COVID-19 pandemic in California

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COVID-19 pandemic in California
COVID-19 rolling 14day Prevalence in California by county.svg
Map of the outbreak in California by confirmed new infections per 100,000 people over 14 days; (click to see date updated)
  1,000+
  500–1,000
  200–500
  100–200
  50–100
  20–50
  10–20
  0–10
  No confirmed new cases or no/bad data
COVID-19 Prevalence in California by county.svg
Map of the outbreak in California by confirmed total infections per 100,000 people (click on map for date of update)
  10,000+
  3,000–10,000
  1,000–3,000
  300–1,000
  100–300
  30–100
  0–30
  No confirmed infected or no data
DiseaseCOVID-19
Virus strainSARS-CoV-2
LocationCalifornia, U.S
First outbreakWuhan, Hubei, China
Index caseOrange County
Arrival dateJanuary 25, 2020[1]
Confirmed cases3,803,094 (JHU)[2]
3,697,927 (CDPH)[3]
Suspected casesAt least 221,000 in April 2020[4][5]
Hospitalized cases11,045 (confirmed)
820 (suspected)[3]
Critical cases2,996 (confirmed)
95 (suspected)[3]
Deaths
63,204 (JHU)[2]
62,515 (CDPH)[3]
63,191 (Google News)
Government website
cdph.ca.gov/covid19
Suspected cases have not been confirmed by laboratory tests as being due to this strain, although some other strains may have been ruled out.

Ten of the first twenty confirmed COVID-19 cases in the United States occurred in California, the first of which was confirmed on January 26, 2020.[6][7][8] All of the early confirmed cases were persons who had recently travelled to China, as testing was restricted to this group. On January 29, 2020, as disease containment protocols were still being developed, the U.S. Department of State evacuated 195 persons from Wuhan, China aboard a chartered flight to March Air Reserve Base in Riverside County, and in the process may have contributed to spread within the state and the US at large.[9][10] On February 5, 2020, the U.S. evacuated 345 more citizens from Hubei Province to two military bases in California, Travis Air Force Base in Solano County and Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, San Diego, where they were quarantined for 14 days.[9][11] A state of emergency was declared in the state on March 4, 2020 and as of February 24, 2021 remains in effect. A mandatory statewide stay-at-home order was issued on March 19, 2020 that was ended on January 25, 2021.[12] On April 6, 2021, the state announced plans to fully reopen the economy by June 15, 2021.[13]

As of June 15, 2021, the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) has reported 3,697,927 confirmed cumulative cases and 62,515 deaths in the state,[14] the highest number of confirmed cases in the United States, and the 37th-highest number of confirmed cases per capita. It has the highest count of deaths related to the virus, and the 29th-highest count of deaths per capita.[15][16][17] As of June 15, 2021, California administered 40,669,793 COVID-19 vaccine doses, the largest number of doses nationwide, and currently 11th of 50 states in terms of per capita dose administration.[18] The slow initial rollout of vaccinations, along with the timing and scope of state COVID-19 restrictions, triggered a wide-scale effort to recall the Governor in early 2021.[19]

California is the origin of the Epsilon variant of SARS-CoV-2, which as of March 2021, accounted for 35% of all confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the state.[20][21]

Timeline[]

COVID-19 cases in California, United States  ()
     Deaths        Confirmed cases
20202021
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAug
Last 15 days
Date
# of cases
# of deaths
2021-08-15
4,033,659(+0.28%) 64,194(+0.02%)
2021-08-16
4,043,407(+0.24%) 64,201(+0.01%)
2021-08-17
4,057,724(+0.35%) 64,291(+0.14%)
2021-08-18
4,070,083(+0.3%) 64,383(+0.14%)
2021-08-19
4,084,799(+0.36%) 64,503(+0.19%)
2021-08-20
4,098,412(+0.33%) 64,585(+0.13%)
2021-08-21
4,112,976(+0.36%) 64,674(+0.14%)
2021-08-22
4,123,250(+0.25%) 64,677(=)
2021-08-23
4,133,651(+0.25%) 64,694(+0.03%)
2021-08-24
4,145,550(+0.29%) 64,802(+0.17%)
2021-08-25
4,157,319(+0.28%) 64,931(+0.2%)
2021-08-26
4,171,104(+0.33%) 65,033(+0.16%)
2021-08-27
4,186,261(+0.36%) 65,139(+0.16%)
2021-08-28
4,198,089(+0.28%) 65,243(+0.16%)
2021-08-29
4,213,057(+0.36%) 65,271(+0.04%)
Sources:
  • "Updates from California Department of Public Health". cdph.ca.gov.
  • "Tracking COVID-19 in California". covid19.ca.gov. State of California.

