focus
on
will
find
more
of
if
we're
exclusively
focused
on
one
perspective,
we
will
find
ample
evidence
to
bear
fruit
to
that
bias.
It's
incumbent
upon
us
to
consider
the
bubbles
that
we
live
in
on
both
sides
of
the
political
aisle.
C
As
we
adjudicate
the
facts,
I
watch
every
night,
multiple
cable
outlets,
we're
living
completely
different
realities,
as
you
suggest
so
relates
to
this
virus,
and
so
many
other
issues,
and
this
foundationally
has
to
be
addressed
at
a
societal
level.
Private
public
social
media
platforms,
our
own
behaviors,
our
own
on
our
home
cohorting,
a
zip
code,
and
this
is
something
that
again
is
foundational
and
much
more
challenging
than
even
the
frame
to
which
you
introduced.
C
This
question
with
kovat,
19
and
so
I
would
just
encourage
people
if
they
haven't
to
flip
the
station
check
out
a
website
that
you
don't
normally
attach
much
veracity
and
credence
to
listen
to
those
that
you
may
find
offensive,
sometimes
and
just
consider
their
points
of
view.
This
time
just
consider
it
doesn't
mean
you
have
to
absorb
it
and
accept
it.
Just
consider
it.
The
opened
argument
interested
in
facts
do
not
be
ideological
either
way
in
this
pandemic
and
I've
seen
ideology
getting
holds
no
boundary
by
political
party.
Ideology
persists
across
the
spectrum.
C
I
have
strong
values.
I'm
proud,
Democrat
and
I
have
a
bias
towards
the
work
that
our
health,
advisors
and
directors
are
doing
in
the
science
and
data
that
dr.
Fauci
and
others
present
every
single
day,
I
openly
submit
to
you,
that's
where
I
tend
to
land,
but
it
does
not
deny
me
my
responsibility
or
afford
me
my
responsibility
to
learn
more
from
the
other
side
as
well,
and
I
would
just
encourage
some
of
you
all
of
us
to
consider
doing
a
little
bit
of
that
as
well.
J
Governor
you
mentioned
before
that
you
may
I
guess,
withhold
funding
to
counties
that
aren't
abiding
by
your
regulation
and
coronavirus
rules.
What
exactly
does
that
mean?
Does
that
mean
if
the
Sheriff's
Department
refuses
to
write
citations
for
two
people
that
aren't
wearing
masks
that
the
county
will
be
cut
off
funding?
Why
does
that
mean
that
if
a
city
or
county
do
not
crackdown
on
a
bar
or
restaurant,
that
doesn't
have
the
social
distant
thing,
that's
in
the
guidelines
that
they
won't
have
money?
What
can
you
give
a
specifics
about
what
exactly
that
means?
I.
C
Encourage
you
to
take
a
look
at
the
language
that
the
legislature
will
be
considering
in
the
budget,
a
legislative
language
that
we
put
together
and
what
we
referred
to
as
our
budget
trailer
bill
that
was
agreed
to
by
legislative
leaders
myself
that
was
announced
a
few
days
ago.
You'll
see
the
framework,
the
criteria
to
which
we
advance,
and
within
that
criteria
or
many
of
the
questions
you're
asking
we're
not
trying
to
be
prescriptive
on
what
that
means.
We
want
to
be
collaborative
again.
This
is
not
a
closed
fist.
This
is
an
open
hand.
Please
I!
C
Imagine
we
all
want
to
run
with
headlines
in
order
to
create
anxiety
and
stress.
My
intention
today
of
mentioning
that
was
not
to
do
either
create
anxiety
or
stress.
It
was,
however,
to
impress
upon
everybody
the
importance
of
this
moment
and
the
importance
that
we
all
must
place
on
being
responsible,
but,
moreover,
accountable
to
the
rules
and
regulation
system
was
designed
where
certain
expectations
were
set.
When
rules
and
regulations
come
out,
we
need
to
abide
by
them
and
we
need
to
work
collaboratively
together
to
the
extent
that
we
can't.
C
We
don't
want
to
be
punitive
as
long
as
we're
in
a
spirit
of
collaboration,
but
when
people
and
this
bill
is
closest
approximation
to
answer
your
question
when
people
simply
thumb
their
nose
and
do
not
come
with
a
collaborative
spirit,
enter
simply
unwilling
to
work,
to
keep
people
safe
and
to
keep
people
healthy.
If
you're
unwilling
to
keep
people
safe
and
keep
people
healthy,
then
by
all
means
the
state
of
California
has
a
responsibility
and
obligation
legally
and
otherwise
to
enforce
those
laws
and
to
utilize.
