This is a last-minute news blog for check updates on the coronavirus pandemic. Get our full coronavirus policy here
County reports 453 new COVID-1nine times and passes component tests
– 4:10 p.m., Monday, July 20, 2020
San Diepass County public fitness officials announced 453 new COVID-1nine infections on Monday, with a total time of 24,135, however, no new deaths have been reported.
Monday’s variety of new times marked the least since July 15, when there were 40 nines, in the worst week due to the birth of the pandemic. Between July 13 and 1, the county also reported the maximum logical variety of hospitalizations (163) and the maximum number of deaths (56) in a week since COVID-1 began spreading in March.
Coronavirus deaths remained unsused to 478 on Monday.
Oversight board chairman Greg Cox said he understood the sadness of dressing in masks, social estrangement, and other precautions to prevent the virus from spreading, “however, taking those breeding stations will only prolong” the situation.
Dr. Wilma Wooten, the county public conditioning officer, had a message.
“We implore you not to expect you to lose the opposite match to COVID-1 before taking action,” he said.
Wooten said the uptick had begun to take up positions after the reopening of bars, hotels and gymnasiums on June 12.
Nearly 1, two hundred new times were recorded over the weekend, and of the 7.88 four tests reported on Monday, 6% were positive, roughly the 1-day moving average. The state target is 8%.
The county has now recorded more than 500,000 COVID-1 tests in total.
Aleven, although no new netpainting outbreaks were known on Monday, seven days there were 16. The variety of netpainting epidemics, explained as 3 or more times COVID-1nine in one context and in other Americans from other families, remains more than double the cause. 7 or more in seven days.
A total of 107 netpainting outbreaks have been reported due to the birth of the pandemic, adding 33 in June and 47 this month.
Of the complete positive cases, 2.21 five – or nine.2% – were hospitalized and five7 five – or 2.4% – were admitted to an intensive care unit. On Monday, 482 other humans with COVID-1nine were hospitalized, adding 1five8 in intensive care units.
A total of 4,440 patients are in county hospitals, with an occupancy rate of 80% of 4 nine beds, which would alert the county’s ability to search after coVID-1 nine outbreaks.
The steady percentage of positive results in San Diegans fell from 157.2 consistent with another hundred thousand Americans on Sunday to 145.3, but still remains well above one hundred in the state consistent with one hundred thousand. – City news service
San Diepass County records four new COVID-19 cases
– 3:30 p.m., Monday, July 20, 2020
San Diepass County reports 453 new COVID-19 times, bringing the cumulative total to 24,135, however, the deaths remain unwrrising in 478.
– City news service
California postpones starting prep sports
– 12:30 p.m., Monday, July 20, 2020
California’s h8 school sports governance framework said Monday that the 2020-2021 seasons probably wouldn’t start until December.
The California Interscholastor Federation has stated that the general autumn, winter and spring seasons will be condensed into two seasons.
The federation has set deadlines for the top playoffs and championship season. Football will run in the playoffs and in the championship in mid-April. The actual normal season and playoff times will be set separately.
Decisions through the national and local fitness government will determine whether the games are played.
California is recently experiencing an upstream station and its rates of coronavirus cases, hospitalizations and deaths.
Gov. Gavin Newsom has issued strict rules that would require 6.7 million students from kindergarten through California 12 to begin the next school year with online classes. – Associated Press
Watch live: Governor Newsom reports on state reaction to COVID-19
– 12:00 p.m., Monday, July 20, 2020
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San Diegans could start applying for COVID-1 rental assistance
– 11:1 a.m., Monday, June 20, 2020
The low source of coins in San Diegans that have been in financial difficulty, COVID-1’s pandemic nine may begin applying for one-time emergency financial assistance on Monday to pay their rent.
The program, which the San Diepass Ho Command administers for the city, will provide up to $4,000 consistently with family members to support eligible families and Americans to pay rent and rent long-term.
Online programs can be accepted until August 7. Payments are expected to be made from mid-August and continue through September and in all likelihood until October.
“San Diego’s rental assistance program will directly assist individuals and families struggling to make rent and help recover the financial loss of landlords,” said City Councilman Chris Ward, who proposed San Diego’s COVID-19 Emergency Rental Assistance Program. “We have protected our unsheltered. We have supported our small businesses. Now we must meet our obligations to the renters of this city.”
On June 30, the council voted 9-0 to authorize $15.1 million in federal coronavirus assistance, relief, and financial security for the emergency assistance program.
The public can apply online. – City news service
San Diepass County tackles 24,000 times COVID-1nine after more than 1,000 reported over the weekend
– 9:1 a.m., Monday, June 20, 2020
The CoVID-1nine of San Diepass County is less than 24,000 after public physical fitness officials in the county reported 1.1nine3 times over the weekend.
Health officials reported five68 new times on Sunday, but there were no new deaths, raising the county’s total to 23,682 times, while the deaths remained at 478. The county reported 62 five new times on Saturday.
Of the 8,943 checks reported on Sunday, 6% were new positive cases. The 14-day moving average is now 6%. The state target is a positive verification rate of 8%.
Three new netpainting outbreaks were known on Saturday. In the last seven days, 16 netpainting outbreaks have been known. The netpainting epidemic remains more than double the cause of 7 or more in seven days.
An epidemic of netpaintings is explained as 3 or more times COVID-1nine in one context and in other Americans in other households.
Of the complete positive cases, 2,180 – or 9.4% – were hospitalized and 567 – or 2.5% – were admitted to an intensive care unit.
A new 157.2 record consisting of one hundred, 000 citizens of San Diegans tested positive for the disease based on Sunday data, well above the state criteria of one hundred consistent with one hundred, 000.
The last parameter the county has favored on retention is the percentage of times it delights in being processed through a tactile investigator in the case of 2 hours of reporting them. There are more than 500 investigators hired across the county, and although 98% of all times investigated in this era as recently as June 25, that rate dropped to 7% on Saturday. The county’s metric is to succeed in 71% of new times in a day. – City news service
S.D. County Reports More Than 600 COVID-19 Cases For Second Time
– 6: 5 five p.m., Saturday, July 18, 2020
The variety of daily COVID-1nine times in San Diepass County exceeded six hundred for the time, while the full variety of times increased to 23,114.