Notes:

  1. ^ On March 14, 2020, CDPH started reporting the numbers as of 6 PM instead of 8 AM. More cases may be reported due to a longer reporting interval that is more than 24 hours (i.e. 34 hours).
  2. ^ On March 20, 2020, CDPH started reporting the numbers as of 2 PM instead of 6 PM. Fewer cases may be reported due to a shorter reporting interval that is less than 24 hours (i.e. 20 hours).
  3. ^ CDPH did not report data on March 28, 2020. As a result, the reporting interval on March 29, 2020 is for 2 days (or 48 hours).
  4. ^ On March 30, 2020, CDPH stopped reporting the exact time in which the statistics were tallied.
  5. ^ The jump in deaths on February 24, 2021 was due to 806 backlogged deaths from Los Angeles County.
  6. ^ The jump in cases on May 27, 2021 was due to 3,632 backlogged cases from Los Angeles County.
  7. ^ The case count for June 26, 2021 includes a backlog of 546 cases from Riverside County.
  8. ^ The case count for June 29, 2021 includes the removal of 6,372 cases.

On January 26, 2020, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) confirmed the first case in California. The person, who had returned from travel to Wuhan, China, was released from the hospital in Orange County on February 1 in good condition to in-home isolation.[7] On January 31, the CDC confirmed the state's second case, a man in Santa Clara County, who had recently traveled to Wuhan.[22] The man recovered at home and was released from in-home isolation on February 20.[23]

On January 29, 2020, the U.S. Department of State evacuated 195 of its employees, their families, and other U.S. citizens from Hubei Province aboard a chartered flight to March Air Reserve Base in Riverside County.[24] On February 2, the CDC confirmed the state's third case in a woman in Santa Clara County, California, who had recently traveled to Wuhan.[25] On the same day, the CDC reported the country's tenth and eleventh cases in San Benito County, including the second instance of human-to-human transmission.[26] On February 5, the U.S. evacuated 345 citizens from Hubei Province and took them to two air bases in California, Travis Air Force Base in Solano County and Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, San Diego, to be quarantined for 14 days.[24][27]

On February 6, 2020, a woman from San Jose, California, became the first COVID-19 death in the U.S., though this was not discovered until April 2020. The case indicated community transmission was happening undetected in the state and the U.S., most likely since December.[28][29] On February 15, the government evacuated 338 U.S. nationals stranded aboard the cruise ship Diamond Princess, which had been held in quarantine in Yokohama, Japan.[30] Fourteen of those repatriated people were infected with the virus.[31] Five more nationals who were also reported as being infected were evacuated from the ship the following week, and were quarantined at Travis Air Force Base; several more cases among the evacuees were later confirmed.[32]

On February 26, 2020 a case of unknown origin was confirmed in a resident of Solano County.[33][34] The UC Davis Medical Center in Sacramento said that when the person was transferred there on February 19, the medical team suspected it was COVID-19 and asked the CDC to test for SARS-CoV-2. The CDC initially refused since the person, who had no known exposure to the virus through travel or close contact with a known infected individual, did not meet the criteria for testing. The person was ultimately tested on February 23; the test results returned positive on February 26.[35] After this first confirmed case of community transmission in the U.S.,[36] the CDC revised its criteria for testing patients for SARS-CoV-2, and on February 28, 2020 began sending out the new guidelines for healthcare workers.[37]

On March 2, 2020, amidst concerns over the spread of coronavirus in the state, Governor Gavin Newsom declared a State of Emergency in California.[38]

March 4th the first reporter coronavirus fatality in the state of California happens in Placer County. [1]

On March 24, a teenager who tested positive and died in Lancaster, part of Los Angeles County, appeared to have become the first individual in the U.S. under the age of 18 to die of COVID-19.[39] It was initially reported that the 17-year-old boy was denied health care at an urgent care clinic because he did not have health insurance; he was then transported from that clinic to Antelope Valley Hospital, during which time he went into cardiac arrest.[40] In reality, the boy did have insurance and contacted Kaiser Permanente who told him to instead go to Antelope Valley Hospital. In transit, the patient coded and six hours of efforts in the emergency room were ultimately not successful in reviving him. Los Angeles County Public Health officials said they asked the CDC to investigate alternative causes of death.[41]

On June 18, 2020, Newsom ordered a statewide mask mandate due to the rising number of cases and deaths, requiring citizens to wear masks or other coverings in most public spaces with a few exceptions. Many local governments had previously dropped mandatory mask-wearing measures.[42] On July 9, he reported a new record number of COVID-19-related deaths in the state.[43] By July 22, California surpassed 409,000 COVID-19 cases, surpassing New York for the most in the nation.[44]

