Boris Johnson orders UK coronavirus lockdown - Los Angeles Times
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Boris Johnson orders UK coronavirus lockdown

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The Los Angeles Times will provide around-the-clock updates on COVID-19 from across Southern California and around the world.

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During coronavirus outbreak, priests master livestream at Gothic cathedral

MARSEILLE, France — Recent restrictions on gatherings in France to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus have forced religious communities to adapt the way they express their faith.

On a typical Sunday morning, Father Philippe Rochas greets roughly 350 worshippers as they trickle into the neo-Gothic St.-Vincent de Paul church in the heart of Marseille.

This Sunday, however, he sat hunched over a webcam as he and his fellow priests prepared an empty meeting room to livestream Sunday Mass directly to the screens of parishioners confined at home.

“I already realize that the people who see us online are very happy to have this service, as a kind of comfort,” Rochas told the Associated Press.

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‘Virus at Iran’s gates’: How Tehran failed to halt the outbreak

Appearing before the cameras coughing and sweating profusely, the man leading Iran’s response to the new coronavirus promised it was of no danger to his country.

“Quarantines belong to the Stone Age,” Iraj Harirchi insisted.

A day later, he was in quarantine from the virus.

Harirchi’s story is a microcosm of what has happened in Iran in the pandemic. About nine out of 10 cases in the Middle East come from the Islamic Republic, which has reported over 16,000 infections and at least 988 deaths amid fears that cases may still be underreported. While most infected people recover, the virus spreads rapidly and can kill the elderly and those with breathing problems or other underlying illnesses.

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All California trials delayed; L.A. County courts close to public

Criminal and civil trials were discontinued in California for at least two months after a sweeping order was issued late Monday by the state’s chief justice that aims to sharply cut down public traffic in state courthouses during the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

Chief Justice Tani G. Cantil-Sakauye said in her order that court facilities were “ill-equipped to effectively allow the social distancing and other public health requirements” that have been imposed across California to prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus.

“Even if court facilities could allow for sufficient social distancing, the closure of schools means that many court employees, litigants, witnesses, and potential jurors cannot leave their homes to attend court proceedings because they must stay home to supervise their children,” Cantil-Sakauye said in the order.

The 60-day delay — which puts the courts in California’s 58 counties on a uniform trial delay schedule — came the same day that the presiding judge of Los Angeles Superior Court, Kevin C. Brazile, blocked public access to county courthouses except for attorneys, staff, defendants and a “authorized persons,” a vague category that includes news reporters.

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Coronavirus cases in California pass 2,000. Here is what you need to know

California hit another milestone with coronavirus: more than 2,000 cases confirmed.

Officials expect that number to rise significantly amid aggressive new pushes to get more people tested.

The death toll now stands at 43, with two new deaths reported in Los Angeles County. Both state and local numbers show it’s not just the old getting sick. Of those who have tested positive in Los Angeles County, for example, 80% are people ages 18 to 65, and 42% are in the 18-40 age group.

“This virus can infect people from across the board,” Dr. Barbara Ferrer, director of the L.A. County Public Health Department, said Monday.

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New York has more than 20,000 coronavirus cases

More than 20,000 New Yorkers have been infected by the coronavirus, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Monday, meaning the Empire State now accounts for 5% of all cases worldwide.

In a news conference from Albany, the governor said 20,875 cases had been confirmed in New York as of the latest count — an increase by 5,707 since Sunday.

Of those cases, 12,339 were in New York City, according to Mayor Bill de Blasio’s office.

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U.S. to bring home stranded Americans using planes that deport immigrants

With pressure mounting over Americans stranded outside the United States because of coronavirus-related travel restrictions, the government plans to use its planes that deport migrants to bring U.S. citizens home, a senior administration official said Monday.

The use of repurposed deportation flights is one of several actions the State Department is taking to retrieve thousands of Americans grounded in foreign countries since the U.S. began closing its borders and barring arrivals from some nations, in an effort to slow the spread of the highly infectious virus. At the same time, commercial airlines dramatically cut back on flights.

“We’re working around the clock to bring U.S. citizens who are stranded overseas back home,” a senior State Department official said, briefing reporters by phone on grounds of anonymity, in keeping with administration protocol. Consular staffs “have been working night and day to help Americans get on flights.”

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U.S. troops remain at southern border despite waning migration, as coronavirus spreads elsewhere

The United States is in a state of emergency, with thousands of active-duty military and National Guard troops deployed — and not because of the coronavirus.

Under the “national emergency” that President Trump declared in February 2019, roughly 5,200 troops remain at the U.S. southern border to assist in detecting undocumented migrants, though apprehensions are at the lowest levels in years. While other National Guard and military units respond to the rapidly spreading virus, the troops at the border are authorized to stay there through Sept. 30, according to the Defense Department.