C
The
tools
that
are
afforded
us
and
one
of
those
tools
is
power.
The
purse
and,
if
counties
that
have
submitted,
that
they
need
more
state
money
to
address
this
pandemic,
but
are
unwilling
to
enforce
the
rules
and
laws
related
to
mitigating
that
pandemic.
It
seems
not
only
counterintuitive
that
you
would
continue
to
provide
those
resources,
but
actually
harmful
to
a
broader
effort,
and
so
we
don't
want
to
be
harmful.
We
want
to
be
helpful.
We
want
to
be
collaborative.
K
Hi
governor,
given
the
recent
outbreaks
at
San,
Quentin
and
Corcoran,
which
are
rapidly
spreading
among
the
inmate
populations
there
do
you
have
any
plans
for
further
widespread
releases
of
prisoners
in
California,
particularly
those
who
may
be
older
or
medically
vulnerable
to
the
Kuran
virus?
Well,.
C
We
have
456
individuals
that
have
tested
positive
at
San
Quentin.
We
have
1818
tests
that
are
outstanding
when
those
tests
come
back.
We
expect
that
number
to
increase
you're
right,
San
Quentin
is
a
concern.
We've
had
other
prisons
that
have
been
a
concern,
Chino
being
primary.
One
I
think
you
may
recall
a
few
seems
months
ago,
X
number
of
weeks
ago
talked
about
Lancaster
prison.
We've
seen
some
things
begin
to
improve
there
chuckwalla
we're
seeing
some
issues.
There
are
a
number
of
other
prisons.
C
1780
I
think
it's
1785
individual
inmates
that
have
tested
positive
for
Cova
19,
a
cohort
of
well
in
excess
120,000.
So
it's
a
concern
always
has
been.
We've
been
shy
about
leaning
in
on
this
over
the
course
of
many
many
months,
tens
of
thousands
of
prisoners
have
been
tested.
We
still
have
a
lot
more
work
to
do
in
that
space
and
we
recognize
our
responsibility
to
do
so.
C
We
called
non
non
non
and
no
domestic
violence
that
we
would
move
that
cohort
out
with
roughly
thirty
five
hundred
people
plus
or
minus,
that
we
moved
out
in
a
very
deliberative
manner,
and
we
did
that
to
what
we
refer
to
as
decompress
the
system.
A
number
of
months
ago,
we
submitted
to
the
courts
a
number
of
days
ago,
an
additional
strategy
and
plan.
This
goes
to
your
question
of
roughly
similar
cohort
of
roughly
thirty
five,
a
hundred
that
would
begin
the
process
of
reviewing
their
plans,
making
sure
they
have
housing
plans,
parole
plans.
C
We
don't
want
to
just
throw
people
out
in
the
streets
and
sidewalks
that
wouldn't
be
humane
either
and
to
make
sure
that
those
that
also
are
in
a
condensed
period
where
they
are
about
to
be
released.
The
next
number
of
months
that
we
would
start
moving
that
court
that
begins
July
1st
next
week
for
San
Quentin.
C
Specifically,
we
are
moving
to
expedite
that
moving
it
closer
moving
it
before
moving
that
process
before
July
1st,
to
decompress
that
system
again
in
a
very
thoughtful,
methodical
way,
based
upon
again
a
parole
probation
framework
working
with
within
the
system,
health
and
human
service
agency
as
well
to
make
sure
we
do
it
in
a
manageable
and
thoughtful
way,
but
with
a
sense
of
urgency,
and
let
me
just
close
on
that.
Roughly
42
percent
of
the
prisoners
at
San
Quentin
are
medically
vulnerable.
C
That
doesn't
surprise
many
people,
I
grew
up
in
the
Bay
Area
just
moved
here
to
Sacramento
from
Marin
County
very
nearby
San
Quentin
San
Quentin
is
interestingly
one
of
the
most
highly
desirable
prisons
because
of
many
different
reasons,
including
a
more
relatively
speaking,
more
robust,
rehabilitative
framework.
So
you
have
a
lot
of
older
prisoners
that,
after
a
period
of
time,
spent
the
rest
of
their
sentences
at
San
Quentin.
C
Of
course
you
also
have
death
row
at
San,
Quentin
and
so
there's
higher
number
of
people
that
are
vulnerable
to
the
spread
of
any
disease,
including
a
regular
flu,
but
substantively
in
relationship
to
covin
19.