On August 19, 2020, Dr. Sonia Y. Angell resigned as the CDPH Director and State Public Health Officer. Governor Gavin Newsom indicated Angell's resignation was related to data issues with the California Reportable Disease Information Exchange (CalREDIE) system that resulted in nearly 300,000 backlogged COVID-19 test results.[45] On August 10, 2020, Sandra Shewry was appointed as acting director and Dr. Erica Pan, California state epidemiologist, was named acting state public health officer.[46]

By September 3, 2020, Hispanic and Latino Americans comprised up to 60 percent of COVID-19 cases in the state, ostensibly due to the large population of the demographic and many of them being a part of the essential workforce.[47] Filipino Americans were the second-most affected, in part due to a high percentage of workers in healthcare on the frontlines, and as well as having a very high percentage of essential workers much like Latino Americans in California.[48]

On October 26, 2020, San Francisco and Oakland phased out Google's sister company Verily's COVID-19 testing system following concerns about patients’ data privacy and complaints about its funding, which despite intention to boost testing in low-income Black and Latino neighborhoods was benefiting higher-income residents in other communities.[49]

On December 30, 2020, a confirmed case of a new, more contagious SARS-CoV-2 variant from the United Kingdom was reported in California. The patient is from Southern California, according to the announcement from Newsom.[50] On January 6, 2021, the CDC announced that it had found at least 26 confirmed cases of the more contagious SARS-CoV-2 variant in California.[51] As of March 2, 2021, 189 sequences in the B.1.1.7 lineage have been detected in California since the lineage was first identified.[52]

As of March 2, 2021, 1,608 sequences in the B.1.427 lineage and 3,903 sequences in the B.1.429 lineage have been detected in California.[20][21]

Equipment shortage[]

California formerly had a strategic stockpile of medical supplies for responding to epidemics. In 2006, then-Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger ordered creation of an epidemic-ready medical equipment stockpile, including three 200-bed mobile hospitals with 50 million N95 respirators, 2,400 ventilators, and 21,000 additional patient beds.[53]  Governor Jerry Brown cut the budget for warehousing and keeping up the reserve in 2011, responding to the Great Recession economic downturn.[54][55]

Personal protective equipment for healthcare workers[]

Nurses protesting a lack of N-95 masks at the UCLA Medical Center on April 13, 2020

As early as January, 2020, a survey by the California Department of Public Health found that many Californian health care providers were having trouble obtaining adequate Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), such as masks, gowns, and eye protection.[56] By mid-March, 2020, when Newsom issued the first statewide shelter-in-place order,[57] 220 of 292 California hospitals surveyed already reported that they were having to limit use of masks, often severely.[56] Even with limitations in place, Newsom estimated that California healthcare facilities were still using about 46 million masks each month during the pandemic.[58]

As safety equipment shortages continued throughout the first months of the pandemic,[59] many doctors, nurses and emergency medical service workers expressed fears and frustrations at being asked to reuse safety gear or wear homemade and less effective masks and at the overall lack of proper PPE, which does not provide adequate protection from COVID-19 exposure.[60][61][62][63][64][65] As of July 29, 2020, local agencies reported 127 deaths from a total of 23,513 confirmed positive cases among healthcare workers in California.[66]

Newsom's administration made several attempts to procure masks and other protective equipment for healthcare workers, including:

  • multiple attempts at large-scale mask purchases, including failed deals with , which was investigated by the US Department of Justice,[67][68] and Bear Mountain Development Co.,[69] as well as a successful, if initially delayed, purchase from BYD;[58][70] and
  • a marketplace portal where individuals and businesses could offer PPE for donation or sale, attracting many small donations and fraudulent business posts that overwhelmed the site managers.[71][72][73]

As of July 22, 2020, California's stockpile reached approximately 86 million N-95 masks and 111 million surgical and procedural masks.[58]

Hospitals and ventilators[]

The State of California loaned 500 ventilators to high need states in the east and midwest during the pandemic.

