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Covid: Most of California under strict new lockdown as cases surge

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Most parts of the US state of California are under a strict new lockdown, as Covid-19 continues to surge across the country.

The stay-at-home order affects around 85% of the state’s 40 million people. It will be in place for at least three weeks and cover the Christmas holiday.

Many businesses will be closed, and people will be banned from meeting anyone outside their household.

On Sunday, the US had a record number of people in hospital with Covid-19.

The country has seen a sharp rise in cases and Covid-related deaths in recent weeks, a surge that could be partly down to last month’s Thanksgiving holiday, when millions of Americans travelled around the US.

The new restrictions in California – the country’s most populous state – were triggered by intensive care capacity in hospitals shrinking.

The measures apply to the southern part of the state and its central valley, while other areas could follow within days. San Francisco has also gone into lockdown, with the mayor imposing a separate set of orders.

California’s lockdown in March, in which all non-essential businesses were closed, was seen as an early model for the US at the beginning of the pandemic.

What are the new restrictions?

Governor Gavin Newsom has ordered that when capacity at intensive care units in any of five regions of the state goes below 15%, that region will go into lockdown within 24 hours.

The stay-at-home orders triggered in this way will be similar to the far-reaching order issued for the state after the pandemic first hit in March, but with a few significant relaxations:

  • All retail stores are able to stay open, although only at 20% capacity, along with outside spaces such as parks and beaches
  • Gatherings are prohibited, and people are required to stay at home and minimise contact with other households
  • Bars, hair salons and indoor restaurants are closed

The lockdown will last for at least three weeks, and until ICU capacity goes above 15% again. Mr Newsom said the measures would help to “flatten the curve” and reduce the pressure on health services.

“We are at a tipping point in our fight against the virus and we need to take decisive action now to prevent California’s hospital system from being overwhelmed in the coming weeks,” he said last week.

How are people reacting?

Reactions to the new lockdown measures have been mixed. Some small businesses owners and service-industry employees fear the economic burden will become overwhelming.

Others see the governor’s orders as a relief.

  • Mimi Marylon Moore Routh, 78, from Lake Tahoe: “I’m glad for the lockdown. It is so important to have it, I want to live 10 or 20 more years. I will spend my Christmas with some good music, knitting and listening to audio books.”
  • Joshua Roizman, 22, from Orange County: “It’s necessary, but I think the way Gavin Newsom is handling this is not the best. Restaurants are hurting. I worked in the restaurant industry, so I sympathise with them. They’re just trying to stay alive.”
  • Heidi Whelchel, 43, from Rancho Cucamonga: “The lockdown is an annoyance because nobody is really observing it and nobody really cares. It’s not like you have the police outside watching that people comply.”

How did it come to this?

The situation in California reflects a surge in infections nationwide. The state, which has the largest number of confirmed cases in the US, reported an additional 30,000 infections on Sunday, a new record.

It has recorded more than 1.3 million cases and around 21,000 deaths since the beginning of the pandemic.

Intensive care capacity in two of the five regions set up by state officials for the purposes of the stay-at-home order – Southern California and the central San Joaquin Valley – fell below 15% on Friday.

Southern California, which includes Los Angeles and San Diego, the state’s two largest cities, fell to 12.5% on Saturday, and San Joaquin to just 8.6%.

What difficulties are the authorities facing?

Republican opponents of the Democratic authorities in the state and many of its municipalities have questioned the efficacy of the new measures, and say they could harm the local economy.

“Every state is experiencing a surge, which begs the question, how do these shutdowns actually reduce cases?” state legislator James Gallagher told Fox News.

Research has found that lockdown measures have been associated with reduced infection numbers, while the World Health Organization also urges people to “avoid spaces that are closed, crowded or involve close contact” during the pandemic.

But some law enforcement officials said they did not plan to help enforce the new rules, with Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes saying: “Compliance with health orders is a matter of personal responsibility and not a matter of law enforcement.”

Meanwhile, Governor Newsom has been facing accusations of hypocrisy. In November he visited a high-class restaurant in the Napa Valley, contrary to his own guidance.

San Francisco Mayor London Breed dined at the same restaurant on a different night. Both have apologised.

But White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany seized on the errors: “These images… make clear Democrats’ mind-set: rules for thee but not for me.”

What is the situation across the country?

According to the Covid Tracking Project, 101,487 people were being treated in hospital with the disease on Sunday, while an additional 1,138 deaths were recorded.

Nearly 14.6 million people have been infected with Covid-19 in the US, and 273,374 people have died – the highest figures of any country in the world.

On Sunday, Dr Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus task force co-ordinator, criticised the Trump administration for flouting guidelines and peddling “myths” about the pandemic.

“I hear community members parroting back those situations, parroting back that masks don’t work, parroting back that we should work towards herd immunity,” Dr Birx told NBC. “This is the worst event that this country will face.”

The scientist in charge of the US push for a vaccine, Moncef Slaoui, said there was “light at the end of the tunnel” and that he hoped the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) could give the go-ahead for a vaccine when it meets on Thursday.

But for life to get back to normal by the spring, Americans still needed to follow safety measures, he said in an interview with CBS News.

States are preparing to distribute a vaccine, with possible approval approaching. Doses are expected to be made available first to the country’s million healthcare workers and three million elderly people living in long-term care homes.

 

Source: bbc.com

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