The Pentagon “has no plans to pull units off the border for coronavirus response,” Lt. Col. Chris Mitchell told The Times in a statement Monday. The mission has cost more than $500 million, he said.

The troops mainly perform services in support of government border agencies because federal law prohibits the U.S. military from domestic law enforcement activities. Reports of some troops’ duties — including, at one point, painting a border barrier “to improve the aesthetic appearance of the wall” — have led to criticism from lawmakers and former officials that the military is being used for the president’s political agenda.

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City of Los Angeles expands its temporary ban on evictions

The city of Los Angeles has expanded its temporary ban on evictions during the novel coronavirus pandemic by prohibiting landlords from removing tenants from rent stabilized apartments for the purposes of converting them to condominiums, Mayor Eric Garcetti announced Monday afternoon.

Garcetti said he was enacting an executive order prohibiting such evictions under the Ellis Act, a state law that allows people to be ejected from rent-stabilized apartments if the landlord is getting out of the rental business, which can include turning the building into condos.

“This is necessary to protect additional tenants from being displaced from their homes at the exact same moment we’re asking them to stay at home,” Garcetti said.

Between 2001 and 2018, more than 25,000 apartments that had been covered by the city’s rent control laws were removed from the market through the Ellis Act, according to city statistics. Garcetti’s order applies to tenants who have already received eviction notices under the Ellis Act but whose date for vacating their apartment had not occurred.

Monday’s order follows one Garcetti announced last week, which prohibits the evictions of any tenant in the city that can’t pay rent due to health or economic effects caused by the virus.

Garcetti’s action on evictions still require tenants to pay any back rent that accumulates within six months of the expiration of the emergency order. He emphasized Monday that tenants should still pay their rent if they can as landlords need to pay their bills as well.

“It’s important to remember that everyone is struggling right now,” Garcetti said. “Not all property owners are large companies, and many get by on the month to month checks they collect.”

The L.A. City Council had planned to advance some broader protections against evictions on Tuesday, but it’s unclear when that vote will be held after Council President Nury Martinez cancelled the scheduled meeting, citing logistical problems and safety concerns over the virus.

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Coronavirus testing sales by ‘concierge’ doctors under review by medical board

The Medical Board of California is looking into physicians selling COVID-19 tests while sick people around the country can’t get tested because of a nationwide shortage, a board spokesman said Monday morning.

The inquiry comes after The Times reported that “concierge” doctors who cater to rich people and celebrities have been selling testing to patients and their families, in some cases even if they have no symptoms or any other reason to be tested.

Dr. Jay Gordon, a Santa Monica pediatrician, told clients who purchased the tests for $250 each — to be taken at home with a cheek-swab and then sent to a lab to process results — to save the tests until they’re feeling sick.

Gordon said in an earlier interview with The Times that he’s looking out for the best interests of his patients, but acknowledged that his offer represents profound inequality in the American healthcare system.

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Emergency order prohibits rental units from being pulled off the market, Garcetti announces

The mayor also announced an emergency order prohibiting any rental units from being pulled off the market under the Ellis Act, a state law that allows landlords in rent-controlled buildings to get out of the rental business.

The order “clarifies that this special class of evictions is also prohibited,” Garcetti said.

Garcetti also declared that L.A. bars and restaurants are now permitted to deliver alcoholic beverages to residents.

“I will continue to do everything in my local power to support local business and make sure Angelenos stay at home,” Garcetti said.

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At least 8 LAPD officers have the coronavirus; 160 law enforcement cases nationwide

At least eight Los Angeles police officers have tested positive for the coronavirus, including two of the department’s most senior command staff, as concerns about first responders’ increased risk of getting sick grow nationwide.

The number of LAPD officers testing positive has increased in the last few days as the department ramped up testing of those exhibiting symptoms.

As of 5 p.m. Monday, eight police officers and one civilian employee had tested positive for the virus, the department said in a statement.

“The Department has strict protocols for any employee who experiences symptoms of the virus. They are instructed to go home and their work spaces are sanitized,” the statement read. “The health and safety of our men and women continue to be our top priority and we will make every effort to test individuals experiencing symptoms.”

At least 14 officers have been tested for the virus, and the number of confirmed cases within the country’s second largest law enforcement agency is expected to increase, according to law enforcement officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity in order to discuss the matter candidly.

Two of the highest ranking officials in the LAPD are among those who have tested positive, those officials said. A Pacific Division supervisor was the first to contract the virus in the department and had to be hospitalized, the department said last Sunday.

More than 160 police officers across the U.S. have become infected by the coronavirus. Nearly 100 of those cases involve the New York City Police Department. Locally, officers with the Los Angeles Airport and San Jose police departments have also fallen ill.

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Newsom announces ‘soft closure’ of state parks by blocking off parking lots

SACRAMENTO —Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday that he is closing parking lots at California’s state parks in order to deter people from congregating and unintentionally spreading the novel coronavirus.

