Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Coronavirus Live Updates: 90 Bay Area Catholic Schools to Shut Down; Newsom Criticizes Pro Sports L

Latest: The Archdiocese of San Francisco said in a letter to families Tuesday that it would shut down all of its 90 schools in San Francisco, Marin and San Mateo counties for two weeks; Gov. Gavin Newsom criticized pro sports leagues for playing in crowded stadiums and arenas despite public health recommendations that events attracting large groups of people be canceled; the much-anticipated Golden Gate Park 150th anniversary celebration has been postponed until later in the year; Sacramento County has given up on automatic 14-day quarantines; and Contra Costa County issued new public health guidelines recommending people 50 years or older should avoid gatherings of 50 or more people who are within arm’s length of each other. This page is frequently updated.

  Coronavirus in California: Rolling updates  TUESDAY: Golden Gate Park 150th Anniversary Celebration PostponedTUESDAY: Catholic Schools in San Francisco, San Mateo, Marin Counties to Shut Down 2 WeeksTUESDAY: Newsom Criticizes Pro Sports Leagues in Coronavirus BriefingTUESDAY: San Francisco to Provide RVs, Hotel Rooms for Potential Quarantine of Homeless PeopleTUESDAY: Sacramento County Gives Up on Automatic 14-Day QuarantinesTUESDAY: The Latest Outside the Bay AreaTUESDAY: Effort to Significantly Increase Testing Capability

Golden Gate Park 150th Celebration Postponed

The much-anticipated Golden Gate Park 150th anniversary scheduled for April 4, 2020 in San Francisco has been postponed until later in the year, the San Francisco Recreation and Park Department announced Tuesday. The decision was made following the San Francisco Public Health Department’s recommendation that all nonessential large gatherings of people be canceled in order to slow the spread of the coronavirus. (Tuesday, March 10, 8:49 p.m.)

“Given the extensive planning, staging and teams of people required to execute a successful event on April 4, the Recreation and Park Department and San Francisco Parks Alliance, who are jointly organizing the event, determined it would be best to explore another date,” a press release said. “Planning for special exhibits and attractions happening throughout the year to celebrate the park’s sesquicentennial will continue.”

Catholic Schools to Shut Down in San Francisco, San Mateo, Marin Counties (Tuesday, March 10, 5:05 p.m.)

The Archdiocese of San Francisco said in a letter to families Tuesday that it would shut down all of its 90 schools in San Francisco, Marin and San Mateo counties for two weeks because one of its students had tested positive for the new coronavirus. The archdiocese says those results came from the San Francisco Department of Public Health on Sunday evening.

The letter, signed by Superintendent of Schools Pamela Lyons, did not say which school the student attends, but the principal at Riordan High School in San Francisco told the San Francisco Chronicle that one of its students has tested positive for the virus.

The archdiocese says it serves roughly 24,000 students and employs nearly 2,300 teachers, principals and other staff in its schools.

More from the letter:

After careful consideration and in light of the new information, the Archdiocese will close its school buildings and cancel classes and student-related activities from March 12 – March 25, 2020. This closure includes any planned school events such as fundraisers, community events as well as field trips. This closure means that school buildings will not be open to children, parents, or community members during this time. Course content will be delivered utilizing the Archdiocesan distance learning protocol which has been distributed to all schools.

You can read the letter in Spanish here. -Jon Brooks and Kevin Stark

Newsom Criticizes Pro Sports Leagues in Coronavirus Briefing (Tuesday, March 10, 3:28 p.m.)

In a wide-ranging press conference, Gov. Gavin Newsom updated the total of confirmed coronavirus cases in the state to 157; detailed the latest steps California is taking to ramp up testing and prepare for school closures, and took a shot at major sports organizations for continuing to pack stadiums full of fans during the outbreak.

“I found it quite curious that the four major organizations — NHL, soccer, Major League Baseball, NBA — put out guidelines to protect their athletes but not their fans,” he said. “They owe it to their fanbase to say why it’s more important to keep reporters away from players in their locker rooms than keep fans in highly contagious parts of the country away from each other.”

The NHL’s San Jose Sharks said Monday night that the team would comply with Santa Clara County’s new prohibition on events of 1,000 or more people, but that is a ban enforceable by law. The Golden State Warriors decided to go ahead with their game against the Philadelphia 76ers at Chase Center in San Francisco on Saturday, despite the San Francisco Department of Public Health’s recommendation that sporting events and other large gatherings be canceled.

Newsom applauded Santa Clara County for prohibiting mass gatherings. He emphasized that the spread of the virus in that part of the South Bay is acute.

He did not recommend other communities take similar measures, which are the most stringent in the state, but he said those prohibitions will come.

“I think it is inevitable, you will hear more from other counties doing the same,” he said. Read the full story

San Francisco to Provide RVs, Hotel Rooms for Potential Quarantine of Homeless People (Tuesday, March 10, 12:33 p.m.)

San Francisco will provide RVs, unoccupied residential property and hotel rooms for people who have tested positive for COVID-19 and are experiencing homelessness or are living in residential hotel rooms, shelters or group settings.

The move is an effort to provide quarantine locations for people who may not have access to homes where they can self-isolate, San Francisco Mayor London Breed said in a statement Tuesday.

“Our top priority is public health and slowing the spread of COVID-19 in our community,” she said. “It’s important that we take measures like this to care for our most vulnerable residents, including people who are homeless.”

Low-income people and those experiencing homelessness are more vulnerable to the disease, city public health officials said, because they are more likely to have underlying conditions that could further exacerbate the illness.

RVs will be staged at the Presidio and in other “secure locations” throughout the city as needed, officials said. As the city works to find vacant properties to lease, it will work with hotel operators to find temporary housing.

On Monday, Breed’s office allocated $5 million to expand cleaning services in shelters, homeless resource centers and residential hotels. It will also use the money to provide meals and expand shelter hours for any shelters that do not already operate 24 hours a day and seven days a week.

As of Tuesday, there were 14 reported cases of COVID-19 in San Francisco, according to the city’s health department. – Erin Baldassari

Sacramento Gives Up on Automatic 14-Day Quarantines (Tuesday, March 10, 11:47 a.m.)

California’s Sacramento County is calling off automatic 14-day quarantines that have been implemented for the coronavirus, saying it will focus instead on mitigating the impact of COVID-19, reports Bill Chappell of NPR.

The change is an acknowledgement that the county cannot effectively manage the quarantines while its health system copes with coronavirus cases. It also reflects problems with the U.S. government’s coronavirus testing program — issues that slowed efforts to identify people with the deadly virus and to contain COVID-19.

“With the shift from containment to mitigation, it is no longer necessary for someone who has been in contact with someone with COVID-19 to quarantine for 14 days,” the county says.

Effective immediately, people in Sacramento County should not quarantine themselves if they’ve been exposed to the COVID-19. Instead, they should go into isolation only if they begin to show symptoms of the respiratory virus, the county’s health department says.

Sacramento County currently has at least 10 coronavirus cases, including one person who recovered. Here is the county’s announcement and its COVID-19 web page.

Read the full story here.

The Latest Outside the Bay Area (Tuesday, March 10, 12 p.m.)

The Trump administration and lawmakers are racing to respond to the coronavirus epidemic and any accompanying financial storm in what appears to be a mounting political and policy standoff over the best approach.

Democrats are preparing a package of aid that includes unemployment insurance and sick pay for working families struggling to keep paychecks coming as the outbreak disrupts workplaces. A vote could come as soon as this week or push to mid-March.

Trump met health insurers at the White House earlier and vowed to help the beleaguered cruise-ship and airline industries.

His top economic advisers accompanied him to Capitol Hill to brief Senate Republicans on his plan to ask Congress to pass payroll tax relief and other quick measures. On Monday, the president told reporters he is seeking “very substantial relief” to the payroll tax. Trump also said he was seeking help for hourly-wage workers to ensure they’re “not going to miss a paycheck” and “don’t get penalized for something that’s not their fault.”

