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Wednesday, July 1, 2020

How California went from model student to pandemic problem child


SAN FRANCISCO — California was long the nation's shining star on the coronavirus, heralded by national media and White House advisers as an example of how other states could beat the disease. The state was so confident in April that it sent hundreds of ventilators to the East Coast.

Now, the Democratic state joins Republican-dominated Florida, Texas and Arizona as America's problem children, with new cases skyrocketing and leaders seemingly caught flat-footed as the spread grows beyond their control. California has seen a 70 percent increase in daily new cases over the past two weeks, while hospitalizations have shot up 51 percent.

Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday took his biggest step yet to reverse California's reopening, ordering 19 hard-hit counties to close indoor dining, movie theaters, bars, wine tasting rooms and bowling alleys for three weeks. The moves affect seven out of every 10 residents, including most of Southern California.

"The bottom line is the spread of this virus continues at a rate that is particularly concerning," Newsom said Wednesday.

Disease experts, public health officials and even state leaders themselves say they had too much faith that residents would continue social distancing in bars, restaurants and backyards. Epidemiologists are now wondering if California was too eager to reopen its economy in a state with the nation's largest, most diverse population of nearly 40 million people.

The state, with the fifth-largest economy in the world, offers a large-scale preview of what states across the country may face in coming weeks as they reckon with a virus that just won’t slow down. California serves as a microcosm of all of the problems cropping up around the nation: an older, more vulnerable population; outbreaks in prisons and nursing homes; cooped-up residents flocking to beaches, restaurants and bars overrun by young people; and a high incidence of infection among essential workers, often living in congregant housing.

State and health officials underestimated how much reopening "became the starting bell for a lot of people beginning to ignore the kinds of public health maneuvers that they had followed earlier," said Bob Wachter, chair of the medicine department at the University of California, San Francisco medical school.

“If you dodge the bullet the first time through, the virus is just sitting there waiting for you to get cocky," he added.

Newsom initially laid out a slow, phased-in reopening process that started in May with retail pick-up, offices and manufacturing, all with social distancing. He then allowed restaurant dining and in-store retail to resume later that month. Facing litigation and pressure from the White House, Newsom allowed church services to start with limitations.

By June, however, Newsom opened the floodgates to other sectors. In the next stage came hair salons and barber shops. Then bars and gyms, followed by nail salons and tattoo parlors. Simultaneously, protesters were hitting the streets throughout California — though officials have insisted that demonstrations did not lead to outbreaks — while residents were increasingly tired of quarantining without seeing friends and family.

“Once the reopening process starts, there’s enormous political pressure to accelerate it to include everything,” said Tom Inglesby, director of the Center for Health Security at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

The governor has insisted that he did not allow California to reopen on a broad scale, putting that responsibility — and blame, perhaps — on officials in the state's 58 counties. He says he only told counties "how" they could open, not "when." Still, by issuing guidelines for each sector, his administration gave a tacit green light to counties where residents had been clamoring for a return to normalcy.

By and large, Southern California has experienced Covid-19 in a different way than Northern California, with Los Angeles and its vast suburbs to the east among the hardest hit. California's top five counties by case count are Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, Orange and San Bernardino.

Meanwhile, Imperial County on the southern border, east of San Diego, is the state's biggest concern with a positive test rate of 23 percent, far higher than the nearly 6 percent statewide figure. The rural county ran out of hospital beds weeks ago, sending more than 500 patients elsewhere in the state.

Despite having more cases, Southern California was among the loudest in the reopening chorus. San Diego officials implored Newsom to loosen restrictions. Orange County cities threatened legal action against Newsom when he shut down their beaches in late April. Riverside County supervisors overrode their health officer's desire to move slower.

The state’s agriculturally rich Central Valley has also emerged as a hot spot, with outbreaks at nursing homes and in the fields as well as at meat-packing and other food-processing facilities. Most inland counties considered their early coronavirus efforts a success and reopened sectors in conjunction with the state's timeline.