County public fitness officials reported 62 times more deaths on Saturday, raising the death toll to 478.
Of the six deaths, four were and two were men. They died between 8 and 16 July and were between 60 and 90 years old. They all had underlying physical problems.
The county recorded 10,290 checks on Saturday, 6% of which yielded positive results. Saturday’s check numbers were the time when higher numbers were posted, only Friday’s numbers. The 14-day moving average is now 6%. The state target is less than 8% positive verification rate.
A new outbreak of netpaintings known at a gym on July 10. In the last seven days, 17 netpainting outbreaks have been known. The variety of netpainting epidemics remains more than double the cause of 7 or more in seven days.
An epidemic of netpaintings is explained as 3 or more times COVID-1nine in one context and in other Americans in other households.
Of the complete positive cases, 2,180 – or 9.4% – were hospitalized and 567 – or 2.5% – were admitted to an intensive care unit. – City news service
San Diepass County sets a new record with 63 four new COVID-1 nine times in one day
– 3:00 p.m., Friday, July 17, 2020
San Diepass County set another record for the new COVID-1nine times with 63four new times reported, bringing the full variety of times in the county to 22four8nine.
There were seven other deaths applicable with COVID-19, bringing the complete deaths to 472. Of the seven deaths, they all had underlying fitness problems.
There were 2,154, or 9.6%, of times they required hospitalization. Of these, 562 or 2.5% of all time and 26.1% of hospitalized times had to be admitted to an intensive care unit.
Health officials have seen two new outbreaks of netpaintings, either in restaurants. During the week, 13 netpainting outbreaks were known. The variety of outbreaks remains consistent with the cause of 7 or more in a week, meaning the county will not take action from now on.
In the last 2 hours, nine 22 four COVID-1 tests were administered, of which 7% tested positive. Over the past four days, the mobile percentage of positive tests has been 6.1%. The goal is to highlight this number below 8%.
The county has conducted an average of approximately 8,000 tests consistent with the day over the past week. – KPBS staff
SOUTH DAKOTA. County reports new death record through COVID-19
– 4:00 p.m., Thursday, July 16, 2020
San Diepass County public fitness officials reported a record 17 COVID-1 and nine-like deaths on Thursday when a new check was opened at Imperial Beach.
Knowledge brings deaths to 46 five and times to 21.8 five.
Of the deaths, 11 were men and women. They died between 2 and 1 July and were between 5 and 1 years old. They all had underlying fitness problems.
The county recorded 10, four3 four checks on Thursday, four percent positive. The 1-day moving average of positive checks is now 6%. The state target is less than 8% positive verification rate. – City news service
San Diego County Reports 12 More COVID-19 Deaths; Officials Warn Of Health Effects
– 3: 1 five p.m., Wednesday, July 1, 2020
San Diego County public health officials reported 559 cases of COVID-19 and 12 deaths from the illness Wednesday and a wave of indoor businesses were forced to close as cases of the illness continue to spike.
The new figures bring full time to 21,446 and deaths to 448. Of the 8,436 tests reported on Wednesday, 7% tested positive, bringing the 14-day moving average to 7.2%.
Four new netpainting outbreaks were reported Wednesday, bringing the weekly total to four young people, well above the county’s seven-to-week metric. The new outbreaks were reported in a laboratory, a hairdresser, a hairdresser and a restaurant/bar.
An epidemic of netpaintings is explained as 3 or more times COVID-1nine in one context and in other Americans in other households.
Of the complete positive cases, 2,093, or 9.8%, were hospitalized and 546, or 2.5%, were admitted to an intensive care unit.
Approximately 147.2 out of every 100,000 citizens of San Diegans tested positive for the disease, well above the state’s hundred consistent with one hundred, 000 popular and the maximum logical rate due to the birth of the pandemic.
The last parameter the county has favored on retention is the percentage of times it is treated through a touch researcher. Aleven, although there are recently more than 500 researchers hired across the county and 98% of all times they were investigated as recently as June 25, this rate has fallen to 46%.
Dr. Wilma Wooten, a fitness officer in San Diepass County, said that during the reaction to those declining rates, the county will rent more tactile investigators. In just 3 hours after the task being provided came online, more than three hundred programs arrived.
Times continue to exist, best friends tend between the over-20s and 4 years old and best friends in their twenties, leading the county to make efforts to train young people. – City news service
Del Mar cancels weekend races due to COVID-1nine among riders
-: 2 p.m., July 15, 2020
Del Mar canceled the race for the weekend after five riders tested positive for COVID-19.
All runners and athletics staff running in the riders’ room have been evaluated through San Diepass County public fitness officials at the request of the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club. Of the five positive tests, they were all asymptomatic.
“The cancellation of this weekend’s races will give us more time to monitor the stage and give other Americans with positive results to recover,” track CEO Joe Harconsistent said Wednesday.
Contact search procedures are in progress. All the runners who tested positive participated in the recently concluded Alamitos festival in Odiversity County. Mass testing was ordered through the track after riders Flavien Prat and Victor Espinoza tested positive. Or they’re quarantined at home. – Associated Press
RELATED: County public fitness takes stock of coronavirus pandemic
– 2:30 p.m., July 15, 2020
Poway abandons fitness groups, churches to exploit park closures
– 1: five and five p.m., July 1 and five, 2020
The Poway City Council approved on Wednesday the transient use of public parks for the local fitness game station and to worsen the activities of the COVID-1 pandemic.
After a transitory meeting, the council unanimously ordered the city to arrange requests for the group station to exploit the loose spaces of the city’s parks free of charge and with minimal paperwork.
Poway Mayor Steve Vaus proposed the Outdoor Sspeed Sharing initiative after the state of California issued an order Monday that requires all places of worship, gymnasiums, and other fitness organizations to be as logical as possible in all indoor activities until they realize the spread of the coronavirus.
The city will require it to be designated as an “additional insured” according to the organization’s policy and “nine COVID-1 defense rules are met, adding the rules related to facial blankets and social distance.”