“We’re going to shut down all state parking lots, and that will go into effect immediately,” Newsom said.

The governor made the announcement four days after he ordered all residents to remain in their homes, making California the first state in the nation to place such restrictions on the movement of its residents in response to the coronavirus. Newsom took drastic action last week in order to slow the spread of the virus before hospitals are overwhelmed with more seriously sick patients than they can adequately treat.

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Trump to delay Real ID deadline due to coronavirus

SACRAMENTO —With the COVID-19 pandemic further stifling the efforts of California and other states to issue Real ID licenses, President Trump on Monday said he will extend the Oct. 1 deadline for people to have the identification cards to board domestic flights in the United States.

Trump made the announcement during a news briefing on the nation’s response to the virus, as the number of confirmed cases across the U.S. now stands at more than 43,000. The resulting public health anxiety has left many Californians unwilling to visit local branches of the Department of Motor Vehicles offices for fear of being infected.

“I’m also announcing that we’re postponing the deadline with Real ID requirements,” Trump said after making other comments during the White House event. “We will be announcing the new deadline very soon.”

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Commentary: Holding NFL draft under current conditions could cause teams to make major mistakes

In this weird coronavirus reality, the sport at center stage is the one that’s not in season.

The NFL provided a distraction last week by staying the course with free agency. Although initially the decision seemed tone deaf, it actually gave millions of fans something to fixate on and discuss that didn’t have life-or-death gravitas.

But the league’s insistence to stick with the April 23-25 dates for the draft could be problematic, giving some teams an unfair advantage and leaving some lesser-known players out in the cold.

Over the weekend, speaking with multiple NFL general managers and player personnel directors from both conferences — each of whom was working from home — they commented on the condition of anonymity so they could be candid.

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Democratic National Committee exploring contingencies for July convention

MILWAUKEE — Democratic National Committee officials are exploring contingencies in case the coronavirus outbreak makes a routine presidential nominating convention impossible.

Statements from convention planners don’t explicitly outline the possibility of a virtual convention. But their acknowledgement underscores the unknowns the party faces amid the pandemic and stay-at-home orders across the county.

The convention is scheduled for July 13-16 in Milwaukee. It would attract about 4,000 delegates and tens of thousands of activists, Democratic donors and media.

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South Africa to go into nationwide lockdown

JOHANNESBURG — South Africa, Africa’s most industrialized economy and a nation of 57 million people, will to go into a nationwide lockdown for 21 days starting Thursday to try to contain the spread of the new coronavirus, the president said Monday.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa announced the measures in response to the increase of COVID-19 cases to 402. South Africa will be the third country in Africa to close down all but essential economic activity, after Rwanda and Tunisia.

South Africa’s coronavirus cases jumped by 47% on Monday from the day before with 128 new cases, increasing worries of exponential growth and making it the country with the most cases in Africa, taking over from Egypt. More than half of South Africa’s total cases are in Gauteng province, which includes Johannesburg, the country’s largest city with 5.7 million people, and the capital, Pretoria, with 2.4 million, according to figures released by the Health Ministry.

South Africa has not registered a known death from COVID-19, the disease caused by the new virus. Officials have said the majority of people infected were travelers from Europe and other countries, although the number of cases that are locally transmitted is rising. South Africa’s crowded working class residential areas and packed commuter trains and minivan taxis are expected to contribute to the spread of COVID-19. Ramaphosa said the lockdown would be enforced by police and the military starting at midnight Thursday. Military convoys have already deployed across Johannesburg.

All South Africans will be required to stay home except for those working in essential services, including healthcare providers, workers in the security industry and those involved in the production and distribution of food, power and medical products, the president said. Individuals will only be allowed to leave home “under strictly controlled circumstances” to access goods such as medical supplies and food, he said. Banks, supermarkets and gas stations will be allowed to continue operations.

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Florida governor to mandate travelers coming from New York City area self-quarantine

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis says he plans to issue an executive order mandating that anyone arriving on a flight from New York City and the surrounding area submit to self-quarantine for two weeks.

DeSantis says over 100 such flights arrive daily in Florida and he believes each one contains at least one person infected with the coronavirus. Passengers will be screened when they arrive and told they must self-quarantine. They won’t be allowed to stay with family or friends because that is one way the virus is spread.

DeSantis says he’s been in contact with federal officials about curtailing such flights, but hasn’t heard back yet. He didn’t say how the self-quarantine would be enforced.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio says he understands DeSantis’ order since New York is an epicenter for the virus in the U.S. However, he has mixed feelings about travel restrictions and says, “I’m not sure it’s the most enlightened approach.”

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Here is where the California National Guard is being deployed to battle coronavirus

The California National Guard on Monday provide details about how personnel would be deployed across the state to assist in coronavirus aid.

Officials said the Guard is being used purely for humanitarian purposes, such as distributing food and medical supplies as well as helping at food banks and working with officials on the Grand Princess cruise ship, which docked in California after an outbreak of the virus on board.