In contrast, the San Francisco Bay Area took a more conservative tack from the start. Santa Clara County was the first in the nation to shut down large gatherings — including professional sports — and was soon joined by San Francisco. Then, six Bay Area counties imposed the nation's strictest rules days before Newsom imposed the nation's first statewide stay-at-home order.

Their approach proved successful — and they have likewise been more conservative than other counties in reopening their economy. As the state's problems grew more severe, San Francisco delayed opening museums, zoos, hair salons and bars last week, while Contra Costa, Alameda and Marin have also slowed their reopening plans.

A handful of critics thought Newsom was reopening too soon — chief among them Sara Cody, the Santa Clara public health officer credited with initiating the early coronavirus shutdown. In late May, as the governor allowed church services and haircuts to resume, Cody told her county supervisors that the pace was "concerning."

“The state modifications are being made without a real understanding of the consequences of what the last move has been, and with the possible serious effects for health and possible serious risks or an exponential growth in cases," she said.

Still, the Bay Area didn't avoid the recent growth in cases. Two Bay Area counties — Contra Costa and Santa Clara — landed on the state's watch list of 19 that must now close or keep shuttered the range of indoor venues.

Some of the hard-hit states on the East Coast — New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts — have been slower to reopen after experiencing a surge at levels still unseen in California. Their infection curves are now calm compared to those in other states.

For now, at least, the key appears to be reducing social interactions.

“That doesn’t mean having to go back to shelter-in-place throughout the state, but it does mean we’ve been reopening too quickly,” Inglesby said.

Even if Newsom ratchets down social activity, behavioral change may remain elusive. "I've thought he's done a pretty good job and he's stayed pretty close to the data," said Steven Goodman, an epidemiologist at Stanford University. "What he says and how people behave are not exactly the same thing."

Goodman also pointed to the influence of President Donald Trump's refusal to take the pandemic seriously. "There's no way to get the collective body of society to do things it doesn't want to do if you don't have consistent and persistent messaging from the top," he said. "California is not a country, and it exists in the United States where there are all sorts of other signals from the top that the actions we want people to take are just suggestions, they're just not mandatory."

To much of the nation, California's emergence on the list of problem states is surprising not just because of its early success, but also because the recent surge has largely been framed as a red state issue. Nearly all of the current hard-hit states have Republican governors who prioritized economic concerns and were criticized for not taking the disease as seriously as other leaders.

The divide between Republicans and Democrats when it comes to social distancing and mask wearing plays a role, but doesn't explain everything, said Matthew Gentzkow, a Stanford University economics professor leading a group of researchers in tracking partisanship in response to the Covid-19 pandemic.

“The idea that political differences would somehow protect California because we have all these Democrats staying home and being careful, I don’t think that can be drawn from the research,” Gentzkow said. “The behavior of Democrats and Republicans haven’t been so different that it would insulate California.”

Through mid-June, Newsom defended the state's reopening as viable because of the precautions in place and the state's large hospital capacity. He noted that California's early actions bought time for the state to stock up on personal protective equipment, such as 150 million N95 masks the state is purchasing from a just-certified manufacturer, BYD. He also took comfort in the state's positive test rate remaining stable around 4.5 percent.

But within the past two weeks, the governor has shifted course. As a first step, he issued a statewide mask order for most public settings on June 18, stressing that wearing face coverings was essential if Californians wanted to keep the economy open and control the virus spread.

Days later, he reinstituted daily press briefings after largely foregoing them during the reopening process. He repeatedly emphasized that residents need to socially distance, wash their hands and wear masks as new cases soared. On Sunday, he ordered bars closed in seven California counties in his first sector closure since the reopening.

Over time, Newsom shifted to a more pluralistic view of decision-making, repeatedly emphasizing that the counties now controlled their own fate. California political expert David McCuan described the administration’s message to counties as “tired, unclear, uncoordinated, disjointed.”

McCuan, a political science professor at Sonoma State University, called Newsom’s mask mandate “late in the game” and said Sunday's bar closures on a handful of troubled counties was the least he could do to take some action.