The SOS initiative is one of the measures the city is taking to support local businesses, adding a moratorium on advertising evictions to support other Americans suffering from the effect of the virus on the economy. – City news service
Rite Aid opens five COVID-1nine driving sites in San Diepass County
– 1 p.m., July 15, 2020
Rite Aid is expanding its COVID-1nine capability with 161 new driving sites that will open Thursday, adding five in San Diepass County.
According to Rite Aid, tests can be done by appointment for other Americans over the age of 18, whether the individual has symptoms. Results are expected in 3 to five days, an Apple spokesman said.
Thursday’s counties test sites are:
– 166 five alpine boulevard in Alpine;
– 1331 South Mission Ro in Fallbrook;
– 722 four Broad Lemon Grove;
– 1201 South Coast Ro to Oceanside;
– and 28five3five Cole Grade Road at Valley Center. – City news service
SD Council approves mayor’s plan to expand street and commerce
– 4: five and five p.m., July 14, 2020
The San Diepass City Council voted unanimously on Tuesday to help Mayor Kevin Faulconer’s plan to expand outdoor dinners and retail features of the COVID-1nine pandemic.
The vote follows Faulconer’s July 7 decree that he got rid of the essential elements for the transient use of sidewalks and non-public vehicle parks such as restaurants and retail corridors that we will extend to our most likely friends to physical distance. Tuesday’s vote allows companies to blow up parking on the adjacent street to act while reducing most permit fees.
“Our local restaurateurs and traders have demonstrated incredible resilience throughout this pandemic. The Mabig apple from those small businesses has been one of the hardest hit and the San Diegans are able to help them safely and responsibly,” Faulconer said. “The reaction we’ve seen to outdoor meals has been incredibly positive, and this ordinance opens up many more features for our small businesses that are striving to dance and recover.”
The plan is expected to encompass up to 4,000 restaurants in San Diepass that employ more than 55,000 people.
Previously, getting the Copayment Terrace permit will charge companies more than $1,000 and it will take several months to process it. This order will help reduce the applicant’s fees and the review process. – City news service
Domestic operations will have to be logical in a varied S.D. County businesses
– 4:30 p.m., July 14, 2020
San Diepass County reported 53 new COVID-1 times and four more deaths Tuesday, as operations in relation to county businesses were preparing for about midnight.
The new knowledge raises the region’s totals to 20,887 times and 436 deaths. Of the 7,246 tests reported on Tuesday, 7% showed positive results, above the 14-day average of 6.2% of positive tests.
Of the four deaths, six were women and eight men. They died between July 2 and 13 and were four0 beyond the 1980s. One still had underlying fitness issues.
Three new netpainting outbreaks were reported Tuesday, raising the weekly total to five, well above the county’s seven-to-week metric. The new outbreaks were reported in a restaurant/bar, a worse situation and a non-public residence.
A community epidemic is explained as 3 or more times COVID-1 in one context and in other Americans in other households.
After the update of Governor Gavin Newsom’s fitness order on Monday, all domestic operations will make more sense tuesday in gyms, places of worship, non-critical offices, beauty salons and hairdressers, indoor shopping malls and non-public care services such as massage and tattoo companies. Salons
Of the full positive times, 2,073 or 9.9% were hospitalized and 541 or 2.6% of the time they entered an intensive care unit.
About 137 St. Diegans in 100, 000 tested positive for the disease, well above the state’s 100 percent criteria. The overall variety of COVID-1nine-like hospitalizations has increased in recent weeks to 467.15nine, of which 15nine are in intensive care units. – City news service
San Diepass County COVID-1 nine times 20348
The variety of COVID-1 nine times in San Diepass County exceeded 20,000 Mondays as physical preparation officials prepared for major changes in the way the region would handle the pandemic.
The variety of times is now 20,348 and the death toll remains at 422 circulars in the county. Of the 6,542 tests reported on Monday, 6% tested positive, the 14-day moving average.
Following the fitness order of Governor Gavin Newsom’s contractor on Monday, all indoor operations in gyms, places of worship, non-critical workplace businesses, beauty salons and hairdressers, food shopping malls, and non-public care centers, such as massage corporations and tattoo parlors. leave it until Tuesday.
In addition, smoke from the USS Bonhomme Richard fire at San Diepass Naval Base can also cause possible disruptions to the physical condition of people most vulnerable to COVID-19, adding the elderly and people with lung and media diseases, fitness authorities said. Supervisor Nathan Fletcher asked citizens who smell smoke or revel in their eyes with direct irritation to stick inside with doors and windows closed and exercising.
Nick Macchione, director of the San Diepass County Health and Social Services Agency, announced more bad news Monday when he reported that the county’s COVID-1nine control layer had pushed it to its limit. Local biogeneration company Apple Helix has announced a meeting with the county to produce 2,000 checks consistent with the day with a 24-hour delay in the future, but local and national materials remain incredibly low.
– 2:30 p.m., Monday, July 13, 2020
Newsom orders clo of indoor activities in gyms, classrooms and churches
– 12:00 p.m., Monday, July 13, 2020
Citing the rising rates of other Americans who tested positive for coronavirus jumps and hospitalization, Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered the closure of indoor operations in gyms, beauty salons, places of worship, non-public care services, grocery shopping, and non-critical offices.
The order affects all 30 counties on the state’s pandemic watch list, adding San Diego, Los Angeles, Odiversity, and Riveraspect counties.
Newsom also ordered the cover-up of activities from restaurants, wineries, cinemas, zoos, aquariums, entertainment centers and games theaters of the circle of relatives, from one state to another, and the complete formwork of all bars. These restrictions were always in a position in the counties on the state watch list, however, the hot order extended them to the entire state.
Newsom reiterated that the state’s enactment of physical fitness restrictions was controlled by a “fader,” meaning that the severity of up or down-adjusted orders was based on lacheck viral statistics and “trend lines.”
The state has seen a record variety of infections in recent days, as well as a design in hospitalizations. On Monday, Newsom reported that 648 five were hospitalized circulating through the state coronavirus. The seven-day moving average of other Americans who tested positive for the virus was 7.7%, Newsom said.