At the start of 2020, California had 416 hospitals, yielding a statewide capacity of about 78,000 beds.[74] In mid-March, 2020, when the state was preparing for a surge of COVID-19 cases, Newsom submitted an unfulfilled request for 10,000 ventilators from the federal government.[74] The state government continued to acquire ventilators, but was able to flatten the curve enough that on April 6, 2020, California donated 500 ventilators to the Strategic National Stockpile for use in other states.[75] As of July 13, 2020, hospitals statewide report that 36% of ICU beds were available still, as were 72% of ventilators. However, the hardest-hit counties were quickly reaching capacity, and reportedly borrowing ventilators from neighboring hospitals to meet demand.[76]

Community response[]

A sign of community support for Tuolumne County in a shop window in Jamestown, California on May 30, 2020

In March 2020, there were calls for crowdsourcing on social media, to donate any masks, goggles, or other equipment to healthcare professionals.[77]

On March 22, Major Bay Area medical centers, UCSF and Stanford Health Center placed a called to action for donations of personal protective equipment.[78]

Local public health offices started coordinating donation efforts.[79]

Maker Nexus, a non-profit maker space in Sunnyvale, began making face shields to donate to local hospitals and other health care facilities, using its 3D printers and laser cutters. This effort grew rapidly as individuals in the Bay Area began using home-based 3D printers and bringing the result to Maker Nexus to complete the shields and deliver them to the recipients.[80][81] By the first of April, more than 300 community members were using their home 3D printers for this effort.[82][83][84] Together with other groups and individuals, the maker space is also making cloth face masks to substitute for N95 masks in non-critical applications and helping to coordinate face mask deliveries.[85] California had no central coordination of informing about vaccinations, and was among the worst at vaccine distribution efficiency in the U.S., with only 37 percent of its 4.4 million doses having been administered by January 20. Volunteers created VaccinateCA, an information website, in January 2021.[86][87]

Government response[]

Timeline for Government Response (State-Issued)
Date Action Taken Weekly cases leading up to stricter/lifted restrictions[88]
March 4, 2020 State of emergency declared.
March 12, 2020 Mass gatherings (over 250 people) and social gatherings (over 10 people) banned.
March 19, 2020 State-wide stay-at-home order issued. 781
March 24, 2020 Intakes in prisons and juvenile correction centers postponed.
April 1, 2020 Closure of all public and private schools (including institutions of higher education) ordered for the remainder of the 2019–2020 academic year. 6,865
April 9, 2020 State offered to pay hotel room costs for hospital and other essential workers afraid of returning home and infecting family members.
April 24, 2020 Program to deliver free meals to elderly residents announced.
April 29, 2020 Expansion of the state's Farm to Family program (which helps connect farmers to food banks) announced.
May 6, 2020 Worker's compensation extended for all workers who contracted COVID-19 during the state's stay-at-home order.
May 6, 2020 Property tax penalties waived for residents and small businesses that have been negatively affected by the pandemic.
May 7, 2020 State entered Stage 2 of its 4-stage reopening roadmap. 12,224
May 8, 2020 Executive order signed that would send every registered voter a mail-in ballot for the general election.
May 18, 2020 Businesses that are part of Stage 3 allowed to reopen. 12,615
May 26, 2020 Hair service businesses allowed to reopen (with restrictions). 16,107
June 18, 2020 Universal masking guidance issued by Department of Public Health. 23,701
June 28, 2020 Bars ordered to close in several counties. 37,842
July 1, 2020 Most indoor businesses, including restaurants, wineries, and movie theaters ordered to close in several counties. 43,420
July 13, 2020 Closure of gyms, indoor dining, bars, movie theaters, and museums re-imposed. 57,393
August 28, 2020 Unveiled a new set of guidelines for lifting restrictions, titled a "Blueprint for a Safer Economy" (BSE).
August 31, 2020 BSE county-level restrictions take effect. See below for initial classifications. More than 80% of population is under "Widespread" restrictions.
September 29, 2020 Majority of population now under "Substantial" or lower BSE restrictions.[A][B]
November 10, 2020 Majority of population back up to "Widespread" BSE restrictions.[A]
November 21, 2020 Nighttime curfew implemented for counties under "Widespread" BSE restrictions. 82,834
December 3, 2020 Regional stay-at-home orders announced.
January 6, 2021 Golden State stimulus program announced.
January 25, 2021 Nighttime curfew and regional stay-at-home orders lifted. 116,992
March 13, 2021 Majority of population back under "Substantial" or lower BSE restrictions.[A]
April 6, 2021 Majority of population under "Moderate" or lower BSE restrictions.[A]
April 6, 2021 Plan for reopening the economy and scrapping the BSE system on June 15 announced. 18,822
April 29, 2021 $6.2 billion tax cut for small businesses signed into law.
May 10, 2021 California Comeback Plan announced.
May 27, 2021 Vax for the Win incentive program announced.
June 8, 2021 Majority of population under "Minimal" BSE restrictions.[A]
June 15, 2021 BSE system and mask mandate repealed.