“This is where he doesn’t want to go too far too fast. He wants to have the hammer ready to go but … he doesn't want to be that heavy handed,” he said.

Despite the growing worry, Cyrus Shahpar, a director at Resolve to Save Lives, a nonprofit that combats global epidemics, said California’s numbers aren’t spiking as dramatically as Texas, Florida and Arizona on a per capita basis — which offers hope for the Golden State to right the course.

“California is starting to move in that direction with hospitalization rates and positivity rates over the last 14 days, but we’re not there yet,” Shahpar, an epidemiologist who lives in the Bay Area. “The problem is that we have a lot more people that will become infected in terms of the number, but not the rate.”

While California’s sheer size and heterogeneity pose challenges, Shahpar noted that more of the state's residents have embraced wearing masks and adhering to public health restrictions than in Texas, Florida and Arizona. He said the state also benefits from more consistent messaging from local and state leaders.

It's possible that California is acting in time to prevent an out-of-control spiral.

“If California can learn from those other states and start tightening the dial earlier, that will have benefits in terms of the overall impact,” he said.



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Record cash floods Democrats, Black groups amid protests and pandemic


Online donors poured a record $392 million into campaigns and causes via ActBlue in June, a sign of surging activism and political enthusiasm on the left that smashed the previous monthly high, from just before the 2018 election, by a whopping 50 percent.

The eye-popping numbers on ActBlue, the favored digital fundraising platform for the Democratic Party as well as a growing host of left-leaning nonprofits, make for a startling split-screen next to Great Depression-level unemployment and spiking coronavirus cases across the country.

But the left’s online giving surge is blunting one of President Donald Trump's remaining advantages in the presidential election, as his poll numbers sink: his financial edge. Small-dollar donors are filling up Joe Biden’s campaign coffers, giving Democratic Senate and House candidates a financial cushion in many of the biggest 2020 elections, and pouring resources into newly emboldened civil rights organizations, which are scaling up rapidly amid rising support for the Black Lives Matter movement.

ActBlue processed nearly $25 million in donations on the final day of June, as Biden and other Democratic candidates pushed their email lists to deliver a big end-of-quarter fundraising haul, according to the live fundraising ticker on ActBlue’s website. It would have been a record day for the service — but for an enormous surge of ActBlue donations in the first four days of June, over $115 million, at the height of the protests over the death of George Floyd, a Black man killed by a Minneapolis police officer.

The money flowing through ActBlue has been a less visible piece of the summer of activism — but no less tangible, fueling everything from bail funds for protesters to think tanks promoting police reform, as well as Democratic political candidates.

“The world has never felt more perilous, so if you’re feeling powerless, don’t know what to do, a simple way to have an impact is to contribute,” said Taryn Rosenkranz, a Democratic digital fundraising consultant. “Open rates on emails are still continuing to surge, click rates are higher, average gifts are higher. Everything that should be going in a different direction for this economic moment is actually going up.”

Fundraising consultants and Democratic donors expect June to mark Biden’s strongest totals to date — “bigger than May,” when he posted brought $80 million, said Tim Lim, a Democratic strategist and a former member of the national finance committees for President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.

On Wednesday evening, President Donald Trump and the Republican National Committee announced that they jointly raised $131 million in June, a significant jump over its recent monthly totals. They also said they brought in $266 million during the second fundraising quarter, as well as sitting on $295 million in cash on hand — a financial edge Trump and Republicans have consistently held over Democrats.

"Even though Trump raised a big number in June, I fully expect [Biden and the DNC] will be close or higher," Lim continued. Biden topped Trump’s fundraising by just over $7 million in May, the first month when Biden could jointly fundraise with the Democratic National Committee, matching a similar agreement that Trump has with the Republican National Committee.

“Donald Trump is the single greatest fundraising tool that Democrats have ever had,” said Tara McGowan, co-founder of ACRONYM, a progressive nonprofit. “There’s probably a strong correlation between how Americans are experiencing this crisis right now and how they feel about the stakes of this presidential election.”