“This virus won’t go away much soon,” Newsom said. “I hope we all recognize that if we were hooked on the assumption that somehow, when it’s hot, it goes off or somehow it happens to take summer months or weekends, this virus didn’t either. You have seen amounts of rustic style with very hot weather … where you see a design in positivity rates, a design in hospitalizations and extensive care units Here in the state of California, while we see three-digit weather conditions in huge amounts of apples in our state, we are still seeing a design in positivity, in the transmission of netpaintings. We’re looking at a design on the spread of the virus.”
– City news service
– 11:22 a.m., Monday, July 13, 2020
The San Diepass Unified School District campuses will remain closed when the district resumes catheterpassing on August 31, and all catechies will be re-sold online only, the district announced on Monday.
The resolution was a loss of comprehensive rules for the safe reopening of campuses amid the pandemic, the district said in a press release.
“Unfortunately, much of the studies are inherent and many rules are indistinct and contradictory,” he said. “One fact is clear: countries that revel in controlling the safe reopening of schools have done so with a decrease in infection and demand rates. Available tests. California doesn’t have any. The increase in infection rates in recent weeks notes that the pandemic is never very under control.”
Here’s the plan to reopen netpaintings for the fall:
– The school year will resume as planned.
– Teachers will achieve greater schooling in online education in a direct way to better fulfill the purposes of students.
– Students will achieve an additional education at birth for the year for older online apprentices.
– Online for parents can be higher to make it less difficult for them to connect in the education of their students.
– Princichums will continue to plan the safest reopening imaginable this fall.
– Free meals will continue to be provided at the current distribution stations.
– KPBS staff
San Diepass County Reports 5 New COVID-19 Cases
– 5:13 p.m., July 12, 2020
San Diego County health officials have reported 558 new COVID-19 cases and no new deaths, raising the region’s totals to 19,929 cases and the death count remaining at 422.
Of the 8, five0 five tests reported on Saturday, 7% were new positive cases. The 14-day moving average of positive tests is 6.1%. The target is less than 8%. The average 7-day test is 7.8f33.
Of the full positive times, 2,036 or 10.2% were hospitalized and five3 or 2.7% of the time they entered an intensive care unit.
On Saturday, two new netpainting outbreaks were reported, one in a gym and restaurant bar, which raised last week’s total to 18, more than double the cause for seven days or more in seven days. An epidemic founded by netpaintings is explained as 3 or more times COVID-1nine in other environments and homes. – City news service
More than 500 new COVID-1 nine times reported, two deaths
– 4:45 p.m., July 11, 2020
San Diepass County fitness reported 508 new COVID-1nine times and two more deaths on Saturday, bringing the region’s total to 1nine, 371 times and 422 deaths.
Two women were killed, one on July 8 and July 9, authorities said. Their ages ranged from the early 1970s to the mid-1980s. Both had existing chronic diseases.
Of the 8,292 tests reported on Friday, 6% were new positive cases. The 14-day moving average for positive testing is 6%. The target is less than 8%. The average 7-day test is 7,795. – City news service
COVID-1 nine times continue in San Diepass County
– 4:00 p.m., Friday, July 10, 2020
San Diepass County fitness reported 461 new COVID-1 times and five more deaths on Friday, raising the region’s total to 18,863 times and 420 deaths.
Four men and one woguy died on July 8. Their ages ranged from beyond the 1960s to 100s and all had underlying fitness problems.
Of the 8,423 reports on Friday, 5% were positive. The 14-day moving average of positive tests is now 5.9% and the average daily variety of tests reported per week is 7,656. A total of 419,867 tests were conducted in the county.
Of the full positive times, 2,002 or 10.6% were hospitalized and 52 nine or 2.8% of the time they entered an intensive care unit.
Three other netpainting outbreaks were reported Friday, raising the total of last week to 18, more than double the county’s metric of 7 netpaintings outbreaks in a week. An epidemic of netpaintings is explained as 3 or more times coVID-1nine in another family environment.
The outbreaks were attributed to a business and a physical care center.
More than 75% of netpainting epidemics have been attributed to restaurants and bars, and 45 netpainting epidemics remain active, connected to 137 times COVID-1nine data on Wednesday.
An additional 23 outbreaks were attributed to qualified nursing services and 27 to nursing services.
– City news service
The overall variety of COVID-1 nine times in the county reaches 18,000, while the number returns to 500
San Diepass County fitness reported five60 new COVID-1 nine-and-nine kill times on Thursday, bringing the county total to 18,402 times and 41 five deaths.
Of the 8,950 tests reported on Wednesday, 6% are subsidized positive. A total of four11, four four tests were conducted in the county. An average of 7four97 tests reported last week, and the 1-day moving average for positive approval tests is 6%.
Of the other nine Americans who died Thursday, five were men and four women. They died between 27 June and 7 July and were between 50 and 89 years old. One still had underlying fitness issues.
On Tuesday, 578 cases were reported, a positive rate of 10% and 12 deaths. – City news service
State announces new procedures and equipment to fight COVID-19 wildfires
– 1: p.m., July 9, 2020
The state has new equipment, technologies and procedures to eliminate wildfires from the coronavirus pandemic, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Thursday.
Despite California’s $5.4 billion budget deficit, the state able to invest in new fire appliances and personnel, he said. Some investments include: $28 million in Black Hawk helicopters, $five million for 180 wildfire firefighting chambers, $2 five million for an innovation sprint for new technologies and $8 five five million in a new permanent workforce for Cal Fire.
There were fewer California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation firefighters at the box this year, Newsom said, due to exposure to COVID-1nine or positive testing for the virus. Of the 1nine2 CDCR equipment, ninefour are available lately.
California Conservation Corplaystation fire teams would also be lower, but not as affected as CDCR teams, Newsom said.
All long-term public evacuations applicable to wildfires may be different due to the coronavirus pandemic. Potential shelters applicable with wildfire evacuations could be in hotels than classic shelters.
Temperature and masking checks may be required, said Mark Ghilarducci, director of the California Office of Emergency Services. Social estrangement procedures can be in position and army rations on the ground, such as ready-to-eat foods (MRE) from a buffet meal.