The California National Guard provided details on the initial deployments:

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Italy’s ‘Patient No. 1’ leaves hospital

ROME — The man known in Italy as Patient No. 1 in the country’s devastating outbreak of the coronavirus is out of the hospital a month after he arrived in critically ill condition.

Authorities in Italy’s hardest-hit region of Lombardy played an audio message recorded by the 38-year-old man in which he says, “You can get cured of this illness.”

The man identified only by his first name of Mattia spent 18 days in intensive care on a respirator. After that time, he says he began to do on his own “the most simple and beautiful thing: that is, to breathe.”

The man is awaiting the birth of a child within days. Last week, Italian media reported the death of his father, who lived in one of the first towns in Lombardy that were at the heart of the outbreak’s start.

Italian doctors say that even before Mattia’s case, they suspect the virus was circulating in Italy and that some patients who died of pneumonia last fall might have had coronavirus.

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Even with no games, something fun is Bruin with UCLA announcer Josh Lewin

Josh Lewin’s voice begins the countdown, a sequence that might have accompanied any of his UCLA radio play-by-play calls over the years.

“Twenty-four seconds on the clock … ” Lewin starts, before it immediately becomes evident that this broadcast won’t end with a Joshua Kelley touchdown run or a Jaime Jaquez Jr. three-pointer.

“ … the Old El Paso taquito almost ready,” Lewin continues, his voice narrating a video that pans across the front of a microwave. “A giddy sense of anticipation here in Josh’s kitchen, this crowd — the wife, the dog — everyone waiting for the Maytag microwave to produce these 180 calories of abject perfection.”

The camera moves back toward the clock panel, revealing the final countdown, the tension building.

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Arizona man dies after taking additive for treatment

PHOENIX — An Arizona man has died and his wife is in critical condition after the couple took an additive used to clean fish tanks.

Banner Health says the couple in their 60s took chloroquine phosphate and got sick within 30 minutes.

Last week, Trump misstated that the malaria medication chloroqine was a known treatment for COVID-19. Even after the FDA chief clarified that the drug still needs to be tested, Trump overstated the drug’s potential upside in containing the virus.

Dr. Daniel Brooks, medical director of Banner Poison and Drug Information Center, says the last thing health officials want is for emergency rooms to be swamped by patients who believe they found a vague and risky solution that could potentially jeopardize their health.

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San Francisco warns of coronavirus surge: ‘The worst is yet to come’

MILLBRAE, Calif. — San Francisco officials warned that a surge in coronavirus is expected to come within a week or two, and voiced dismay over images of the public crowding beaches and parks across California.

“The worst is yet to come,” San Francisco Director of Health Dr. Grant Colfax said at a news conference Monday. “Every community where the virus has taken hold has seen a surge in the number of coronavirus patients who need to be hospitalized. We expect that to happen in San Francisco soon, in a week or two, or perhaps even less.”

San Francisco has already taken steps to decompress the healthcare system — banning almost all visitors to hospitals and long-term care facilities, canceling elective surgeries and routine medical visits, and ordering appointments be done by phone or video if possible, and opening up tents to care for mild coronavirus patients to keep hospital beds free.

But officials say based on what’s happened elsewhere, the surge will come

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Robert De Niro and Ben Stiller have a message for New Yorkers: Stay home!

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has gone straight to the people to spread his stay-at-home message — the famous people, that is.

“This is not life as usual. There is a density level in NYC that is destructive. It has to stop and it has to stop now. NYC must develop an immediate plan to reduce density. #StayAtHome,” Cuomo tweeted Sunday morning.

Video messages from Robert De Niro, Danny DeVito, Ben Stiller and Lala Anthony followed, all tagged with New York state’s new slogan: “Stay home. Stop the spread. Save lives.”

The messages, aimed at stopping the spread of the coronavirus, were a reaction to situations in New York that were similar to the scenes at California’s beaches and parks over the weekend. Those gatherings, many of which failed to adhere to social-distancing guidelines, resulted in the closure of local trails, parks and beach parking lots.

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United Talent Agency cuts salaries and top executives forgo pay

United Talent Agency on Monday said it will cut the salaries of its staff, as the entertainment industry continues to grapple with the fallout from the novel coronavirus.

The Beverly Hills business, which has about 1,200 employees, said salaries would be cut across every level and “structured so our most senior colleagues make the largest financial sacrifice.”

UTA CEO Jeremy Zimmer and co-Presidents Jay Sures and David Kramer will give up their salaries for the rest of the year, according to a person familiar with the matter who was not authorized to comment.

“Like companies across the industry and our country, UTA is taking some immediate and painful steps to ensure we get through the current public health and economic crisis as strong as possible,” UTA said in a statement.