Biden’s campaign, in an email to supporters, said it had topped 3 million online contributions in the second quarter, “double the amount we received in the first quarter this year.” Based on individual donors disclosed in April and May, according to the Federal Elections Commission filings, that puts Biden’s individual donor number for June above 1.2 million, a big one-month leap for the former vice president amid economic and social turmoil.

“We know that June was a difficult time for many,” the Biden fundraising email continued.

Groups focused on criminal justice and the Black community — including Black Lives Matter and Color of Change — also saw an enormous influx in cash during the multi-week protests following Floyd’s death in Minneapolis. Totals raised by some nonprofits may not be available until later this month at the earliest, but IRS documents filed by ActBlue last month show the early effects of the surge that started in May. The IRS disclosure shows that Color of Change, for example, raised over $1.3 million via ActBlue in May after garnering just a few hundred thousand dollars from the service in the previous four months of the year.

The amount of money flowing into those Black-led groups is “revolutionary,” said Steve Phillips, a Democratic donor and the founder of Democracy in Color.

“There’s been a lot of gatekeepers – white gatekeepers – of big dollars that have been bypassed by all this small-dollar giving,” Phillips said. “It’s remarkable to watch mainstream philanthropy really become irrelevant in this moment.”

In the presidential campaign, Biden’s cash ballooned in June thanks, in part, to his featured headliners. In late June, Obama hit the virtual campaign trail alongside Biden, raising a combined $11 million from a pair of grassroots and high-dollar fundraisers. Biden has also leaned on former opponents for the Democratic presidential nomination, including current running mate options: In June, Sen. Elizabeth Warren helped him raise $6 million, while Sen. Kamala Harris brought in over $2 million from single events.

Biden bundlers are already preparing to cover the costs for a presidential transition, too. Earlier this month, Biden formally launched a transition team, led by Delaware Sen. Ted Kaufman, a longtime Biden adviser.

A memo obtained by POLITICO showed that donors are soliciting $5,000 contributions, “to raise sufficient funds to prepare for a core transition team.” (The memo urged givers to keep the effort “quiet” so “we do not distract attention from the core task of winning the election.”) The New York Times first reported the transition fundraising overtures.

The financial machine boosting Biden stands in sharp contrast to his primary campaign, when he struggled to keep pace with Democratic rivals and had little digital fundraising infrastructure to lean on.

In recent weeks, the Biden campaign built out its small-dollar operation significantly, spending more than $9 million on Facebook ads in June, messaging that’s aimed at acquiring voters email addresses through petitions and direct donation appeals.

“They’ve definitely put the foot on the gas,” said Julia Rosen, a Democratic digital consultant who led digital strategy on Andrew Yang’s presidential campaign. “They were a very lean campaign to start, and they’ve added digital staff and they’re spending a lot more on Facebook and other properties.”



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Fauci: Avoid gatherings like Trump's Rushmore fireworks show


Anthony Fauci discouraged Americans from attending events like President Donald Trump's upcoming fireworks display at Mount Rushmore, pointing out that a large gathering of people in close proximity goes against best practices for stopping the spread of the coronavirus.

After being asked Wednesday by journalist Jessica Yellin for his message regarding the July 3 event, the nation’s top infectious disease expert said: "You should avoid whenever possible gathering in crowds where people cannot maintain physical distance."


"Avoid crowds, wear a mask, keep physical distance," Fauci continued. "It doesn't matter what the reason for the congregation, whether it's a celebration here, the demonstration there. It doesn't make any difference — wear a mask."

Trump's fireworks display on Mount Rushmore has already garnered fierce backlash for its disregard for social-distancing measures. More than 7,000 people are expected to attend.

Native American leaders have also criticized the event for making use of land sacred to some Native nations, as well as opening the potential for more infections.



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Florida to rescue ‘essential' online education programs after veto


TALLAHASSEE — “Essential” pieces of a $29.4 million education program vetoed by Gov. Ron DeSantis will survive and be transferred from the University of West Florida.