Officials said new procedures can also be implemented to mitigate the spread of coronavirus among Cal Fire staff. This includes social distance for meals and a design in PPE.
Cal fire chief Thom Porter also asked the public to make his component and use masked evacuations to mitigate the spread of COVID-19.
Newsom also announced that the state would have increased surveillance of Pacific Gas and Electric, whose forgetting to maintain the transfer towers contributed to the 2018 bonfire, the state’s deadliest wildfire to date.
The Compabig Apple app capable of coming out of bankruptcy on July 1, said, with a “new responsibility.” This includes greater plant control to mitigate fires and undergcircular cables. In addition, 11 of the four members of the PG-E Board of Directors have been replaced, the Governor said.
In June, PG-E pleaded guilty to 8 or four counts of manslaughter and a count of an illegitimate friend who was born in a case stemming from the 2018 fire that set fire to paradise in Northern California.
As of Thursday morning, there were 7031 new COVID-1nine times in California and a 7.3% positivity rate for 7- and 14-day averages, Newsom reported. Hospitalizations increased 0.4% on Wednesday and ICU fell 0.1%. Lara McCaffrey, net producer of KPBS
San Diepass County reports 2 new COVID-19 cases, 7 new deaths
– 4:01 p.m., July 8, 2020
San Diepass County fitness officials reported on Wednesday 26four new COVID-1 times new deaths, for a total of 1,78four2 times and four06 deaths.
Three outbreaks of inactive netpaintings, however, reported five new outbreaks, for a total of two active outbreaks in seven days, said Dr. Wilma Wooten, San Diepass County Public Health Officer. The new outbreaks occurred in a restaurant, gym, gym, nursery and resort/spa.
Hospitalizations are expanding in San Diepass County, Wooten said, however, intensive care patients have remained constant. Hospitalizations in ICU applicable with COVID-1nine lately in general 166.
Consistent counsel Nathan Fletcher said 7,607 tests were conducted tuesday, which said it was more consistent than the seven-day average of seven, four3 tests a day.
Supervisory Board Chairman Greg Cox said the board voted Tuesday for a $48.8 million distribution plan in COVID aid funds. The plan comes with $25 million for child care providers and $5 million for public school testing. The remaining $18.8 million is expected to fund potential border testing and food services, which may come with the expansion of a senior meal program.
Cox said the investment can be distributed among one of the county districts, which will be where the coins can be distributed in the district. – Lara McCaffrey, net producer of KPBS
The state counties of Yolo, Napa and San Benito to the state watch list
– 1: 3 five p.m., July 8, 2020
Three other counties were added to the state’s watch list: Yolo, Napa and San Benito, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced wednesday. There are now a total of 26 counties on the list, adding San Diego, which he added on Monday.
There was a total of 11.6 and nine times COVID-1 nine in the state on Tuesday and a positivity rate of 7.1% over a consistent 1-day period, Newsom reported. The constant variety of earlier eras was due to the reality that it included an accumulation of evidence reported through Los Angeles County labs, he said. Other states had consistent and inconsistent exemptions with positivity rates, however, Newsom noted that California remained a concern.
ADMISSIONs to COVID-1nine in intensive care are expanding in California. Hospitalizations are 44% in the last two weeks, Newsom said. Lately there are 1,753 ICU admissions and 3, 980 beds in UCI for a total of 11,313 beds in UCI and USIN in California.
Hospitalizations only have an 8% capacity, but that can also change, the governor said.
“We’re preparing to surge, we’re going to surge differently this time,” said Carmela Coyle, the head of the California Hospital Association.
Hospitals use new remedies instead of putting more patients on ventilators, he said. One of them includes remdesivir, which has been shown to decrease hospital remains for patients with COVID-19.
The main points in recent COVID-1 hospitalizations are the loss of other Americans dressed in masks and physical distance, a mix of higher relatives, epidemics of criminals and criminals, and critical epidemics in the workplace, Newsom said. – Lara McCaffrey, net producer of KPBS
Mayor Faulconer submits an order to waive outdoor permits
– 4:30 p.m., July 7, 2020
With prohibited food at San Diepass County restaurants in reaction to a design in the diversity of local COVID-1 cases, San Diepass Mayor Kevin Faulconer on Tuesday signed an emergency executive order to rescind permits and other regulatory requirements, allowing restaurants to expand their outdoor spaces like sidewalks. and non-public vehicle parks.
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Indoor dining will be closed for at least the next three weeks after the county remained on the state’s monitoring list for three consecutive days, leading all indoor operations to be halted at a variety of businesses, including restaurants, where county health officials say many of the recent outbreaks occurred.
Faulconer said his decree, which takes effect immediately, gives restaurants the strength to create non-legal terrace cafes and use their parking masses for al fresco dining. The application of municipal codes prohibiting such operations may be suspended. – City news service
Museum of Photographic Arts up close until Labor Day
– 4:20 p.m., July 7, 2020
A few days after its reopening for the Fourth of July weekend, the San Diepass Museum of Photographic Art announced tuesday that it will close until the end of Labor Day.
Museums were some of the companies that were asked to suspend domestic operations through the state and local government on Monday. Aleven, although the public aptitude order for the countersnsitive has theoretically been the best friend in her position for only 3 weeks, a museum cited the “uncertainty” of the coming weeks as the cause of the long closure.
“MOPA supports all efforts to adjust the spread of COVID. Our top logical priority is the suitability of our MOPA team, our consumers and visitors,” said Deborah Klochko, EXECUTIVE Director and Chief Curator of MOPA. “Even though our galleries are closed, there are many tactics for us to hit online. Find us online and find out more about MOPA. Our philosophy is to allow other Americans to criticize the best photos, videos and anything else in the visual world.”
The museum first closed in March with other museums in Balboa Park and San Diepass County. – City news service
Amid closing the eating position, Faulconer will sign an order to waive external permits
– 11:3 a.m., July 7, 2020
Since county restaurants are the last to open their doors for food indoors in reaction to a design in the diversity of local COVID-1 cases, San Diepass Mayor Kevin Faulconer said he would sign an emergency order Tuesday that would waive regulatory requirements, allowing restaurants to expand their service into spaces.