But so far, the president’s approach, based on tax breaks, is receiving a cool response from Democrats as well as Republicans from his own party who say it’s too soon to consider fresh spending from Capitol Hill.

Meanwhile, in growing swaths of the globe outside China, virus-related disruptions were increasingly becoming the new normal. More than 100 countries — over half of the United Nations’ membership — have now confirmed cases. Panama and Mongolia, which borders China, were the newest countries to announce infections. France’s government advised voters to bring their own pens to local elections Sunday so they won’t have to share. Morocco reported its first death of a virus-infected person — only the second confirmed fatality in Africa. In Spain and France, soccer’s biggest stars prepared to play in empty stadiums. Bans on public gatherings silenced entertainers. Sony Pictures delayed the launch of “Peter Rabbit 2” to August.

In Italy, the boisterous hum of Rome dwindled to a whisper and police patrols kept people apart in cafes as Italy enforced an extraordinary, sweeping lockdown Tuesday in hopes of not becoming the next epicenter of the spreading coronavirus epidemic now that life in China is edging back to normal.

The travel restrictions that were extended across Italy illustrated how the virus and the broad disruptions it is causing are sweeping westward from China, where the outbreak began.

Teams of Italian police patrolled cafes to make sure owners were keeping customers 1 meter (3 feet) apart. The streets of the Italian capital were as quiet as they are during the annual mid-August vacation shutdown.

“It’s bad. People are terrorized,” said Massimo Leonardo, who runs a market stall. “I’ve never seen anything like it.”

Italy now has more coronavirus cases than anywhere but China, registering 9,172 infections with 463 deaths. Italy increasingly found itself sealed off as countries elsewhere in Europe and farther afield sought to keep infections contained to the peninsula. (AP)

Effort to Significantly Increase Testing Capability (Tuesday March 10, 10:34 a.m.)

On Tuesday, researchers from Stanford, UCSF, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative and the Chan Zuckerberg Biohub announced an effort to quadruple the Bay Area’s COVID-19 testing and diagnostic capabilities.

The scientists formed what they are calling a “COVID-19 Task Force” and are purchasing two FDA-approved machines for processing tests that detect the new coronavirus.

Experts say that California has too few tests available to provide an accurate picture of where the coronavirus is spreading and how fast. The new task force initiative wants to fix that by connecting Bay Area research groups and by processing a backlog of tests ordered by UCSF doctors at Stanford’s labs.

Joe DeRisi, co-president of the Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, said in a statement that as the coronavirus continues to spread, “our ability to rapidly test and diagnose cases is critical.”

“Procuring these new diagnostic machines will have a significant impact on our ability to respond to the outbreak in a more streamlined way,” he said.

The researchers expect to have the machines in place for coronavirus testing beginning next week.

Testing will be limited to people who show symptoms of COVID-19.

The Situation Tuesday Morning (Tuesday, March 10, 10:13 a.m.)

As Bay Area counties ramp up social distancing measures to fight the spread of the coronavirus, companies and organizations are canceling meetings and encouraging employees to telecommute, while colleges and universities are shutting down events and in-person classes.

On Monday, Santa Clara County took the most stringent action in the region — and perhaps the country — yet: It banned, by force of law, all gatherings of 1,000 people or more until at least the end of March. The order covers auditoriums, stadiums, arenas, theaters and large conference gatherings. It does not include normal operations at stores, shopping malls, airports or mass transit.

As a marker of how normal life is starting to be altered by COVID-19, the effect of the Santa Clara County order on the San Jose Sharks will do. The team announced Monday night it would comply with the ban starting with the March 17 game at SAP Center. The team has not yet offered further details.

Meanwhile, San Jose State University, San Francisco State University, City College of San Francisco and Academy of Art University in San Francisco followed the lead of UC Berkeley and Stanford by moving classes online.

Yesterday, the Grand Princess cruise ship arrived at the Oakland port carrying at least 21 people infected with the coronavirus. The ship had trolled the Pacific Ocean off the Central Coast for several days. Federal and state officials are transferring thousands of passengers to a military base for a two-week quarantine.

The city of Monterey asked cruise ship companies to cancel any upcoming cruises into Monterey Bay until at least the end of April. In a statement, the city says they made the decision “out of an abundance of caution,” a phrase that has come to symbolize the early response to the outbreak, and the companies will comply.

Santa Clara County Bans Mass Gatherings (Monday March 9, 9:01 p.m.)

Santa Clara County has issued an order prohibiting mass gatherings of 1,000 or more people. The order will become effective at 12:00 a.m. Wednesday, March 11 and last through the end of the month.

“We are clearly facing a historic public health challenge and we know this is a very difficult time,” said Dr. Sara Cody, county Health Officer, at a press conference Monday evening. “As we’ve tested more people, we’ve found more cases, and we anticipate many more cases as commercial laboratories come online.”

The county confirmed six more cases of the disease on Monday, bringing its total to 43.

“The number and type of cases to date indicate that the risk of exposure to this virus in our community is increasing,” said Cody. “We’ve seen a rapid increase in cases not linked to travel or known confirmed cases of COVID-19.”

Cody said the new policy was intended to slow the rate of infection in hopes of not overwhelming hospitals with cases.

The order is legally binding and enforceable by the county sheriff or police. This will impact auditoriums, stadiums, arenas, theaters and large conference gatherings. It does not include normal operations at stores, shopping malls, airports or mass transit. More details can be found on the county’s Facebook page.

California Nearly Doubles COVID-19 Tests, But Experts Say It’s Not Enough (Monday March 9, 9:01 p.m.)

Over the weekend, health officials in California nearly doubled the number of people tested for COVID-19, KQED’s Kevin Stark reports. Yet with thousands of people being monitored for the new coronavirus, as of Monday the total still only amounts to 942 people, according to the California Department of Public Health.

Medical professionals say that’s not nearly enough given the spread of the coronavirus in the state.

“It really needs to be in the tens of thousands and higher,” David Relman, an immunologist at Stanford University told KQED’s Mina Kim on “KQED Forum” Friday.

“We need to have a much better understanding of where is this virus,” said Relman. He reeled off a host of unknowns that need to be solved.

“How does it move? From whom? Under what circumstances? And when, during the course of an illness, is a person infectious? To what degree do they transmit? All of those questions require that we be able to both detect the virus quickly and in many, many people and settings.”

Relman said that California still needs to learn who has contracted the virus and where they have been. To acquire detailed information will “require a much greater capacity for routine point-of-contact tracing and testing.”

“We know how to do that,” he said. “We just don’t yet have the resources deployed to do it at the scale that it really needs to be done now.”

California Department of Public Health officials said in an email that their capacity to test is “dependent upon availability of test kits from the CDC.”

CDPH said last week they had the capacity to test about 7,400 people over the coming weekend.

“The state has continually requested more testing capacity from the federal government, and the CDC has continued to fulfill those requests on an ongoing basis,” the health department said. “As this need expands, we continue to ask for more tests – including just today.”

In Sacramento Monday, Gov. Gavin Newsom met with mayors from around the state to discuss the spread of the coronavirus, KQED’s Katie Orr reports.

San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo said to effectively contain the virus, thousands of people need to be tested every day.

“That is not happening in California or anywhere in the country right now,” he said. “We critically need to scale up the number of tests.”

Read the full story here

UC Berkeley Moves Classes Online (Monday March 9, 2:14 p.m.)

UC Berkeley is suspending most in-person classes and canceling or postponing all campus-sponsored events with plans for over 150 people attending. The changes will take effect Tuesday, and last at least through the end of spring break on March 29.

School Chancellor Carol Christ sent the announcement to faculty members and the university posted it online.

Instead of meeting in classrooms, lectures and class discussions will be held remotely. Instructors who do not yet have the capacity to teach classes online will be given a couple days to install the necessary technology and learn how to use it. The university is telling students to look for specific plans from professors.