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Was your job affected by coronavirus? Here’s how to file for unemployment

As workers lose jobs or have their hours reduced during the coronavirus outbreak, many Californians will turn to unemployment benefits for help.

The state is already seeing a surge in claims. For the week ending March 14, there were 58,208 claims processed, a 34% increase over the previous week, according to the California Employment Development Department.

If you’ve lost a job or had hours reduced due to the pandemic, you can file a claim for unemployment benefits. Parents who have to stay home to care for a child due to a school closure are also eligible.

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Michelle Obama has sage advice on how to cope with coronavirus anxiety

Exhale: Michelle Obama is lending her voice of reason to the ongoing conversation surrounding the coronavirus crisis.

On Sunday, the former first lady joined the growing chorus of public figures weighing in on the pandemic via social media by sharing some healthy tips as to how to navigate this unsettling “new normal.”

“These past few weeks have been scary and difficult for many of us. We just don’t have a roadmap for what we’re currently experiencing — that in and of itself can bring up feelings of anxiety, loneliness, and fear,” the “Becoming” author wrote on Instagram. “Not to mention the worry we feel about the health and safety of our parents, children, and loved ones and the financial security of so many families.”

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Texas joins Ohio in restricting abortion access

On Monday, Texas officials followed the lead of Ohio and restricted access to abortion, citing the coronavirus pandemic.

Texas Atty. Gen. Ken Paxton released a statement saying all licensed healthcare providers, including abortion providers, must postpone procedures “that are not immediately medically necessary” due to an executive order issued by the governor Saturday restricting elective procedures.

Paxton said the restriction applies to, “most scheduled healthcare procedures that are not immediately medically necessary such as orthopedic surgeries or any type of abortion that is not medically necessary to preserve the life or health of the mother.”

“Postponing surgeries and procedures that are not immediately medically necessary will ensure that hospital beds are available for those suffering from COVID-19,” Paxton wrote, and prevent shortages of protective equipment like surgical masks.

He noted that those violating the order could be fined up to $1,000 or jailed for 180 days.

“No one is exempt from the governor’s executive order on medically unnecessary surgeries and procedures, including abortion providers. Those who violate the governor’s order will be met with the full force of the law,” he wrote.

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How likely is it that you’ll get the coronavirus? And what are the chances of survival?

Experts estimate 40% to 70% of us will catch coronavirus at some point during this outbreak. That number comes from Harvard epidemiology professor Marc Lipsitch, one of America’s foremost experts on this disease.

Once you get it, it’s difficult to say exactly how you’ll be affected. The World Health Organization says 14% of people who test positive for COVID-19 will develop symptoms severe enough to require hospitalization and oxygen support.

Originally, there seemed to be a perception that only people 65 and older would become sick enough to require a hospital visit, but so far in the U.S., close to 40% of the people who have needed to be hospitalized were ages 20 to 54, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Half of the patients admitted to the ICU were under 65, according to the same CDC report.

Though children appear to be less likely to require hospitalization than adults, they can still catch (and subsequently spread) the disease. In China, a 14-year-old boy and a 10-month-old died of the disease.

Basically, we are all at risk of catching COVID-19 and developing symptoms severe enough to require hospitalization.

Some people, however, will have the disease and show no symptoms. They might never even realize they have the disease. These “silent spreaders” are a danger to the rest of the population, because they can still be highly contagious. (Before the Chinese government imposed a lockdown on the province of Hubei to try to stop coronavirus from spreading, almost nine out of 10 infections came from carriers who were still healthy, according to a new simulation of the virus’ spread.)

That’s why it’s important for everyone, even if you’re feeling great, to maintain social distancing and try to flatten the curve. Here’s our guide to the do’s and don’ts of social distancing.

Globally, the fatality rate from COVID-19 is still being determined. Estimates have fluctuated but generally fall somewhere in the 0.9% to 3.4% range. But because some people will catch the disease and never show symptoms, they might not be tested and therefore won’t be counted toward the total percentage of survivors.

Older adults and patients with underlying medical conditions are at a much greater risk of dying from COVID-19 than younger, healthier people, but no one is death-proof. An expert panel assembled by WHO determined the following fatality risks based on observing data from China: Among patients of all ages without preexisting medical conditions, the fatality rate was 1.4%. The fatality rate was 13.2% for those with cardiovascular disease, 9.2% for those with diabetes, 8.4% for people with hypertension, 8% for patients with chronic respiratory disease, and 7.6% for those with cancer. Patients age 80 and older died at a rate of 21.9%.

That total 1.4% fatality rate might sound low. The catch is how contagious this disease is and how many people there are. Some quick math demonstrates what 1.4% means: The U.S. population was 327.2 million in 2018. Let’s go with the middle of the range and say 55% of the population catches the coronavirus. That’s about 180 million people.

And 1.4% of that is 2.52 million people.