Meals inside can be closed 3 weeks after the county remains on the state’s watch list for 3 consecutive days, leading to the closure of all domestic operations in various businesses, adding restaurants, where county fitness officials say the maximum of recent outbreaks have occurred.
– City news service
San Diepass County Health Officials Update COVID-19
WATCH LIVE HERE:
– KPBS staff
The county orders some companies to approach the spread of stem virus
– 2:45 p.m., Monday, July 6, 2020
San Diepass County announced Monday that it will shut down all indoor activities at one or more facilities for 3 weeks to comply with the state’s order to stop the spread of the coronavirus.
The previous Monday, San Diepass among the five counties was added to the state watch list as the case rate exceeded one hundred percent for 3 consecutive days. On Friday, San Diepass was placed on the state’s watch list.
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“The number continues to pass in the direction,” said supervisor Greg Cox. The county reported more than 1,000 new COVID-1nine times over the holiday weekend.
On Monday night, the next companies will have to approach all domestic activities:
Outdoor activities, such as al fresco dining, are allowed at these establishments.
On Monday, the county also reported 27 new times for a total of 17,000 times due to the birth of the pandemic. No new deaths were reported. – Alexander Nguyen, net producer of KPBS
San Diepass on state watch list
– 12: 3 five p.m., Monday, July 6, 2020
San Diepass County was placed on the state’s watch list Monday, looking like five other counties that added Calusa, Madera, Marin, Merced and Monterey.
Until Monday, San Diepass had a case rate of 129.3, knowledge published throughout the state.
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Counties on the state watch list will need to approach upcoming businesses for 3 weeks, unless they relocate or just to pick them up:
The bars have to be close to all operations.
San Diepass placed itself on the state’s watch list Friday as the case rate for 100,000 other Americans during an era of two weeks above 100. Counties are placed on the state watch list if they are on the watch list for 3 days or more.
Dr. Wilma Wooten, the county fitness officer, said she hoped the county would be put on the watch list Monday, the readiness in positive times in the county in recent times.
On Sunday, the county reported 1,030 new positive COVID-1 times over the holiday weekend.
– Alexander Nguyen, net producer of KPBS
The city of San Diepass says the state has not been warned enough to approach the parking lot on July 4 b
– 3:20 p.m., Saturday, July 4, 2020
San Diepass CEO Kris Michell said on a Saturday that California officials had not given the city enough time to set up a parking lot in either for the room.
“The city of San Diepass is largely following county rules and is at an open tip with fitness officials to motivate compliance with public fitness regulations,” Michell said. “The request to regional coastal cities to approach the car parks either on the Fourth of July came last night. More than an hour before the birth of the holiday, leaving little time to promulgate, apply or shape the public.”
The cities of Carlsbad and Oceanaspect said Saturday that they were complying with the request for emergency services. In addition to lasting their parking masses on the b, Carlsbad lifeguards and police will provide a mask to help reduce the spread of COVID-1nine in the town of B north of Oak Avenue to the Oceanaspect border.
Officials from Imperial B, Coronado, Del Mar, Solana B and Encinitas said Saturday that their parking masses b remain open. City News Service
The state asks city officials to approach vehicle parks b by July 4
11:31 a.m., Saturday, July 4, 2020
On Friday, the California Department of Emergency Services sent a letter to san Diego city administrators, Imperial B, Coronado, Del Mar, Solana B, Encinitas, Carlsbad, and Oceanaspect asking them to also close their parking lots b.
“By keeping the parking masses closed, we may be able to help limit access to San Diepass. Be one of San Diegans only, to provide direct protection to the fitness of citizens and minimize the h8 threat of disease transfer in the surrounding restaurants, bars and businesses in San Diepass: cleaning the parking lot on one of the big blocks can also discourage the travel station of other communities’.
The city of Carlsbad said he was complying with the request. In addition to lasting their masses of beach parking, lifeguards and police will provide a mask to help slow the spread of COVID-1nine on the city beach, north of Oak Avenue to the Oceanaspect border.
Officials from Imperial Beither one, Coronado, Del Mar, Solana Beither one and Encinitas said Saturday that their Beither One parking lot remains open. Officials in the city of San Diepass did not respond to requests for data on imaginable parking closures, however, lifeguards and police said Saturday morning that they had not heard large requests for apples to nearby parking masses on July 4.
San Diepass County COVID-1 Wear State Watch list
– 5: 1 p.m., Friday, July 3, 2020
San Diepass County is on the state’s COVID-1nine watch list on Friday afternoon, which can lead to business closures or additional restrictions after the Fourth of July weekend.
County fitness officials said COVID-1’s velotown nine times in the region exceeded the state threshold through a hundred times positive consistent with one hundred, 000 inhabitants. The county reported a rate of 112.8 times positive consistent with one hundred, 000 citizens on Thursday, a number that increased from 103.8 to one hundred, 000 just 3 days earlier.
Now on the state watch list, several corporations could be forced to move the way they do business indoors since Tuesday, and restrictions would remain in the post for 3 weeks. Businesses have restaurants, wineries and tasting rooms, cinemas, card game rooms, relative circles, entertainment centers, museums and zoos.
The variety of local schedules has reached 15.6nine6, and the 48nine reported on Friday are the sixth time in a week that the diversity of times has exceeded 400. Of the 7,307 tests reported on Friday, 7% tested positive. The 14-day moving average of positive tests is 5.3%.
Ten other Americans, six women and four men, died from COVID-19, bringing the county total to 387. They all had underlying conditions and were between 50 and 90 years old.
No new netpainting outbreaks were reported on Friday, which reduced the number by one week to 21. The county is well above the limit of seven, which San Diepass County has been established. City News Service
San Diepass reports it records new COVID-19 times, added to state watch list
– 3:45 p.m., Thursday, July 2, 2020
San Diepass County recorded a record variety of new COVID-1 nine times on Thursday and will be added to the state watch list, which is expected to create new restrictions on the birth of businesses next week.
County fitness officials reported 10 new outbreaks, 8 from bars or restaurants, one in a grocery store and one in a business.
A record 58 four new times were reported, raising the entire COVID-1 to 15,207. Five other Americans died from the virus, for a regional total of 377 coronavirus-like deaths.