Statistics and data[]

County Confirmed[a] Recovered Deaths Vaccinations Population
[citation needed]
Cases/1M
3,532,496 Incomplete 55,577 13,882,984 39,873,057 88,594
Los Angeles[89] 1,216,319 No data 23,022 3,786,542 10,283,729 118,276
Riverside[90] 292,606 237,199 4,052 659,215 2,415,955 121,114
San Bernardino[91] 289,242 279,498 3,619 505,188 2,174,938 132,989
Orange[92] 249,067 224,933 4,511 1,064,225 3,284,468 75,832
San Diego[93] 266,317 No data 3,470 1,298,629 3,337,456 79,796
Kern[94] 105,222 34,334 1,026 208,691 905,801 116,165
Fresno[95] 97,727 No data 1,546 285,151 1,007,229 97,026
Sacramento[96] 95,837 72,158 1,565 462,240 1,529,501 62,659
Santa Clara[97] 113,173 No data 1,892 651,579 1,927,852 58,704
Alameda[98] 82,368 No data 1,366 658,190 1,671,329 49,283
San Joaquin[99] 68,551 58,029 1,216 191,461 758,744 90,348
Contra Costa[100] 64,358 56,050 727 478,150 1,153,526 55,792
Stanislaus[101] 51,867 42,190 978 158,076 555,624 93,349
Tulare[102] 48,740 39,086 791 114,483 475,834 102,431
Ventura[103] 79,028 70,420 940 280,535 859,073 91,992
Imperial[104] 26,817 25,317 689 41,075 190,624 140,680
San Francisco[105] 34,889 No data 455 446,894 881,549 39,577
Monterey[106] 42,667 40,111 338 116,523 443,281 96,253
San Mateo[107] 39,992 No data 544 377,875 766,573 52,170
Santa Barbara[108] 32,755 29,116 434 134,345 453,457 72,234
Sonoma[109] 28,882 19,197 308 217,881 494,336 58,426
Merced[110] 30,087 22,255 428 60,855 279,977 107,462
Kings[111] 22,441 11,339 237 25,115 151,662 147,967
Solano[112] 30,710 25,346 181 142,065 447,643 68,604
Marin[113] 13,600 11,237 200 161,052 258,826 52,545
Madera[114] 15,773 11,705 226 39,191 158,894 99,267
Placer[115] 20,460 15,982 244 155,971 389,532 52,525
San Luis Obispo[116] 20,172 15,408 253 102,498 280,101 72,017
Yolo[117] 13,044 10,449 192 84,179 221,270 58,951
Butte[118] 10,963 9,228 171 79,535 227,621 48,163
Santa Cruz[119] 15,169 14,365 197 119,879 276,864 54,789
Shasta[120] 11,113 9,641 195 42,589 178,271 62,338
Napa[121] 9,233 2,481 74 65,356 137,744 67,030
Sutter[122] 9,029 7,728 101 26,761 97,238 92,855
San Benito[123] 5,812 4,842 61 15,050 57,088 101,808
Yuba[124] 5,900 4,675 40 13,669 74,727 78,954
El Dorado[125] 9,326 6,890 107 64,049 188,399 49,501
Mendocino[126] 3,895 3,105 46 40,333 89,299 43,618
Lassen[127] 5,634 4,649 24 6,001 30,911 182,265
Glenn[128] 2,224 1,404 24 8,387 28,795 77,236
Lake[129] 3,233 1,978 43 19,558 65,081 49,677
Colusa[130] 2,155 1,200 15 5,607 22,098 97,520
Nevada[131] 4,160 2,345 74 35,203 99,155 41,955
Humboldt[132] 3,406 1,413 35 45,365 136,002 25,045
Tehama[133] 5,180 2,353 53 13,371 64,039 80,888
Calaveras[134] 1,963 879 50 16,198 45,157 43,471
Amador[135] 3,481 2,575 44 13,529 38,094 91,379
Tuolumne[136] 4,006 1,907 59 22,418 54,740 73,182
Inyo[137] 1,375 625 37 8,207 18,577 74,016
Mono[138] 1,235 No data 4 8,880 13,822 89,350
Siskiyou[139] 1,846 1,234 14 15,183 44,612 41,379
Del Norte[140] 1,090 734 5 6,112 27,221 40,043
Mariposa[141] 400 347 7 3,625 18,129 22,064
Plumas[142] 670 489 6 5,991 19,773 33,885
Modoc[143] 467 311 4 3,408 9,612 48,585
Trinity[144] 381 303 5 3,293 13,635 27,943
Sierra[145] 101 95 0 1,703 3,207 31,494
Alpine[146] 86 73 0 813 1,154 74,523
  1. ^ Cases reported by each county's health department. Cases reported are those of county residents, including those who tested positive elsewhere in California.
External 3D models
LA County Communities COVID-19 Cases
Center for Geospatial Science and Technology
California State University, Northridge
Steven Graves[147]
continuously updated
3D model icon Map: LA COVID-19 by Community
via ArcGIS
3D model icon Walkthrough: COVID-19 in LA County
via ArcGIS
External 3D model
Los Angeles Times
Tracking California coronavirus confirmed cases
continuously updated
3D model icon Coronavirus Maps & Tables