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Commentary: How a Hollywood poker game keeps the camaraderie — and trash talk — going on Zoom

I don’t care who you are or what you do, everybody has already lost something to the virapocalypse. Personally, I’ve lost lots. So much that as I stood there, counting dust-covered packets of Ramen by the light of my smoldering stock portfolio, I wondered what I was missing most. Restaurants. Sure, who didn’t love eating out? Retirement security, yes, that was nice while it lasted. Sports … I must say, it was shocking to realize what a hole the loss of Premier League Soccer put in my weekends.

And yet, as each of these practical and emotional touchstones was stripped from me — like some cruel future serial killer kid pulling the legs off an ant one by one — none seemed unrecoverable. But flicking through the endless abject horror of my news feed, the thing I found myself missing the most intensely was my Sunday night poker game.

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Amid pandemic, hospitals need medical safety gear. Here’s how you can help

Increasingly desperate pleas from healthcare workers and public authorities for donations of face masks and other protective gear are an unsettling sign of just how unprepared American hospitals are for the COVID-19 pandemic.

Dr. Alison Cooke, assistant chief of hospital medicine for Kaiser Permanente-San Francisco, warned recently that her institution had less than a week’s supply of medical masks for doctors and nurses. “If you have any masks or safety goggles at home, please consider giving them to your nurse and doctor neighbors,” she wrote on the neighborhood social networking site Nextdoor.

On Friday, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo urged nonessential medical offices and other businesses to donate their protective gear to hospitals. And former federal health official Andy Slavitt tweeted a request to dentists, painters, contractors and plastic surgeons, to give “all you have” in the way of masks, gloves or thermometers to local hospitals.

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Long Beach reports first COVID-19 fatality as cases rise

Long Beach confirmed its first COVID-19 fatality on Monday as total cases of the illness caused by the coronavirus rose to 19.

Officials said the victim was a woman in her 50s with underlying health problems.

“We’ve been dreading this day and were hoping it would never come,” said Mayor Robert Garcia. “We extend our deepest condolences to the victim’s family, friends and loved ones. We are all mourn this incredible loss to our community.”

About 140 people in the city have been or are currently being monitored for coronavirus symptoms.

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Which Southern California public spaces are safe to visit during the coronavirus outbreak?

Southern Californians can still walk, hike and bike outdoors without violating Gov. Gavin Newsom’s “stay at home” order, but options are narrowing as public agencies move to stop many activities, including golf and team sports on public courts, parking at many beaches and hiking on trails in the Santa Monica Mountains.

Here’s an update on what’s happening where.

If you leave your residence, local and state officials stress the need to take greater care in maintaining a social distance of at least 6 feet from others.

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Visual Effects Society urges Hollywood to let VFX artists work remotely during coronavirus crisis

The Visual Effects Society, a leading organization representing VFX artists, has called on studios and the film industry to support efforts to allow people to work from home due to the outbreak of the new coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

In a statement Monday, the Visual Effects Society said it “wants to encourage all employers — large or small — to grant permission for their employees to work remotely during this unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic.”

“We understand the concerns around security to protect proprietary work product, but right now is the time for the utmost flexibility towards VFX artists and all practitioners as we try to figure our way through this crisis. Many companies are trying to take action, and we are optimistic that studios and vendors can find and enact workable solutions.”

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Watch live: White House holds news conference

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80% of COVID-19 patients in L.A. County are ages 18 to 65; fatalities rise to 7

Los Angeles County on Monday provided new information about the spread of coronavirus as well as the demographics of the patients.

NEW CASES: Officials confirmed Monday there were 128 new COVID-19 cases in the county and two more deaths from the disease caused by the coronavirus. That brings the total number of fatalities in the county to seven and the total case count to 536.

DEMOGRAPHICS: Of those who have tested positive, 80% are people ages 18 to 65, and 42% are in the 18-40 age group. “This virus can infect affect people from across the board,” said Dr. Barbara Ferrer, director of the L.A. County Public Health Department, on Monday. Those numbers are fairly in line with the statewide breakdown of COVID-19 cases as of Sunday:

  • Ages 0-17: 25 cases
  • Ages 18-49: 837 cases
  • Ages 50-64: 442 cases
  • Ages 65 and older: 415 cases
  • Unknown: 14 cases

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Column: Postpone the Olympic Games now for the sake of everyone involved

Through this global crisis, while the novel coronavirus continues to change the way millions of people think and behave, the International Olympic Committee has remained unshakably constant to its twisted version of noble principles.

The inspirational Olympic motto, “Faster, Higher, Stronger,” has a different meaning to those who sit in lush ivory tower isolation by arrogant choice and not by medical directive. Faster means how rapidly they can rake in revenues from the Games. Higher means they’ve placed themselves so far above the athletes whose achievements they showcase that they are oblivious to the reality that lives and training schedules have been turned upside down by the COVID-19 outbreak. Stronger refers to their stubborn and self-centered plan, as stated Sunday by IOC President Thomas Bach, to take as long as four weeks before deciding whether to proceed with the Tokyo Summer Games on their scheduled dates of July 24 through Aug. 9.