The new policy does not cover Cal Performances or the school’s intercollegiate athletic teams.

“(H)owever, those events should include generous refund policies for anyone who wishes not to attend for any reason,” Christ wrote. “Guidance will be forthcoming regarding registered student organization events.”

For now, labs, studios, physical education and performing arts classes will continue to meet in person.

Christ said the campus is remaining open and she emphasized that no confirmed COVID-19 cases at UC Berkeley have been identified.First COVID-19 Death Announced in Santa Clara County (Monday, March 9, 1 p.m.)

An adult woman in her 60s has passed away from the new coronavirus, the Santa Clara County public health department announced Monday morning.

The woman is the first confirmed death from COVID-19 in the county.

Health officials say the woman had been hospitalized since Feb. 28, the third confirmed case of infection in Santa Clara County and the first to have acquired the virus without traveling overseas or having a known contact with someone infected with the coronavirus.

“We are facing a historic public health challenge and know this is a very difficult time” said Sara Cody, Health Officer for Santa Clara County, in a statement. “Our top priority continues to be protecting the health of our community.”

The county has advised businesses to encourage employees to work from home, and organizations hosting large events to cancel them.

You can find the county health department’s full guidance for slowing the spread of the virus here.

Grand Princess Arrives at Port of Oakland (Monday, March 9, 1 p.m.)

The Grand Princess, which has been trolling the Pacific Ocean off San Francisco, has arrived at a berth in Oakland’s port.

 

At the site, workers wearing gloves and yellow protective gear placed a large tent by a platform that passengers will use to disembark. At least 20 buses and five ambulances were parked nearby, and officials have said those needing acute medical care for any reason will get off first.

The unloading will take up to three days, officials have said. How many travelers will get off the ship Monday wasn’t clear.

U.S. passengers will be flown or bused from the port — chosen for its proximity to an airport and a military base — to bases in California, Texas and Georgia for testing and a 14-day quarantine. The ship is carrying people from 54 countries, and foreigners will be whisked home.

About 1,100 crew members, 19 of whom have tested positive for the new virus, will be quarantined and treated aboard the ship, which will dock elsewhere, Gov. Gavin Newsom said. (AP and KQED)

Marin County Confirms First Case (Monday March 9, 12 p.m.)

An “older man” who had traveled on the Grand Princess cruise ship on its Mexican voyage in February is the first case of COVID-19 in Marin County, the Department of Health and Human Services said Monday. The man, a Marin resident, is being treated at an unspecified hospital. The department said it’s identified and isolated people who have been in close contact with the patient, and that they are currently being evaluated.

For updates check the Marin County coronavirus page. The county has set up a dedicated call line for nonmedical COVID-19 questions at 415-473-7191 or you can email covid-19@marincounty.org. There will be a community meeting and panel discussion with the health department at 6 p.m. tonight at the Marin County Office of Education in San Rafael. You can also watch the meeting on Facebook.

Mid-morning Update (Monday, March 9, 10:50 a.m)

The Chronicle and KTVU are reporting five new confirmed cases of COVID-19 this morning. Ten other new cases emerged in the Bay Area this weekend as the region tightened restrictions on public events in an attempt to slow the spread of infections. On Friday, San Francisco issued more stringent recommendations for employers, schools, workplaces, event gatherings and venues. The city has shut down all scheduled events through March 20 at city-owned buildings like Moscone Center and the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium, and all scheduled programs and group events at public library branches have been canceled through the end of March. The San Francisco Unified School District has done likewise, canceling all assemblies, fundraisers, field trips, athletic events, practices, performances and rehearsals until March 22. On Saturday, Elk Grove Unified the largest school district in California, announced it would close all schools this week after the Sacramento health department confirmed a family in the district had tested positive for the new coronavirus.

Meanwhile, the Grand Princess cruise ship carrying 21 infected individuals is scheduled to make port in Oakland around noon. The California Office of Emergency Services issued the following update today on the planned disembarkation process.

Today, it is expected that the Grand Princess cruise ship will dock in the Port of Oakland to begin the disembarking process at approximately noon. Federal support teams from the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness & Response within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) have setup disembarking screening protocols to focus first on helping those individuals who require immediate emergency medical care, not necessarily related to COVID-19 exposure. Once this first cohort of individuals has disembarked, the federal staff will begin disembarking the 962 California residents aboard. It is expected that these actions will take the greater part of the day on March 9th. California residents who disembark will be transferred to Travis Air Force Base or Marine Corps Air Station Miramar for testing and quarantine. After California residents are disembarked, non-Californians will be transported by the federal government to facilities in other states. The crew will be quarantined aboard the ship. If a crew member is in need of more acute medical care, they will be transferred to an appropriate medical facility in California. The Grand Princess will only stay in Port of Oakland for the duration of disembarkment. This ship will depart Oakland as soon as possible and will remain elsewhere for the duration of the crew’s quarantine.

Grand Princess Docking (Monday March 9, 7:39 a.m.)

A Port of Oakland spokesperson told KQED the Grand Princess cruise ship is “likely docking at noon.” Follow the ship’s location at VesselFinder.com.

Sunday, March 8

 

Newsom Explains Why Oakland Chosen for Cruise Ship Docking (Sunday March 8)

At a press conference in Oakland Sunday, Gov. Gavin Newsom and Mayor Libby Schaaf sought to reassure city residents that none of the passengers from the Grand Princess, now headed for the Port of Oakland, will be released into the community before undergoing a 14-day quarantine. The ship, with more than 3,500 people from 54 countries, is carrying 19 crew members and two passengers infected with the new coronavirus. The Grand Princess is expected to dock at the port on Monday, timing to be determined by conditions in the bay. Some of the passengers have been on board since mid-February.

Schaaf said the city was “pleased to step forward” to help solve the dilemma of where passengers could disembark. “It’s our duty to help people on the ship,” she said. “We have to not let our fears dictate or impede our humanity.” But she also said she informed officials that Oakland “is a community that has sufferred decades of environmental racism and injustice.”

Schaaf said she had received “some very strong assurances that this operation will employ the best isolation practices known” and that the operation would minimize the ship’s time in Oakland. No passengers or crew members would be quarantined in the city, she said.

Newsom said the Oakland port was chosen because of a relatively isolated 10-acre site — at Pier 22 according to the San Francisco Chronicle — that is possible to secure; nearby Oakland International Airport, which would allow foreign passengers to be processed by the State Department and repatriated to their home countries on chartered flights; and its proximity to Travis Air Force Base, where passengers who live in California can be quarantined. Bar pilots, the San Francisco Bay navigation specialists responsible for bringing ships into local ports, will board the ship in protective gear, the governor said.

The former naval air station in Alameda was also considered but was not chosen because of heavy silting, according to Newsom. The Port of San Francisco, the ship’s original destination, was ruled out because it’s smaller and would cause too much disruption along the Embarcadero waterfront and nearby neighborhood.

The 1,113-member crew will be quarantined and treated aboard the ship, which will go on to dock elsewhere, Newsom said.

“That ship will turn around — and they are currently assessing appropriate places to bring that quarantined ship — but it will not be here in the San Francisco Bay,” he said.

On the Grand Princess, Donna LaGesse and her sister-in-law Jackie Eilers had a small celebration in their cabin Saturday night after the captain announced the ship would soon dock. She said they’re maintaining a positive attitude, watching exercise videos and re-runs of “The Love Boat.”

“We’re keeping our senses of humor. We’re laughing at the whole situation,” said LaGesse, 64, of Greenville, North Carolina. “We’re lucky because we have a room with a balcony so we can get some fresh air.” (KQED and AP)

San Francisco Shuts Down Events at Public Libraries and City-Owned Venues (Sunday, March 8, 2:01 p.m.)

In order to slow the spread of the new coronavirus, San Francisco has shut down social, cultural, entertainment and other events of 50 or more people at city-owned facilities through at least March 20.