Charts of medical cases by county:

  • Los Angeles County
  • Orange County
  • San Diego County
  • San Francisco County (data from )[148]
  • San Mateo County
  • Santa Barbara County
  • Santa Clara County (for tabular data, see COVID-19 cases)
  • Alameda County (for tabular data, see COVID-19 cases)
  • Contra Costa County
  • Marin County
  • Ventura County
Number of new daily cases, with a seven-day moving average:
  Raw   7-day moving average

Weekly all-cause deaths in California [2]:

Impact[]

Cancellations, closures and postponements[]

A nearly empty flight from Beijing to Los Angeles on March 15, 2020

Effects on education[]

Education in California has been impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. For example, while most students in the state have switched to distance learning as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, thousands of them lack laptops and Wi-Fi.[149] By April 10, 2020, a school of 21 students became the only school in the state to remain open.[150] However, by April 29, the school closed indefinitely, making it the last school in the state to do so.[151]

  • K–12: On March 17, 2020, the California Department of Education provided guidance for K–12 schools:[152] This includes information regarding: Distance learning,[153] resources that support distance learning,[154] remote learning guidance,[155] designing a high-quality online course,[156] grading and graduation requirements,[157] and internet access;[158] school meals;[159] Special education;[160] child care and student supervision in the event of a school closure; and parent resources. The state also authorized $5.3 billion in the 2020-21 budget for Learning Loss Mitigation Funds, designed to help schools improve teaching and learning and access to virtual school.[161]
  • California Community Colleges System (CCCS) issued guidance regarding Novel Coronavirus 2019.[162] On May 18, Chancellor Eloy Ortiz Oakley said that California's 115 community colleges will likely continue to offer their classes fully online in the fall, noting that many colleges in the system had already announced this intention. Oakley added that he fully encouraged this decision as he believes it "will be the most relevant way for us to continue to reach our students and to do it in a way that commits to maintaining equity for our students."[163]
  • California State University (CSU) system: On March 17, 2020, CSU issued a response to the COVID-19 outbreak, including that "the CSU is following guidance provided by the Centers for Disease Control and the U.S. Department of State".[164] The communication also included information regarding a plan for CSU's 23 campuses to accelerate their transition to online instruction.[165] On May 12, California State University Chancellor Timothy White announced that the CSU system would be offering fall 2020 courses primarily online "with some limited exceptions."[166] For spring 2020 alone, the CSU system was projecting a revenue loss of $337 million due to the pandemic, as a result of losses from student housing, parking and campus bookstores, combined with costs related to cleaning, overtime and the shift to distance education.[166]
  • University of California (UC) system: On April 2, 2020, UC president Janet Napolitano and the chancellors of the 10 campuses gave assurances to UC employees.[167] On April 6, 2020, the UC Health Data Initiative launched daily updates on COVID-19 tests.[168] On the same day, the UC launched a grant program to spur COVID-19 related research.[169] Pertinent information for students, faculty, staff, and community is available for each campus: UC Berkeley,[170] UC Davis,[171] UC Irvine,[172] UCLA,[173] UC Merced,[174] UC Riverside,[175] UC San Diego,[176] UC San Francisco,[177] UC Santa Barbara,[178] and UC Santa Cruz.[179] On May 20, University of California president Janet Napolitano told the UC Board of Regents that "every campus will be open and offering instruction" in fall 2020, adding that she "anticipates that most, if not all of our campuses, will operate in some kind of hybrid mode" involving a mix of online and in-person instruction.[180] From the time that UC campuses shut down in mid-March through the end of April, the UC system experienced a $1.2 billion loss due to the pandemic.[180]

Effects on prisons[]

  • Alameda County: On March 20, 2020, Alameda County officials announced that 247 people would be released from Santa Rita Jail, located in Dublin.[181]
  • Los Angeles County: On March 17, the county Sheriff's Department announced that it had reduced the inmate population by 600 during the previous two weeks in an attempt to keep prisoners from being infected by coronavirus.[182]
  • Santa Barbara County: As of April 17, 2020, the county jail had released 324 prisoners. The Sheriff announced on a Friday night that one inmate has tested positive for COVID-19.[182]
  • San Diego County: On March 16, the Sheriff's Department said it had started reducing the number of people being accepted into the county's seven jails and had received approval for early release of some prisoners. Other measures included in-cell meals, a suspension of visitation, and suspension of jail programs.[183]