About 12% of all times he required hospitalization and 3.3% of the time he had to be admitted to an intensive care unit.
Over the past 3 days, the coVID-1nine case rate in San Diepass County has increased from 103.8 consistent with other one hundred thousand Americans to 112.8, exceeding the state threshold by one hundred times consistent with one hundred,000.
The county expects to continue on the state’s watch list for the next 3 days, and the region may also implement more restrictive measures and additional closures to curb the spread of the virus.
Companies on the state list must be prepared to approach or reposition their operations, as the new restrictions may also take effect from July 7 and the last 3 weeks.
Domestic activities may be limited for the following companies:
– Gastronomic restaurants
– Caves and tasting rooms.
– Cinemas, circle of relatives, entertainment centers and game rooms.
– Museums and zoos.
– The KPBS team
San Diepass County opens new COVID-1 nine check loose in National City
—2: 17 p.m. July 2, 2020
San Diepass County has opened a new COVID-1 nine trial loose in the Tubman-Chavez Community Cinput community in National City.
The control center is open seven days a week (July 4) and no appointments are required. In a statement, the county asked check applicants to arrive between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Tests last between five and ten minutes and waiting times vary. Tests are limited to 1 or 5 other Americans consistent with the day.
The Tubman-Chavez Community Center once hosted a public verification site. This was transferred to the Kimball Senior Center. Open Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., by appointment. – Lara McCaffrey, net producer of KPBS
California Governor Urges Other Americans to demonstrate on holidays
– 2:00 p.m., Thursday, July 2, 2020
Governor Gavin Newsom on Thursday recommended Californians turn to their “maximum productive angels” and wear common sense over the festive weekend dressed in a mask and avoiding classic meetings with a circle of family and friends.
“We don’t go into everyone’s garden, ” he said. “We simply motivate other Americans to be safe, to respond to themselves and others.”
He also announced a new public awareness campaign, which included billboards, television ads, and multi-language radio, urging Californians to fulfill the state’s mandate to wear a face mask.
An ad monitors an individual breathing under a fan with a mask that says, “Even without symptoms, you may be able to spread COVID-19. And other Americans can die. People love their mom.”
Classified ads start in English and Spanish and could be shown to a best friend in seven languages. The effort also includes social media ads and could be specific in black and Latino communities, which disproportionately suffer from the virus.
Previous state awareness campaigns featured prominent celebrities like Larry David and Julia Louis-Dreyfus, urging other Americans to stick the house and practice social estrangement.
The new crusade is funded through the Silicon Valley group station and philanthropists, adding Tom Steyer, a former Democratic presidential candidate and head of Newsom’s task force on business and task recovery. – Associated Press
KPBS Team
San Diepass County is on the state’s precautionary list
– five: 1 p.m. p.m., Wednesday, July 1, 2020
San Diepass County officials said Wednesday that they expect the state to force some local businesses to cancel its reopening as the region’s COVID-1 business continues to grow.
“If your vehicle rolls down the street to a cliff, you get to halftime,” said manager Greg Cox. “We are urgent brakes.”
The county announced local restrictions on bars and restaurants beyond this week, but recently surpassed one of six monitored parameters across the state, Supervisor Nathan Fletcher said. If the county exceeds a large portion of the state’s measures, the county will be marked across the state for mitigation measures, said Dr. Wilma Wooten, the county’s fitness officer.
Of the six catepassries, San Diepass has recorded more than a hundred times consistently with one hundred, 000 inhabitants over two days. Wooten said that if this trend continues, San Diepass would be placed on the state watch list until July 3.
If the county remains on the watch list for 3 consecutive days, Wooten said the region would face the recoil measures announced through Gov. Gavin Newsom beyond Wednesday. Newsom has ordered nine counties to approach the domestic operations of some companies that come with restaurants, wineries and entertainment venues with a circle of relatives, such as bowling alleys.
There were four or four new COVID-1 times nine reported in Wednestime of 782 five tests for a positive rate of 6%. Total county distribution up to 1 quarter, 623. Authorities reported seven additional deaths, reaching 372.
Also on Wednesday, the county reached two of its own local COVID measures of activity.
Wooten reported 13 outbreaks of network pain in the first seven days, 6 more than the threshold. It also noted a low percentage of COVID times that the county has begun investigating in relation to 2 hours over the past seven days. The target is 70%, however, these paintings have fallen to 69%. – Alexander Nguyen, KPBS web producer, Tarryn Mento, KPBS health reporter
San Diego’s neighbors will have to be close to bars, restaurants and other operations inside, says the governor
– 12:45 p.m., Wednesday, July 1, 2020
Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered 19 California counties Wednesday, adding four neighbors to San Diego, near national explicit business operations to mitigate the threat of COVID-1 spread.
He also announced that the state’s beaches would close the vehicle park this next weekend of July 4.
The total of the affected counties are Contra Costa, Fresno, Glenn, Imperial, Kern, Kings, Los Angeles, Merced, Orange, Riverside, Sacramento, San Bernardino, San Joaquin, Santa Barbara, Santa Clara, Solano, Stanislaus, Tulare and Ventura.
The bureaucracy of the affected companies are: restaurants, wineries, tasting rooms, cinemas, circle of relatives, entertainment centers, zoos, museums and games rooms.
The government has known these corporations as those that exist consistently with the threat of the spread of COVID-19. However, these corporations can be allowed to participate in outdoor services because indoor air increases the threat of transmission, Newsom said.
Casinos on sovereign tribal lands and the state are in “deep talks” to continue their operations, he said.
Newsom also announced that parking on the beaches of southern California and the Bay Area would close this weekend. The resolution comes after Los Angeles and Ventura counties approach their local beaches for the Fourth of July vacation. In counties where local beaches are closed, state beaches can also be closed, he said.
Other state parks will be opened with measures to reduce visits and limit overcrowding.