The city’s Department of Public Health order, issued Saturday evening, covers group events at the following locations:

The San Francisco Public Library main branch. However, the city librarian has canceled all scheduled programs and group events at public library branches through March 31. Moscone Center Bill Graham Civic Auditorium New Conservatory Theater War Memorial & Performing Arts Center, including Davies Symphony Hall, the Opera House and the Veterans Building The Palace of Fine Arts Theatre main theater Pier 27 and Pier 35 at The Embarcadero

The order applies to events deemed “nonessential” and does not cover government meetings.

Notably, the health department said it was taking this action in part “to serve as a model for other owners and operators of facilities where similar events may be held… .” The department defined problematic gatherings as those where people sit or stand within four feet of each other. Such events include those held in theaters, as well as concerts or performances where people stand or have to wait in line for admission or concessions.

More news… MONDAY: Santa Clara County Confirms First DeathSATURDAY: Bay Area Schools Prepare in Case of ShutdownSATURDAY: Santa Cruz County Confirms First Case of COVID-19FRIDAY: Keeping Seniors in Nursing Homes SafeFRIDAY: SF Coronavirus Alert System

Cruise Ship to Dock in Oakland Monday (Sunday, March 8, 9:30 a.m.)

The Grand Princess — the ship that’s moored off the Central Coast because of the coronavirus — is headed to the port of Oakland. Passengers will likely stay aboard the ship for at least another day.

In a recording provided by passenger Laurie Miller of San Jose, Grand Princess captain John Smith told guests the ship will dock in Oakland. Princess Cruises says it’s expected to arrive on Monday. The ship is carrying more than 3,500 people from 54 countries.

“An agreement has been reached to bring our ship into the port of Oakland,” he told passengers Saturday night. “After docking, we will then begin a disembarkation process specified by federal authorities that will take several days.”

Passengers who need medical treatment or hospitalization will go to health care facilities in California, while state residents who don’t require acute medical care “will go to a federally run isolation facility within California for testing and isolation,” the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services said in a statement Sunday.

“The crew will be quarantined and treated aboard the ship, but importantly, the ship will only stay in Port of Oakland for the duration of disembarkment. This ship will depart Oakland as soon as possible and will remain elsewhere for the duration of the crew’s quarantine,” the CalOES statement said.

U.S. guests from outside California will be transported by the federal government to facilities in other states. (Associated Press)

Arts, Entertainment and Cultural Event Cancellations and Postponements (Saturday, March 7, 6:56 p.m.)

The biggest arts- and culture-related cancelation due to the coronavirus came on Friday, when San Francisco Mayor London Breed announced that all War Memorial Performing Arts Center venues, including Davies Symphony Hall and the Opera House, will be closed for all public events for the next two weeks, reports KQED’s Gabe Meline.

Performances by the San Francisco Symphony, San Francisco Ballet and others have been canceled. Breed also urged residents to cancel or postpone “nonessential events” such as sports games and concerts.

KQED Arts is tracking event and venue cancellations, postponements and closures in the Bay Area. Currently, the list includes San Francisco’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade, the Walt Disney Family Museum, and the San Jose Children’s Discovery Museum, which will be shut down through Tuesday while the facility is sanitized due to an employee who may have been exposed to the new coronavirus, and who is awaiting test results. The Golden State Warriors decided to play tonight’s game against the Philadelphia 76ers at Chase Center, despite the San Francisco Department of Public Health’s recommendation that sporting events be canceled. The Warriors said they are taking extra precautions. See KQED Arts for the full list of arts, cultural and entertainment shutdowns.

Santa Cruz County Confirms First Case of COVID-19 (Saturday, March 7, 1:50 p.m.)

A Santa Cruz County resident who recently traveled on the Grand Princess cruise ship is the county’s first confirmed case of COVID-19, county health officials said Saturday.

The resident, whose identity and hometown were not released, had traveled on the Grand Princess from San Francisco to Mexico in February.. Twenty-one people currently aboard the ship on a subsequent voyage from Hawaii to San Francisco have tested positive for the new coronavirus; 19 of those infected are crewmembers.

Santa Cruz County officials are investigating any possible exposures the resident may have had with others. The California Department of Public Health had previously alerted counties of an exposure risk due to several passengers returning from the Grand Princess, including Santa Cruz County residents. All are being actively monitored and are under self-quarantine, with daily contact with public health officials, the county said. Testing has been requested for those exhibiting symptoms.

The county declared a local health emergency on Wednesday and activated its Emergency Operation Center to help in responding to the spread of the coronavirus. While COVID-19 represents a serious public health threat, the risk to Santa Cruz County residents remains low, but additional local cases are anticipated, officials said.

For local information, residents can go to Santa Cruz County’s Health Service Agency website, call 211 or text “coronavirus” to 211211.

The Grand Princess is carrying more than 3,500 passengers. The ship was recently on its way from Hawaii to San Francisco on a different trip, but remains on hold off the coast of California while authorities determine a safe place for it to dock. (Bay City News)

Bay Area Schools Prepare in Case of Shutdown (Saturday, March 7, 10:16 a.m.)

As the coronavirus bears down on Northern California, school districts are scrambling to prepare, KQED’s Vanessa Rancaño reports. The California Department of Education issued updated guidance Thursday emphasizing that decisions to close schools are made at the local level and CDE will not be providing directives.

According to the Alameda County Public Health Department, a single presumptive positive case of the virus among students or staff could trigger a recommendation to close for up to 14 days. The department released a guidance document for schools Friday.

“Expect that this is going to happen,” said Alameda County Office of Education spokesperson Michelle Smith-McDonald. “Don’t know who, don’t know where, but expect that we’re going to have confirmations as we begin to test more people.”

In San Francisco, new public health recommendations, released Friday, instruct schools and parents to develop plans in case a citywide closure becomes necessary.

In addition to determining when to close, schools must also consider alternative educational plans, and it’s proving no small task. Berkeley Unified School District officials held a shutdown contingency meeting late this week and there were more questions than answers.

“Like many districts in California and probably around the country, we currently have no process in place to accommodate distance learning at this kind of a scale,” said district spokeswoman Trish McDermott. “There are a lot of challenges.”

Like other districts, Berkeley has assembled a team of administrators to develop contingency plans and assess distance learning options. District leaders are considering providing families with a “menu of resources” including links to local library resources, Khan Academy courses or resources that could be accessed from home, though they acknowledge this only helps students with computers and access to the internet.

Read the full story from KQED education reporter Vanessa Rancaño here.

San Francisco Issues More Stringent Public Health Recommendations (Friday, March 6, 7 p.m.)

The San Francisco Department of Public Health Friday announced new recommendations that rely on “social distancing” for preventing the spread of the coronavirus. The department acknowledged adherence to these guidelines would “cause changes in behavior for systems and individuals. They are meant to disrupt normal social behavior, because the virus thrives under normal circumstances.” Notably, the department says schools should develop plans and parents should prepare for a citywide closure should it occur.

The recommendations cover individuals, businesses, schools, transit agencies, and nonessential large gatherings, such as concerts, conventions, and sports events. (The St. Patrick’s Day parade was postponed Friday.) The department says it expects the recommendations to stand for an initial period of two weeks, while it assesses whether they need to be adjusted.

There is still no recommendation for members of the general public to wear a mask, but the usual guidance for individuals applies: Wash your hands, cover coughs and sneezes, avoid touching your face, stay home when sick, and avoid shaking hands. Here are the new recommendations:

Vulnerable Populations

Vulnerable populations are defined as those 60 and older as well as people with heart disease, lung disease, kidney disease, diabetes, weak immune systems and other conditions.

Anyone fitting these descriptions should avoid gatherings of 50 people or more and should try to stay away from those who are sick.