On October 11, 2020, an investigation revealed that California's prison factories continued operations even after COVID-19 outbreaks happened in the prisons. Rehab programs, religious services, and educational classes were all stopped, but the prison factories continued operating, where inmates worked for hours without wearing masks.[184]

Effects on religion[]

Various faith organizations claim that social distancing orders issued by the state violate the constitutional right to freedom of religion and assembly. Bans of all gatherings, no matter the size, outside of places of residences put in place by local authorities have also been challenged.[185]

On March 13, the Catholic Diocese of San Jose in California closed all diocesan schools from until at least April 20. It suspended public Masses and dispensed with the obligation to attend Mass from March 14 until further notice.[186] On March 18, the California Catholic Conference of bishops followed suit, suspending the public celebration of Mass throughout the state until further notice.[187] Many churches are conducting services online during the time of closure.[citation needed]

The United States Supreme Court denied to grant an emergency injunction on Newsom's May orders limiting churches to 25% capacity or 100 persons maximum ahead of the Pentecost on May 31. The denial was decided on a 5–4 vote, with Chief Justice John Roberts joining the four liberal Justices in denying the order by stating that "Although California's guidelines place restrictions on places of worship, those restrictions appear consistent with the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment. Similar or more severe restrictions apply to comparable secular gatherings, including lectures, concerts, movie showings, spectator sports, and theatrical performances, where large groups of people gather in close proximity for extended periods of time."[188]

In two ongoing cases, the Supreme Court granted two orders on February 5, 2021 that enjoined the state from banning religious services in the Tier 1 areas, though agreed that the state may limit capacity to 25% of the church and can ban singing and chanting under the pandemic conditions. The orders found that California may have reason to restrict capacity, but they cannot restrict that capacity to zero, and that California has shown unequal treatment of religious groups compared to other industries, particularly Hollywood.[189]

Effects on sports[]

Sacramento Kings players shoot around after their March 11 game against New Orleans is postponed

The first U.S. sports cancellations attributed to the pandemic occurred in California; in accordance with a local health emergency in Riverside County, the 2020 BNP Paribas Open tennis tournaments at Indian Wells were postponed on March 8, 2020.[190][191] The 2021 edition of the tournament has also been postponed indefinitely, with organizers seeking to host it later in the year.[192]

After Santa Clara County banned all large gatherings larger than 1,000 people for a three-week period beginning March 11, the San Jose Sharks of the NHL and the Golden State Warriors of the NBA announced that all of their remaining home games of the regular season would be played behind closed doors with no spectators. With their game on March 12 against the Brooklyn Nets, the Warriors were to be the first professional sports team in the United States to play a home game behind closed doors due to the pandemic.[193][194][195] However, on March 11, after Utah Jazz players tested positive for COVID-19, the NBA suspended its regular season, and almost all other professional sports leagues and college athletics programs followed suit over the days that followed.[196]

On March 16, the CCCAA also canceled the remainder of the winter seasons as well as the spring seasons. They also restored a season of eligibility to those athletes who had already participated in the early season of spring sports.[197] The NAIA canceled their spring season on the same day.[198] Also on March 16, the Ojai Tennis Tournament, the oldest and largest amateur tennis tournament in the United States, canceled its 2020 event;[199] the 2021 edition was later nixed as well.[200]

At the high school level, the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) canceled the basketball state championship tournament after the Northern California and Southern California semifinals. During the tournament, Sheldon, Archbishop Riordan, and the Menlo School withdrew from the tournament after their schools were shut down. The CIF gave their reevaluation of the situation on April 3 and cancelled all spring sports.[201][202]

In motorsports, the NASCAR Cup Series canceled the 2020 Toyota/Save Mart 350 in Sonoma, as Sonoma County would not allow sporting events and any other mass gathering to occur at that time.[203] The IndyCar Series was required to cancel the 2020 Grand Prix of Long Beach,[204] and the Monterey Grand Prix (which had initially been rescheduled as a twin race weekend to make up for other cancelled races).[205] In December 2020, it was announced that NASCAR's 2021 race weekend (including the Cup Series Auto Club 400) at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana would be canceled (with the race weekend moved to Daytona International Speedway's road course). Accordingly, a planned reconstruction of the track was also postponed to 2022 [206] It was also announced that the 2021 IndyCar Series schedule would be modified to move the Grand Prix of Long Beach from April to September as the season finale, with organizers stating that this would "afford us the best opportunity to provide our guests with a fun and exciting experience in a safe and unrestricted environment."[207]