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U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson orders lockdown to try to contain the virus

The U.K. was to go into lockdown as of Monday night after Boris Johnson ordered sweeping measures to stop people leaving their homes.

As the coronavirus pandemic spread across the country, the prime minister approved radical measures to ban unnecessary movement of people for at least three weeks. Police will break up gatherings and have the power to fine individuals who break the tough new laws.

Under the plan:

  • Shops selling nonessential items, playgrounds, libraries and places of worship will be closed.
  • People will be allowed out of their homes only to buy essentials, take one form of exercise a day, travel to work if it can’t be avoided, for medical care, or to help a vulnerable person.
  • The government will review the measures after three weeks to see if they can be relaxed.

Johnson announced the strict measures in a televised address to the nation from his 10 Downing Street office.

“Without a huge national effort to halt the growth of this virus, there will come a moment when no health service in the world could possibly cope,” Johnson said. “From this evening, I must give the British people a very simple instruction: You must stay at home.”

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Admissions scandal: Judge releases one parent from prison early

Imprisoned for conspiring to slip their children into USC as bogus water polo stars, a Napa Valley vintner and a Los Angeles water systems executive asked a judge last week to release them from custody early, citing the specter of the novel coronavirus.

Agustin Huneeus Jr., whose family owns several wineries in Napa, was discharged on March 17, two weeks before his five-month term was up, after U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani found that “extraordinary and compelling reasons” justified the early release.

Incarcerated in Lompoc, Devin Sloane, whose four-month prison term will end April 1, asked Talwani for similar relief and was denied. Even as she turned down the request, Talwani suggested that the process prisoners must follow to seek early release was ill-equipped to address a fast-moving crisis forced on the courts and prison system by the coronavirus outbreak.

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Laguna Beach closing city beaches to further social distancing as response to coronavirus

In an escalated effort to curb the spread of the COVID-19 coronavirus, the city of Laguna Beach has directed staff to close city beaches by Monday night unless Orange County or the state does so before then.

The City Council also directed staff to take necessary actions to close local trail access to county wilderness parks and to ask the county to close its beaches in Laguna Beach or allow the city to do so.

Closure of the city’s beaches is to encompass adjacent parks including Main Beach, Heisler and Treasure Island parks.

“The safety of the public is our utmost concern, and this decision was not taken lightly by the City Council. We were unanimous that these steps must be taken now in our city to slow the spread of COVID-19,” Laguna Beach Mayor Bob Whalen said in a statement Sunday night.

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Is it safe to walk, run or bike outside right now? Yes, and this is how

Some beaches and hiking trail heads were so crowded over the weekend that Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti on Sunday tightened rules for people who want to go outdoors. Some parks have closed; golf and team sports on public courts in L.A. parks have been banned. Group gatherings for outdoor activities also are on the “don’t do” list.

Right now, you can still visit your favorite park or trail. The L.A. County Public Health’s website says: “Individuals and families can also participate in outdoor activities, such as hiking or walking, as long as they can stay at least 6 feet from others while doing so.”

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Bunker with a bowling alley: How the rich are running from coronavirus

Hand sanitizer? Sure. Face masks? Fine. But as the coronavirus spreads, the rich are investing in a much more extreme way to ward off the disease: bunkers.

Inquiries and sales are skyrocketing for bunkers and shelters across the country.

Most come equipped with special air-filtration systems, which buyers believe will come in handy to keep out a virus that can reportedly linger in the air for several hours. And for those fearing a broader societal collapse down the road, a secure safe room with a year’s worth of food can provide peace of mind.

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Los Angeles County officials confirm 128 new cases, two more deaths

Los Angeles County officials on Monday confirmed 128 new COVID-19 cases and two more deaths, bringing the total number of fatalities in the county to seven and the total case count to 536.

Of those who have tested positive, 80% are ages 18 to 65, and 42% are in the 18-40 age group.

Ninety people who have been infected in the county have at some point been hospitalized while sick, said Dr. Barbara Ferrer, director of the L.A. County Public Health Department. That’s 17% of those who have tested positive.

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Coronavirus cases in Orange County jump to 125

The number of coronavirus infections in Orange County cracked triple digits on Monday.

There are now 125 confirmed COVID-19 cases in the county, up 30 from Sunday, according to the Orange County Health Care Agency. Despite the steady increase in cases, no deaths have been reported.

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Landlords will be granted U.S. mortgage relief if they delay evictions

Many landlords may be allowed to fall behind on their mortgage payments amid the coronavirus outbreak in return for not kicking renters out of their apartments.

The Federal Housing Finance Agency said Monday that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would grant mortgage forbearance to owners of multifamily properties in exchange for suspending evictions. The move applies to all Fannie- and Freddie-backed mortgages in situations where renters can’t afford to make their monthly payments due to the outbreak.