Workplaces and Businesses

No nonessential employee travel Keep employees who work within arm’s length of one another to a minimum Cancel large in-person meetings Employees should stay home if sick and employers should not require a doctor’s note Employers should maximize sick leave flexibility Consider implementation of telecommuting

Schools

Schools should develop a plan for citywide school closure, and families should prepare for that possibility. Remote teaching and online options should be explored. Students and teachers should stay home if sick Parents of children with chronic health conditions should consult their doctor All classrooms should have hand sanitizers and tissues Reschedule or cancel nonessential medium to large events

Large Events and Gatherings

Cancel or postpone concerts, sporting events, conventions and large community gatherings.

If these events take place, hand sanitizers and tissues should be made available and people should have a place to wash their hands. Organizers should frequently clean surfaces that are frequently touched. Close contact should be minimized.

Health Care Patients and Facilities

The general public, even those who are not ill, should avoid hospitals, nursing homes and long-term care facilities. People should only make visits to emergency rooms that are essential. If you’re ill, see if you can be helped over the phone. Long-term care facilities must put in place COVID-19 plans that conform to Department of Public Health guidelines. They must also screen all staff and visitors for symptoms, and anyone with symptoms should be barred from entry.

Transit

Transit agencies should increase cleaning of vehicles and surfaces that are touched frequently. Hand sanitizers, tissues, and hand-washing capability should be provided.

Read the full recommendations here.

Pence: 21 People on Grand Princess Test Positive (Friday, March 6, 4:30 p.m.)

Twenty-one people aboard the Grand Princess cruise ship off the coast of California have tested positive for the coronavirus disease COVID-19, Vice President Pence announced Friday

The Grand Princess had been returning to San Francisco after a cruise to Hawaii and has been kept away from port while a small portion of the roughly 3,500 people on board are tested for the coronavirus.

Pence said of 46 tests conducted so far on the ship, 19 crew members and 2 passengers tested positive, while 24 people were negative and one was inconclusive.

The ship will now be brought into a noncommercial port where all passengers and crew will be tested for coronavirus, the vice president said during a briefing at the White House. Some people onboard may be quarantined, he said, emphasizing that measures will be taken to avoid spreading the virus. (NPR)

South by Southwest Canceled (Friday, March 6, 2:25 p.m.)

The festival said in a statement:

“We are exploring options to reschedule the event and are working to provide a virtual SXSW online experience as soon as possible for 2020 participants, starting with SXSW EDU. For our registrants, clients, and participants we will be in touch as soon as possible and will publish an FAQ.”

Contra Costa County: People Over 50 Should Avoid Mass Gatherings (Friday, March 6, 10:46 a.m.)

Contra Costa Health Services Friday tightened its community guidance to slow the spread of the virus.

Officials now recommend that people over 50 or those with medical conditions avoid “mass gatherings, such as parades, sporting events or concerts.”

County health officials also confirmed three new cases of the coronavirus. Two of the individuals were passengers aboard the Grand Princess cruise ship on its trip to Mexico Feb. 11-21.

Another traveler on the Grand Princess from that trip died in Placer County Wednesday from the disease. Two Sonoma County passengers are presumptive cases.

Keeping Seniors in Nursing Homes Safe (Friday, March 6, 9:28 a.m.)

Bay Area nursing homes and senior service providers are responding to the risk of novel coronavirus by implementing emergency measures and consulting public health officials each day. Among the precautions, staff and clients are increasing hand washing, stockpiling protective equipment, canceling public events and screening all visitors, including vendors and family members, who have traveled internationally in recent weeks.

Health officials in Santa Clara County, which confirmed at least 20 coronavirus cases Thursday, have advised nursing homes to cancel gatherings like bingo or movie night, and to enhance screening measures generally. The advisory also noted that a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention team is onsite at the county’s Public Health Department. Full story here

SF COVID-19 Alert System (Friday, March 6, 6:39 a.m.)

San Francisco’s Department of Emergency Management and the County Department of Public Health have announced a COVID-19 public information text message alert system. San Franciscans can now text COVID19SF to 888-777 to receive real-time, official text updates about the novel coronavirus situation in San Francisco. Officials say the system will be used to get the word out about latest information and instructions, as well as the cancellation of any major events or public facility closures, should they become necessary.

San Francisco’s Lowell High School Close (6:39 a.m.)

San Francisco’s Lowell High School is closed today. The San Francisco Unified School District announced Thursday that officials at the Lake Merced area campus learned that a relative of a student is being treated for COVID-19. Lowell officials said “out of an abundance of caution” they decided to close the school and cancel all events “for the time being.” District officials say they plan to give an update before Monday on when the school might reopen. The student has been assessed by public health officials and does not have any symptoms, according to SFUSD. District officials say the student is in “self-quarantine.”

March 5

Tests Being Processed in Richmond State Lab (10:16 p.m.)

Princess Cruises issued an update tonight, saying samples were collected Thursday from 45 people on the Grand Princess — given by a mixture of guests and crew members. They were then delivered to the state public health lab in Richmond. Results are expected to be be ready sometime tomorrow.

Following guidance from the CDC, the update says all guests have been asked to stay in their staterooms while test results are pending. Guests are receiving meals via room service.

The cruise line confirms there are 3,533 people total aboard the Grand Princess, 2,422 guests and 1,111 crew, representing 54 nationalities.

Cruise Ship Testing Begins(5:12 p.m.)

The Grand Princess cruise ship is idling in the Pacific Ocean off San Francisco, while health officials test passengers for the novel coronavirus.

With help from para-jumpers with the California National Guard, state health officials collected samples from people aboard the vessel.

Using cables and harnesses, the para-jumpers lowered themselves from helicopters onto the deck of the Grand Princess Thursday.

The state guardsmembers brought coronavirus test kits for about 100 people currently aboard the ship.

There are about 3,500 people total on the Grand Princess.

The helicopters flew from Moffett Field in the South Bay.

The kits are being transported to a state lab in Richmond.

Health officials say test results could be available as soon as tomorrow morning.

Sonoma County: Shuttle Passengers From Prior Grand Princess Cruise Test Positive (3:04 p.m.)

Sonoma County health officials said Thursday that 78 county residents were aboard the Grand Princess cruise ship when it sailed from San Francisco to Mexico on Feb. 11. The ship returned to San Francisco on Feb. 21 before departing on another voyage to Hawaii.

Jennifer Larocque, spokesperson for the county’s health department, said two residents of Sonoma County who were on the initial cruise to Mexico have tested positive for novel coronavirus.

Larocque said those two patients were among 25 Grand Princess passengers from Sonoma County who rode a shuttle together after disembarking.

The health department is reaching out to the other passengers who were on the cruise.

“The 14-day window of risk of exposure for the cruise ends tomorrow,” Larocque said on Thursday. “If passengers that were on the ship have not experienced symptoms yet, they likely will not.”

The Grand Princess is currently being held off the coast of Monterey while some of its current passengers are being tested for the virus. Another passenger who traveled on the Grand Princess cruise to Mexico, a 71 year-old man from Placer County, died Wednesday of complications caused by COVID-19.

The San Francisco Department of Emergency Management said Thursday that approximately 100 San Francisco residents were aboard the same cruise. Officials say they are in the process of contacting the passengers.

Marin County’s chief Medical officer, Dr. Matt Willis, says that 55 people from Marin County were also on the voyage.

The County, Willis says, is notifying passengers and that those with symptoms will be tested.

New California Cases (1:00 p.m.)

County health departments in California continued to announce new cases of novel coronavirus on Thursday

The Sonoma County Department of Health Services announced a second presumptive positive patient in the county. The person traveled on the Grand Princess cruise ship that departed San Francisco on Feb. 11 for the Mexican Riviera and returned on Feb. 21.

Los Angeles county health officials announced four news cases in patients that had all traveled to Italy, where more than 3,000 people have tested positive for the virus.

Attorney General Announces Anti-Price Gouging Rules for Coronavirus Supplies (12:30 p.m.)