The Pac-12 Conference (which includes several universities in California) delayed its college football season to November, and all games were closed to the public.[208] On December 19, 2020, it was announced that the 2021 Rose Bowl (a College Football Playoff semi-final game) would be re-located from Pasadena to AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas due to the current surge in local cases, and inability to invite the families of players as spectators. It was the first time since 1942 (due to wartime restrictions on public gatherings on the west coast following the Pearl Harbor attack) that the Rose Bowl was not be held in Pasadena.[209][210]

Unemployment[]

As of April 8, 2020, over the preceding three weeks, California had processed over 2.4 million applications for unemployment assistance.[211]

A survey conducted April 17 found that fewer than half of the residents of Los Angeles County were employed, although some of this unemployment was supposed to be temporary.[212]

Effects on the economy[]

In January 2020, California expected a $5.6 billion surplus in the state budget by the time the fiscal year ended on June 30.[213] In May, however, the Department of Finance changed its projection, saying that the state would instead have a deficit of $54.3 billion. Some of this shortfall was caused by expenses for COVID-19 response (an unanticipated $7.1 billion for health programs and an additional $6 billion for other types of responses), but most was caused by the expectation that tax revenue—personal income, corporate, and sales—will be one-quarter lower than originally projected.[214][215] However, in January 2021, California revised its earlier estimate and instead expected a $15 billion one-time budget surplus, largely due to increased tax revenues from wealthy residents who were doing better than expected.[216] In May 2021, Governor Newsom announced that the state's budget surplus had grew to $75.7 billion.[217]

Vaccination[]

Groups eligible for vaccination
Group Eligibility date
Healthcare workers and long-term care residents December 14, 2020
All residents age 65+ January 14, 2021
Workers at high risk of workplace exposure February 15, 2021
Residents age 16–64 with underlying conditions March 15, 2021
All residents age 50–64[218] April 1, 2021
All residents age 16–49[218] April 15, 2021
All residents age 12–15[219] May 13, 2021

Challenges and overall progress[]

Following administration of the first vaccinations on December 14, 2020,[220] the rollout of COVID-19 vaccinations in California proceeded slowly. The effort was hampered by a variety of factors, including vaccine supply shortages, poor communication between federal and state authorities, and shortages in both the supply of vaccines as well as persons to administer them.[221] The problems were exacerbated by the state's large, decentralized structure, which resulted in a delegation of the response to 61 local health departments and resulted in a piecemeal effort with widespread regional disparities.[222] The rollout was initially slowed by restricting it to health care workers and nursing homes: Other groups were held back while the state worked to complete vaccination of the first groups.[221] Additional challenges included the state's large population, prioritization of the order in which groups were deemed eligible to receive the vaccine,[223] and appointment systems throughout the state that favored tech savvy persons with smart-phones.[224] Elderly populations in particular were disadvantaged by the vaccination rollout, experiencing long lines, lack of seating, lack of restroom facilities and in some cases requiring QR codes on cell phones or printed paper to prove eligibility.[225] Minority residents of the state were in addition found to be receiving a smaller share of the vaccines in the initial months than their fraction of the population.[226] In order to address these discrepancies, the governor announced in early March 2021 that the state would be setting aside 40% of its COVID-19 vaccine doses for the hardest-hit communities and establish a "vaccine equity metric".[227]

As of June 15, 2021, California administered 40,669,793 COVID-19 vaccine doses at a daily rate of 148,077 vaccines. Overall, 59.1% of the population has received their first dose, and 46.8% has been fully vaccinated. 84.2% of the state's supply has been used.[228][229][230] The state has administered the largest number of doses nationwide, and is 11th of 50 states in terms of per capita dose administration.[18][231] Mass vaccination sites in certain regions continued to experience severe shortages as of March 2021.[232]

Vaccination sites[]

As of February 12, 2021, a website had been established by the state for scheduling and/or being notified of eligibility for COVID-19 vaccines,[233][234] and vaccination providers expanded throughout the state to include retail pharmacies, federal mass vaccination sites, and local health clinics.[235] As of March 4, 2021, a state-government provided directory of vaccination sites had yet to be established, which has prompted the development of VaccinateCA, a crowdsourced volunteer website listing vaccination sites in the state in a dynamic manner as the number of sites and locations continuously vary.[236][237][238]

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Population as of July 2019.
  2. ^ Percentages may not add up to 100% due to rounding.

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