The emergency rescue, which sidesteps Florida law and suggests that state officials were unprepared for the far-reaching fallout of the veto, was announced by the State University System Board of Governors and UWF just hours before the cuts took hold at midnight Tuesday.

The Complete Florida Plus Program in its current form will be dismantled. Programs deemed essential will be recreated under a new name, allowing the state to get around a law that put UWF in charge of the program and another that restricts spending on vetoed programs.

Without action, the governor's veto would have disconnected critical services like online library resources used by K-12 students, colleges, and universities across Florida as the state continues to battle economic and health crises triggered by a surge in Covid-19 infections.

Complete Florida, for now, will be kept afloat by reserve funding — the same pool of money state auditors said UWF had improperly tapped from state library resources, eventually leading the Department of Education and governor’s office to seek a change in leadership.

“We are confident that new management will improve oversight and decision-making processes,” the BOG said in a written statement issued late Tuesday.

UWF and the governor’s office signed off on the transition, noting that online education services will be the financial priority.

DeSantis spokesperson Helen Aguirre Ferré said “leftover rolled over funds” will allow the program to continue to operate until the transition.

The board will work with UWF and the Florida Department of Education, the agency that oversees the Florida College System, to move “essential” Complete Florida programs from UWF’s control. The board did not specify which services are considered essential and said more details will be provided in the coming months. It isn't known where the programs will be housed.

Programs like the $3 million initiative that helps former college students return to school to complete their degree are at risk of being cut.

The transition plan sends Florida into murky legal territory.

State law prohibits the governor, the chief justice of the state Supreme Court, and state agencies from authorizing expenditures for programs that were part of a vetoed appropriation.

And transferring Complete Florida away from UWF would conflict with a law that put the university in charge of that program and the Florida Academic Library Services Cooperative, which provides online access to 17 million books to 1.3 million students, faculty and staff.

Complete Florida will survive on $9.8 million in carry-forward accounts, the equivalent of about a third of its budget, according to UWF records. State auditors in March said UWF should repay Complete Florida $2.4 million in carry-forward cash that the university improperly pulled from the program's accounts, which could provide additional dollars.

State University System Chancellor Marshall Criser on Wednesday asked UWF to refrain from spending carry-forward dollars without first consulting system officials.

That way, the system “can ensure the carry forward funds are expended on services that are identified as essential going forward and that you provide an accounting of the funds that are currently encumbered,” Criser wrote in a letter to UWF leaders.

While university officials scramble to reconfigure the program, some 150 employees in Tallahassee, Gainesville and Pensacola are in limbo. Program staffers had not received termination notices as of Wednesday, according to UWF officials.

Gary Fineout contributed to this report.



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Trump, RNC raised $131 million in June


President Donald Trump and the Republican National Committee raised a combined $131 million in June, a significant jump over its recent monthly fundraising hauls.

Trump and the RNC announced in an email Wednesday evening that they brought in $266 million during the second fundraising quarter, after raising $212 million in the first three months of 2020. The campaign also said it has $295 million in cash on hand, maintaining a financial edge that Republicans have consistently held over Democrats.

Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, has not yet released his fundraising totals for the month. Last month, Biden and the Democratic National Committee had about $122.2 million in cash on hand.

But in May, Biden outraised Trump for the first time, bringing in $7 million more than the president. Notably, it was the first month Biden and the DNC could raise money jointly, opening up new funding streams and allowing wealthy donors to give more than $620,000 at a time. Trump and the RNC have been raking in cash through a joint fundraising agreement for months.

The Trump campaign touted the president's small-dollar machine, including a record-setting one-day total for his birthday, when it brought in $14 million.

“The Trump campaign’s monumental June fundraising haul proves that people are voting with their wallets and that enthusiasm behind President Trump’s reelection is only growing,” Brad Parscale, Trump's campaign manager, said in a statement. “No one is excited about Joe Biden, which is why he has to rely so heavily on surrogates like Barack Obama and radical Hollywood elites."



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