We
are
concerned
about
that
cohort
and
and
I
know
that
the
courts
are
and
the
abacus
are
as
well,
and
so
we
are
in
real-time
working
to
address
the
need
to
decompress
to
cohort
to
segment
within
that
jail
or
other
prison
and
also
do
the
same
more
broadly
throughout
the
rest
of
the
prison
system.
C
So
it's
always
been
top
of
mind.
It's
always
been
a
point
of
concern,
not
surprising.
As
you
see,
the
numbers
more
generally
increase
that
we're
going
to
potentially
experience
some
challenging
and
these
congregate
facilities,
both
those
that
are
car
serrated
in
CDC,
are
the
state
system,
but
the
jail
system
and
again
dominate
vigilance
for
skilled
nursing
facilities
and
our
adult
and
senior
care
homes,
as
well
as
our
homeless,
which
remain
a
top
concern
as
well.
D
Good
afternoon
governor,
you
talked
about
the
the
fist
year
and
trying
to
get
their
compliance,
but
several
counties
that
already
had
state
attestation
to
begin
opening
or
out
of
compliance
with
the
metrics
that
they
were
that
you
laid
out
for
their
safe
reopening.
Those
are
pretty
blatantly
flouting
the
the
mass
requirement
talked
about
the
financial
repercussions,
but
are
you
considering
revoking
any
of
those
authorizations,
and
what
can
you
do?
What
are
you
prepared
to
do
beyond
monitoring
them?
Well,.
C
I
think
we
laid
out
our
prioritization
and
I.
Think
I've
been
very
clear
in
terms
of
how
we
want
to
engage
those
counties.
You
saw
just
two
days
ago
and
I'll
update
you
on
a
consistent
basis.
We
unfortunately
today
focused
on
some
other
information,
but
we
have
11
counties
that
you
are
correct
that
are
getting
support.
What
we
refer
to
as
technical
assistance
from
the
state
and
different
categories
are
not
where
they
would
like
to
be
and
where
we
believe
they
should
be
as
it
relates
to
their
own
procure
or
rather
containment
plans,
protection
plans.
C
What
we
refer
to
as
these
attestations
most,
if
not
all.
In
fact,
let
me
just
submit
all
are
working
very
collaboratively
with
the
state
to
address
those
specific
issues.
You
recall
just
two
days
ago,
we
put
those
out
and
there
were
checkmarks
where
they're
doing
well,
and
there
was
a
few
categories
where
they're
not
again,
all
that
was
put
out
in
very
public
way,
and
so
that's
the
spirit
that
we
look
to
engage
but
you're
right.
C
There
are
some
that
have
made
rhetorical
comments
about
not
giving
a
damn
flouting
any
consideration
of
supporting
the
broader
health
directives
coming
out
of
the
state
of
California,
and
that's
exactly
why
I
look
forward
to
signing
this
budget
that
will
afford
me
a
little
bit
of
leverage
in
that
conversation
and
I.
Think
that's
the
appropriate
next
step,
but,
as
I
said,
that's
going
to
be
an
exception
and
we
hope
we
never
have
to
trigger
that.
I.
C
Think
the
vast
majority
of
local
officials
care
deeply
about
their
constituency
about
their
community
want
people
to
self
enforce
in,
to
the
extent
that
they
can
advise
and
they
can
counsel
and
they
can
educate
they
will
they
can
warn.
There
are
many
gradations
of
enforcement,
but
clearly
we
have
our
tools,
not
just
financial
but
as
I
said
on
Monday,
as
I
said,
I'd
least,
on
a
dozen
other
occasions
very
publicly
alcohol
beverage
control
OSHA
many
other
state
agencies
also
can
enforce
and
anticipate,
if
only
necessary,
that
we
do
just
that.
C
C
It
is
a
deadly
virus
and
your
increased
likelihood
of
getting
it
as
we
reopen
the
economy
as
you
cohort
with
strangers
in
annex
crowds
increases
not
decreases,
and
that's
why
it's
incumbent
upon
all
of
us
to
step
things
up
extent.
We
can
be
more
vigilant
practice,
social,
distancing,
physical
distancing
and
not
let
our
guard
down
go
about
responsibly,
our
day
to
day
lives,
socializing,
but
again
safely
and
wear
a
mask.
C
It's
a
mandate
in
the
state
of
California,
because
it
not
only
protects
you,
it
protects
others
and
it
sends
a
message
to
people
that
we
are
not
out
of
this
pandemic,
and
we
are
here
to
remind
you
of
that,
and
we
encourage
you
to
share
that
message
to
the
extent
you
can
and
as
always
go
to
the
website.
Go
in
nineteen,
see
a
gov
to
learn
more
take
care.
Everybody.