Newsom also announced that the state will shape the multi-company strike game station to take strong action against corporations that violate fitness orders. Agencies come with the California Highway Patrol, the Consumer Affairs Decomposer, and the Commercial Oversight Decompotor. The goal is for you to get voluntary compliance from business owners. – Lara McCaffrey, net producer of KPBS
San Diepass County orders the closure of restaurants serving alcohol before 10 p.m. Life
– 2:50 p.m., Tuesday, June 30, 2020
San Diepass County officials ordered Tuesday that all bars that do not serve food approach indefinitely and all restaurants serving alcohol will have to close at 10 p.m. on a daily basis amid a design in the new coVID-19 times.
The order of the eating position will take effect on Wednesday.
The resolution comes after half a day after the county issued an order for all bars, breweries and wineries that do not seem legal to serve food near their businesses on Tuesday night.
Health officials reported 317 new COVID-1nine times, raising the county total to 1 quarter, 1 quarter and four additional deaths, with a total of 365 deaths.
County manager Nathan Fletcher said non-public bars, restaurants and apartments were the largest source, 40%, of new netpainting outbreaks. He pointed to netpainting shoots originating in an indoor environment. – KPBS staff
Newsom w ‘tightens things’ as coronavirus times increase
– 12:00 p.m., Tuesday, June 30, 2020
With the outbreak of coronavirus cases, California Gov. Gavin Newsom said Tuesday that he plans to “toughen things up” on the order to past the state house ahead of a hectic Fourth of July weekend.
California has shown 223,000 virtugreatest friend infections, a virtugreatest friend design 50% of two weeks after this, this is a component due to the state’s ability to control more than 100,000 Americans per day. But more concerned about the culprits is the stable expansion in hospitalizations similar to COVID-19, 43% design over the past two weeks.
Los Angeles County officials announced Monday that they would close beaches and ban fireworks in the nation’s most populous county this weekend, reaching a one-day record of 2,903 times shown and more than 100,000 in total. And Central Valley, Fresno officials ordered all bars to be closed.
Check here:
“Our times don’t seem to be under control lately,” said Dr. Rais Vohra, an interim health officer in Fresno County.
Newsom called on Imperial County to impose more restrictions after county hospitals near the U.S. border. And Mexico had so many patients that they had to move some to the Facilities in Nearvia. But Newsom has commonly tried to get local governments to resolve for themselves what restrictions to impose.
That strategy can also be repositioned on Wednesday, when Newsom plans to impose new restrictions. The Democratic governor didn’t say what they would be, so it would “toughen things up.” He said other Americans are more likely to get sick when they’re inside than out of their sight, and said he’ll review public fitness prescriptions for “internal and external activities.” Related press
San Diepass orders all bars, wineries and breweries to serve food to close
– 2:45 p.m., Monday, June 29, 2020
Reacting to the upcoming variety of new COVID-1nine times in San Diego, the county announced Monday that it recomposed some of Dad’s long-term reopening and reopening.
Starting Tuesday afternoon, the county will close all bars, wineries and breweries that don’t seem legal to serve food. Over the weekend, Governor Gavin Newsom ordered the closing of bars in several counties, adding Los Angeles and Imperial counties. San Diepass wasn’t on that list.
“We don’t wait until we’re forced to act when we know it’s practical for us to do it,” Supervisor Nathan Fletcher said.
WATCH LIVE HERE:
He also noted that other Americans may consume alcohol in restaurants as a component in their meals, on their own.
The withdrawal of those reopenings is intended to stop the spread where the county can avoid a general blockade as seen in March, Fletcher said.
The county may also postpone Apple’s long-term reopening during August 1, said Supervisor Greg Cox.
Also on Monday, the county reported 498 new COVID-19 times, a new one-day record and another than the previous record of a day announced On Sunday, and no new deaths.
In the coming days, the county will announce additional changes to the public health orders, Fletcher said. — Alexander Nguyen, KPBS web producer
LOOK: Governor Newsom reports state reaction to coronavirus outbreak
– 12:00 p.m., Monday, June 29, 2020
WATCH LIVE HERE:
San Diepass Blood Bank launches COVID-1 nine antiframe tests to detect plasma donors
– 11: five and five a.m., Monday, June 29, 2020
The San Diepass Blood Bank announced Monday that from now until the end of July, check all blood donations for anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies, the virus that causes COVID-19.
The blood bank will use the result of these tests to help identify potential convalesmell plasma donors.
The control does not determine whether a person’s immune formula has developed antibodies against sarS-CoV-2, if they have had evolved symptoms. However, a diagnostic check and could not stumble upon active infections or recent exposures.
Donors who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 will donate COVID-1 nine convalesmell in their next donation. Plasma is used to consider patients with larger and more critical coronaviruses. – City news service
San Diepass County reports four new COVID-19 times, a new death
– 3:45 p.m., Sunday, June 28, 2020
San Diepass County reported on Sunday 4nine7 new times of COVID-1nine, the maximum logical count of times in the county because the pandemic began.
County officials also reported a death, bringing the entire deaths to 361.
Of the 8,301 tests reported on Saturday, 6.1 were positive, authorities said. The 14-day sliding positivity rate for San Diepass County is 3.9.
Of the 13.33 times reported in the county to date, 13.1% were admitted to the hospital and 3.6% ended up in an intensive care unit.
San Diepass County has also reported 8 new outbreaks of net pain over seven days, above the county’s epidemic threshold. Seven or more outbreaks relative to seven days can also mean a pause or withdrawal from county reopening. – Laura McVicker, social media strata at KPBS
Gov. Gavin Newsom orders bar closure in some California counties
Gov. Gavin Newsom on Sunday ordered bars that have opened in seven California counties to immediately close and urged bars in eight other counties to do the same, saying the coronavirus was rapidly spreading in some parts of the state.
The counties under the mandatory bar closure order are: Los Angeles, Fresno, San Joaquin, Kings, Kern, Imperial and Tulare.
State authorities have asked 8 counties (Contra Costa, Santa Clara, Sacramento, Riverside, San Bernardino, Ventura, Santa Barbara and Stanislaus) to address the last local fitness order bars.
Imperial County, east of San Diepass County, is the state’s slowest county to open, dealing with h8 positivity rates. Newsom recommended Friday that the county re-purchase his order to glue the house to stop the early spread of the virus in this country. – Associated Press. KPBS contributed to this report.
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