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra announced the state has enacted an anti-price-gouging law to protect consumers and health care providers from price increases related to the spread of novel coronavirus in California.

“Businesses cannot exploit this state of emergency to unlawfully raise prices and attempt to unscrupulously profit off this emergency,” Becerra said at a press conference Thursday in Los Angeles.

The law applies to price increases of over 10% compared to prices before the state’s emergency declaration Wednesday by Gov. Gavin Newsom. It covers — but is not limited to — emergency supplies like hand sanitizer, medical supplies, food and drink.

Violators could face up to a year in jail and fines up to $10,000 per violation.

Becerra said his office has heard numerous reports of raised prices for items like toilet paper and hand sanitizer. His office has also heard from health care providers about price increases for some products they use to care for patients.

The attorney general says if consumers believe they have a case of price gouging to report, they can call their local police or sheriff’s department, or contact the Attorney General’s office at 1-800-952-5225.

First Two Cases in San Francisco (11:20 a.m.)

The first two cases of novel coronavirus infection have been detected in San Francisco, Mayor London Breed announced at a press conference Thursday.

The two patients are being treated at separate hospitals in San Francisco, and the cases appear unrelated.

Health officials said neither patient had a recent travel history or contact with a person known to be infected with the virus, so they are cases of community exposure.

Full story here.

Cruise Ship Held Off California Coast (10:45 a.m.)

Scrambling to keep the coronavirus at bay, officials ordered a cruise ship with about 3,500 people to hold back from the California coast Thursday to await testing of those on board, after a passenger on an earlier voyage on the ship died and at least one other became infected.

A Coast Guard helicopter was expected to deliver test kits to the Grand Princess once it reached the waters off San Francisco later in the day. Princess Cruise Lines said fewer than 100 of those aboard had been identified for testing. San Francisco health officials said they expect results to come back early Friday.

“The ship will not come on shore until we appropriately assess the passengers,” California Gov. Gavin Newsom said. (AP) Full story here.

Worker Protection Bill Introduced (10:25 a.m.)

A new bill aimed at protecting workers from being fired or retaliated against if they miss work due to compliance with a quarantine order is being introduced by State Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez, D-San Diego, her office announced Thursday.

Under AB 3123, workers can also use sick leave if their employer is ordered to shut down by a public official due to a health emergency, or if they’re providing care to their kids if their school is shut down.

Newsom Declares State of Emergency (7:36 a.m.)In a press conference broadcast live on social media, Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency Wednesday afternoon.

The declaration came after the number of confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus in California grew to 53 people and a resident of Placer County died after contracting the virus.

The person, who was elderly with underlying health conditions, was a guest aboard the Grand Princess cruise ship, before departing at a stop in San Francisco. The ship continued onto Hawaii, but it has been called back to San Francisco, where it will be held off the coast of California until all the passengers are tested for the coronavirus.

Newsom said California is deploying “every level of government” to help identify cases and slow the spread of the coronavirus.

“This emergency proclamation will help the state further prepare our communities and our health care system in the event it spreads more broadly,” he said, adding that the emergency declaration is not about acquiring more money to fight the coronavirus.

“It’s about resourcefulness, it’s about our ability to add tools to the toolkit,” he said. The proclamation allows the state to bring in health care workers from outside California, and includes protections for consumers against price gouging.

“We are seeing literally small hand sanitizers going for as much $17,” Newsom said. “I’ve seen some online for even more. That’s unconscionable — that’s usurious.”

As part of an $8.3 billion emergency package approved by Congress today, California will receive $37 million in grants. On Monday, Newsom requested $20 million from the state legislature for emergency response.

In his remarks, Newsom also announced that California asked the Grand Princess cruise ship, now en route, to anchor off the coast before making port in San Francisco.

The state is flying thousands of test kits out to the ship, which will be processed at a lab in Richmond.

“The ship will not come onshore and tour till we appropriately assess the passengers and appropriately assess the protocols and procedures,” he said.

The Grand Princess cruise ship is now under investigation as the CDC probes a “small cluster” of coronavirus patients who were aboard, according to the cruise line. Another passenger who contracted the COVID-19 virus is now in stable condition at a hospital in Sonoma County, north of San Francisco.

Newsom said California obtained the ship’s manifest and is working closely with the CDC and the state’s health care partners to contact all the people who disembarked when the Grand Princess docked previously in San Francisco.

These are passengers who could have been exposed to coronavirus from the Placer County individual who later died. The person had symptoms as early as Feb. 19, according to Placer County Health Officer Aimee Sisson, and disembarked in San Francisco on Feb. 21.

CDC Director Robert Redfield said Wednesday at a White House briefing that staff are at the beginning of this effort, “looking at the manifest to make sure that we understand who has gotten off the cruise and where they got off the cruise.”

First Patient with COVID-19 in California Dies

Placer County Public Health is reporting that a resident has died of COVID-19. The person, an elderly adult with underlying health conditions, was the second confirmed case of COVID-19 in the county and is now the first instance of someone dying from the illness in California.

The patient tested positive on Tuesday at a California lab and was likely exposed to the coronavirus during international travel from Feb. 11-21 on a Princess cruise ship that departed San Francisco to Mexico. The patient was in isolation at Kaiser Permanente, Roseville.

County health officials say this case is travel-related and does not represent local transmission, but they believe local transmission is likely in the future.

Gov. Gavin Newsom issued the following statement regarding the death of the Placer County patient:

“Jennifer and I extend our deepest condolences to the family and loved ones affected by this death in Placer County. The state is working with federal officials to follow up on contact tracing of individuals that may have been exposed to provide treatment and protect public health.

“This case demonstrates the need for continued local, state and federal partnership to identify and slow the spread of this virus. California is working around the clock to keep our communities safe, healthy and informed.”

Another Cruise Ship Cluster

Officials with Princess Cruises said today its Grand Princess cruise ship, now en route to San Francisco from Hawaii after a “Mexican Riviera” cruise, was the location of a “small cluster” of COVID-19 cases aboard a prior cruise of the same name on the same ship.

One of the guests aboard the previous “Mexican Riviera” voyage on Wednesday became the first California patient to die of COVID-19, according to Placer County Health officials. They describe the person as elderly, with underlying health conditions.

A total of 62 guests sailed on the previous Mexico voyage and stayed on board for the Hawaii trip. The cruise line told those passengers that they may have been exposed to coronavirus and are being required by the CDC to remain in their staterooms until cleared by medical staff. There are about 2,500 passengers on the ship, according to Governor Newson, not counting crew. Roughly fifty percent of the passengers are from California.

San Francisco City officials said in a statement Wednesday that some passengers aboard the current voyage of Grand Princess have developed “influenza-like symptoms.” The city says it is working with the CDC, the U.S. Coast Guard, the California Department of Public Health and Princess Cruises to provide care to all affected passengers and crew on board the vessel.

Governor Newsom said the Grand Princess Cruise ship is being held somewhere offshore until testing of passengers can be conducted.

Princess Cruises also owns the Diamond Princess, quarantined in Yokohama, Japan, in early February, because of a COVID-19 outbreak.

Los Angeles County Cases

Earlier Wednesday, officials in Los Angeles County announced that six new cases of the coronavirus had been confirmed, up from one previously.

All of the Los Angeles County cases confirmed Tuesday night were due to a known exposure and not the result of community transmission, Dr. Barbara Ferrer, director of the county Department of Public Health, told reporters.

One person was hospitalized and five others were in self-quarantine at home, she said. Officials have tested more than two dozen people for the virus since January and most tests came back negative.

Ferrer said Los Angeles County health officials expect more cases to be confirmed in the future and have increased the county’s capacity to test at a local laboratory.

Sonoma County Health Alert

The Sonoma County health department has sent out its highest-level alert to health providers after testing showed a presumptive positive for the infection in a resident.

From the alert:

The individual recently returned from a “Mexican Riviera” cruise on the Grand Princess (Princess Cruises) from February 11-21, 2020 out of San Francisco with several stops in Mexico before returning to San Francisco.These findings emphasize the importance of obtaining a thorough travel history and the potential to identify new exposure sources and locations. It also highlights that the congregate environment on cruise ships can promote prolonged close contact believed to increase the risk of COVID-19 transmission if someone on the ship is infected.

Providers who come across patients who were on the cruise should be screened for COVID-19 symptoms, the alert says. Those with symptoms should be reported to the county’s Disease Control Unit so they can be tested.

Covid-19 Numbers (10:30 a.m.)

At least 53 Californians have now been confirmed to have COVID-19, and the last few days have seen a sharp rise in cases as testing has ramped up. The San Francisco Chronicle is tracking all California cases by county in this interactive map.

We’re monitoring the latest developments related to the epidemic and will update this post as news comes in.

Santa Clara County Warns People Over 50 of Increased Risk

Santa Clara County Public Health officials said Tuesday that the risk of severe illness starts to increase at age 50 for anyone who contracts Covid-19, and increases with age, and to cancel attending large public gatherings. Health officials gave examples like movie screenings or bingo. The highest risk group are people age 80 and over. Also at risk is anyone with underlying health problems, like diabetes, cancer or those who are immunocompromised.

March 3 Stories

First Berkeley Case

A Berkeley resident has tested positive for the new coronavirus, the city announced Tuesday, the first known case of an infection in Berkeley. The patient returned home on Feb. 23 from an overseas trip and “largely stayed at home in a voluntary self-imposed quarantine,” according to the city’s press release.

The city will hold a “Twitter town hall” with Dr. Lisa Hernandez, Berkeley’s public health officer, starting 12 p.m. on Friday, March 6.

You can tweet questions to @CityofBerkeley using the hashtag #BerkCOVID19, or use this online form to submit anonymously, the city said.

Meanwhile, in Santa Clara County, the public health department on Tuesday announced two more infections, bringing the county total to 11.

Tech Conferences Called Off

Google on Tuesday announced it is cancelling its I/O developer conference at Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View over coronavirus concerns. That is just the latest in a cascade of tech conference postponements, cancellations and online-only migrations. Among the change of plans are Facebook’s axing its F8 developer conference in San Jose; Adobe Summit 2020 moving from Las Vegas to the Internet; Google Cloud Next abandoning San Francisco for online, and the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco postponing until sometime in the summer.

Twitter has suspended all noncritical business travel, the company said in a blog post Sunday, until the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention or World Health Organization “deem it appropriate to step back from pandemic precautionary measures or when a vaccine becomes available.” The company is also encouraging all employees to work from home.

“This will slow spending on tourism,” said Stephen Levy, director of the Center for Continuing Study of the California Economy in Palo Alto, about all the cancellations. “It’s a smaller part of the slowdown in trade and activity that is coming from the worldwide spread of the virus. What we don’t know is the magnitude. That depends on how long the coronavirus situation lasts. But, it will be a hit to our convention and tourism activity here in the Bay Area.”

So far, South by Southwest, due to begin in 10 days, is still going forward. But the Austin Statesman has a page up called “Here’s Who’s Not Coming.” In that category: Facebook, Intel, Mashable and TikTok, among others.

Apple-oriented media are now speculating on whether the company’s Worldwide Developers’ Conference, scheduled for June in San Jose, will actually take place.

Fauci Speaks

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and one of the most esteemed immunologists in the field, was about as quotable as it gets in an interview with Politico published early this morning.

“I don’t think that we are going to get out of this completely unscathed,” he said about COVID-19. “I think that this is going to be one of those things we look back on and say boy, that was bad.”

Later, he said the severity of the epidemic in the U.S. could range from “really, really bad” to “mild,” but not “that mild,” depending on the level of mobilization in the country.

Fauci also discussed the quandary of keeping the public informed in the face of an administration, and especially a president, particularly averse to publicizing bad news.

“You should never destroy your own credibility. And you don’t want to go to war with a president,” Faucis aid. “But you got to walk the fine balance of making sure you continue to tell the truth.”

SF Mayor London Breed Slams Administration

Breed, who is probably not in the habit of writing to Mike Pence, expressed “grave concerns about the lack of funding, guidance, and support for local jurisdictions from the federal government” in a letter Tuesday sent to the vice president regarding the administration’s “anemic response” to the epidemic.

The letter cites “the disastrous decision” by the administration to let the national security team responsible for responding to global pandemics collapse in the face of key officials resigning or leaving in 2018.

Breed also said the $2.6 billion in federal funds earmarked for the epidemic is insufficient, and that the lack of tests “is a national disgrace.” She called on the federal government to ramp up its medical response in local communities and to provide them with needed supplies of respirators, gowns, goggles and face masks for health care workers.

You can read Breed’s letter here.

‘What’s Weird About This Virus…’ A COVID-19 Patient From California Speaks

COVID-19 patient Carl Goldman, who owns radio station KHTS-AM in Santa Clarita in Los Angeles County, talks to Vox’s “Today Explained” from CDC quarantine in Omaha.

“What’s weird about this virus is a lot of the symptoms are like a mild cold for me without any of the dripping nose, no sneezing, no body aches; it was simply a very, very high fever that spiked for about 10 hours, disappeared, came back as a low-grade fever about two days later, and other than that and being dehydrated a bit from the fever, I do not have any symptoms of the virus, even though I’m still testing positive so … I’m still contagious; I’m not going to be allowed out of here until authorities are sure that I’m not going to be contagious.”

You can read Goldman’s ongoing blog about his experience here.

Coronavirus Trackers

The San Francisco Chronicle is tracking all the confirmed cases in California by county.

Worldwide, you can’t beat Johns Hopkins’ interactive map. Importantly, they are also tracking the number of recovered patients.

San Francisco to Begin Testing

Following an emergency declaration by the city last week in response to the novel coronavirus, San Francisco city leaders announced on Monday they’re preparing for possible cases.

During a news conference inside City Hall, Mayor London Breed, along with Department of Public Health Director Dr. Grant Colfax, said the city’s health department will begin testing for the virus at city facilities.

Because there have been no cases so far in the city of the coronavirus, also known as COVID-19, Breed urged the public not to become alarmed, but rather to take precautions.

“We don’t want anyone to jump to any conclusions or to jump to fear, because we know that fear will make it possible that less likely, people will come forward when symptoms do occur,” she said.

Colfax said, once the health department begins testing, it will be able to see results within 1 to 2 days, faster than the 3 to 7 days turnaround time from tests sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention labs in Atlanta.

However, Colfax said, the test kits the city received from the CDC are limited, so on-demand tests will not be available.

For now, if primary health care providers suspect a patient might have the virus, they will consult the public health department, which will then consult with the CDC before testing can start.

Patients will not have to pay for the tests.

Colfax said the health department is reaching out to patients with chronic diseases and complex medical needs, encouraging them to see their physicians now and to make sure they have medication for the next three months, in order to free up the city’s health care system.

Additionally, medical professionals are working with nursing homes to ensure that staff and residents are trained to recognize the symptoms of the coronavirus, in order to provide a rapid response.

Colfax also said the health department is working with the San Francisco Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing to provide outreach at shelters, Navigation Centers, residential treatment centers and other places.

Also starting this week, the city has activated more than 50 additional disaster service workers, which includes analysts, administrative staff, bilingual employees and public information officers, as well as others, all trained in the city’s incident command system.

The Big Picture Globally

The coronavirus crisis shifted increasingly westward toward Europe and the United States on Tuesday, with the U.S. Federal Reserve announcing the biggest interest-rate cut in over a decade to try to fend off damage to the world’s biggest economy.

The disease reached deep into Iran’s government, where 23 members of Parliament and the head of the country’s emergency services were reported infected. South Korea started drive-thru testing. The French government announced it is requisitioning supplies of protective masks. And nearly 100 Spanish health care workers were held in isolation.

Virus clusters in the United States led schools and subways to sanitize, quickened the search for a vaccine and spread fears among nursing home residents, who are especially vulnerable.

“We are in uncharted territory,” World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said.

The mushrooming outbreaks contrasted with optimism in China, where thousands of recovered patients were going home and the number of new infections dropped to the lowest level in several weeks.

On Wall Street, stocks jumped after the Federal Reserve announced the emergency rate cut. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said the coronavirus “poses evolving risks to economic activity.” Other Group of Seven countries appeared more reluctant to follow suit, probably because many of their interest rates are already near or below zero.

The U.S. count of COVID-19 cases topped 100, spread across at least 11 states. Six people have died, all in Washington state.

Capitol Hill aides said negotiations are nearing completion on an emergency bill to fund the development of a vaccine and offer disaster loans to businesses hurt by the crisis.

Surgeon General Jerome Adams, a leading public health official in the U.S., urged calm: “Caution, preparedness, but not panic.”

Iran’s supreme leader ordered the military to assist health officials in fighting the virus, which authorities said has killed 77 people — the deadliest outbreak outside China. Among the dead are a confidant of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s former ambassador to the Vatican and a recently elected member of Parliament.

Iran’s judiciary chief, Ebrahim Raisi, said some people are stockpiling medical supplies for profit and urged prosecutors to show no mercy.

“Hoarding sanitizing items is playing with people’s lives, and it is not ignorable,” he said.

France’s president announced the government will take control of current and future stocks of face masks to ensure they could go to health workers and coronavirus patients, and the finance minister warned that binge-shopping for household essentials could trigger shortages.

South Korea saw its largest daily increase in new cases Tuesday, with 851 more infections reported, largely in and around the southeastern city of Daegu. In all, 5,186 in South Korea have tested positive for the virus.

In the capital of Seoul, drive-thru virus testing centers began operating, with workers dressed head-to-toe in white protective suits leaning into cars with mouth swabs, a move meant to limit contact with possible carriers of the illness. Troops were also dispatched across the city to spray streets and alleys with disinfectant.

Worldwide, more than 90,000 people have been sickened and 3,100 have died. The number of countries hit by the virus has reached at least 70, with Ukraine and Morocco reporting their first cases.

In China, the count of new cases dropped again Tuesday, with just 125 reported. It is still by far the hardest-hit country, with over 80,000 infections and about 95% of the world’s deaths.

The count of infected people in Italy climbed to 2,036 with 52 dead, and officials said it could take up to two weeks to know whether measures including quarantines in 11 northern towns are working.

In Japan, questions continued to build about the fate of the Olympics.

The country’s Olympic minister, Seiko Hashimoto, said Japan is “making the utmost effort” to proceed with the games’ opening on July 24 in Tokyo. But she told parliament that the country’s contract with the International Olympic Committee specifies only that the games be held in 2020, meaning they could be postponed to later in the year if necessary.

March 2, 2020, 6:46 p.m. 

The coronavirus spread to ever more countries and world capitals Monday — and the U.S. death toll climbed to six — even as new cases in China dropped to their lowest level in over a month.

In California, Gov. Gavin Newsom is asking the Legislature to approve up to $20 million from a state disaster response emergency account to help fight the spread of the virus.

Newsom also put the State Operations Center in Mather, designed to respond to catastrophic events around the clock, at its second-highest level.

In the Bay Area, San Mateo County also activated its emergency operations center, and Alameda County declared a local public health emergency.

There are now 10 public health labs in the state that have begun testing, the California Department of Public Health said, with 10 more coming online in the coming weeks.

Meanwhile, those who are just now getting around to laying in supplies for an extended quarantine period at home — if and when that becomes necessary — are finding a lots of people already had the same idea, as grocery stores have begun to run low on nonperishable food items, water and emergency supplies.

Residents are reacting to the steady upward climb of cases in the region, the state, the nation and internationally. Here in the Bay Area, the Santa Clara County Public Health Department announced two new cases Monday and three on Sunday, bringing the total number of cases in the county to nine.

A resident from San Mateo has also tested positive for the virus, pending confirmation by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the county health department said.

Sonoma County also confirmed a presumptive positive case. The county’s health department says the patient recently returned from a cruise ship that left San Francisco and was headed to Mexico. The patient is being isolated at a local hospital and is in stable condition, the department said.

The Alameda County Public Health Department and Solano Public Health say three health care workers at NorthBay VacaValley Hospital have presumptively tested positive for COVID-19. Both individuals were exposed to a confirmed case, the Solano health department said in a statement.

Hospital Workers’ Possible Exposure

On Monday, Solano County Public Health Officer Bela Matyas said VacaValley Hospital had checked 93 employees who might have had contact with an infected COVID-19 patient. About three dozen of the workers had symptoms of the virus and were tested. Results showed three presumptive positives, with about a half-dozen results still pending.

Last Friday, the largest union of registered nurses in the U.S. said UC Davis Medical Center had asked 124 nurses and health care workers to self-quarantine at home after having been exposed to the new coronavirus through a patient who had been admitted to the hospital. (UC Davis Medical Center disputed that number today, without releasing a revised figure.)

So What Is a ‘Presumptive Case’ of the Novel Coronavirus?

As you’ve read, a new term is being bandied about by the media in its coronavirus coverage: “presumptive case.” According to Matyas, when local agencies first start running their own tests to detect a pathogen, the results must be confirmed by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Before that occurs, local results must officially use a qualifying “presumptive.”

“The test was developed by the CDC and approved by the FDA, and the materials to run the test are being manufactured so other laboratories can run the test as well,” Matyas said. “Each time one of those other laboratories starts testing, part of the validation process is for CDC to double check their accuracy. So for the first certain number of positives that are found, CDC has to confirm those as positives also.”

Once CDC is satisfied the local tests are accurate, the agency can confirm the cases on its own.

“But from our perspective, we’re acting on every presumptive as though it has been confirmed because we don’t have the luxury of waiting for that second test,” Matyas said.

If You’re Feeling Anxious

It would take a Zen master or a person who just happened to be on a month-long media fast to not be anxious over this epidemic.

However, says Bart MaGee, director of the Access Institute for Psychological Services, “If you’re feeling compelled to go find every Walgreens in San Francisco and see if there’s a bottle of hand sanitizer left, that’s when you need to say, ‘Whoa, OK, I need to slow down. I’ve got to take a deep breath and take care of myself.’”

Dr. John Onate, professor of psychiatry at UC Davis, says we’re all in the same scary boat, which should actually help.

“Talk to your managers or friends and families or your health care provider, because everyone is sort of sharing the anxiety to some degree.”

Onate offers another mental health pro tip: Make sure all the information you’re getting about the virus comes from a reputable source. That would include the California Department of Public Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the World Health Organization.

Nonreputable sources would include any media outlet, website, social media post or hand-scrawled flier that promulgates one of the myths debunked in this WHO page.

Healdsburg School to Reopen

The Healdsburg School says it will reopen Tuesday after consulting with county health officials.

The school shut down Monday after it learned this weekend that an adult and nonemployee within the school community had been exposed to someone infected with the new coronavirus.

Shipping Is Down

Shipping companies have cancelled close to two dozen trips into and out of the Port of Oakland that were scheduled to take place between last week and the beginning of April.

That represents about a 10 to 20 % drop in ship requests, according to Port spokesman Mike Zampa.

He says there are concerns the new coronavirus’s effect on business in China will hurt a major part of the Bay Area’s economy.

“Will importers get the goods they need for assembly lines or store shelves. Will California growers find enough ship space to export farm goods – and yes there are 84 thousand jobs connected to the Port of Oakland. Those may be long shore workers or warehouse workers or railroad employees.”

Zampa says about a third of trade at the Port of Oakland is with China.

We will be updating this post as news comes in.

Bay City News and Associated Press contributed to this report.

Copyright 2020 KQED