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L.A. County has secured 20,000 new tests

L.A. County has secured 20,000 new coronavirus tests with a processing capacity of 5,000 tests per day, officials announced Monday. The tests will be free, and healthcare workers and first responders will be prioritized for testing.

Additionally, L.A. City Councilman David Ryu said officials were working with a South Korean company to have 100,000 coronavirus tests available to the area per week, with the ability to run 30,000 per day.

“With increased testing comes an increase in reported infections,” Ryu said. “This does not necessarily mean we’re having an outbreak of new infections. Rather, testing is helping us identify our current problem.”

To date, Ryu said that roughly 25,200 test had been conducted in California.

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West Hollywood mayor, who tested positive, describes life with the coronavirus

For West Hollywood Mayor John D’Amico, who tested positive for the novel coronavirus last week, gratefulness under quarantine looks like this: a loving husband. Two loyal dogs, Dodger and Mr. Big. And a long driveway for solo walks.

“I can imagine being stir crazy,” D’Amico said. “For now, it’s OK. It’s OK to slow down and be grateful for the things I do have.”

The mayor’s positive test on March 18 came as city officials were in the midst of aggressive planning to combat the disease’s spread. That day, city staffers were ordered to leave work. Facilities were deep-cleaned. City Hall remains closed.

A dense, 1.9-square-mile city of 37,000 people, West Hollywood had 19 confirmed cases of coronavirus infection as of Monday morning, the most per capita in Los Angeles County.

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IOC member gives conflicting statements on postponement of Tokyo Olympics

A longtime International Olympic Committee member gave differing statements Monday on the potential for postponement of the 2020 Summer Games in Tokyo.

Dick Pound of Canada, an influential and outspoken figure with the IOC for decades, told the CBC he believed the Games would be moved to a later date.

“We’re all reading the tea leaves and so on, but the Japanese themselves are talking about postponing,” he was quoted as saying. “A lot of national Olympic committees and countries are calling for a postponement.”

That comment seemed to fall short of another interview Pound gave with USA Today, in which he stated that “postponement has been decided.”

Reached at home by the Los Angeles Times, Pound initially agreed to talk but asked a reporter to call back. He then hung up on the return call.

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Trump shows impatience with public health experts on coronavirus

WASHINGTON — With the nation’s economy shuddering to a stop, millions of Americans out of work and another cliff dive in the stock market Monday, President Trump and his allies began showing public and private impatience with the extreme restrictions federal and state officials have ordered to deal with the exploding coronavirus crisis.

Even as U.S. infections and deaths jumped again, and additional cities and states issued stay-at-home orders, Trump says he will reassess his administration’s call to close schools and offices, encourage people to work from home and avoid gatherings after a 15-day period that ends on March 30.

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‘Once on This Island,’ the first Broadway tour to end early because of pandemic

The traveling production of “Once on This Island” has wrapped its scheduled run four months early, making it the first Broadway national tour to close prematurely because of the coronavirus.

Michael Arden, who received his second Tony Award nomination for directing the acclaimed revival, announced the news on Saturday via Instagram.

“It’s a great loss for so many, but I am deeply proud of everyone who came together to make this production happen from day one, who lifted their voices, paintbrushes, hands and hearts to spread the word of love and forgiveness and celebrated the human spirit’s resilience against even the greatest of odds.”

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Navy hospital ship to arrive in Los Angeles by end of week, officials say

A Navy hospital ship being to sent to Los Angeles to treat non-coronavirus patients is due to leave San Diego on Monday afternoon and to arrive by the of the week, Navy officials said.

The Mercy, which has 1,000 hospital beds, will take until the end of this week to make the short trip because the crew will be conducting training while in transit, the officials said at a Pentagon news conference. The ship will dock at the Port of Los Angeles and be ready to take patients the day after arriving.

“We definitely have a sense of urgency and want to be there as soon as possible,” said Capt. John R. Rotruck, the commander of the medical team. He added that ship would act as a “relief valve” for local hospitals.

Patients not infected with the virus will be transferred to the ship from local hospitals to free up beds for treating coronavirus infection cases, officials said. Patients will be screened for the coronavirus before being admitted to Mercy.

The ship is equipped and staffed to conduct a wide variety of medical procedures, including surgery and critical care. It will not offer obstetrics or pediatrics, the officials said.

The Mercy will remain in Los Angeles as long as required but could go to other ports if needed.

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Hawaii visitors face strict 14-day quarantine upon arrival

Amid the spread of the novel coronavirus to all 50 states, Hawaii’s governor ordered a strict quarantine for arriving passengers. Anyone flying to the islands will have to quarantine at home or at their hotel for 14 days. Also, Hawaiian Airlines will suspend all but one flight between the U.S. mainland and Hawaii beginning Thursday.

Hawaii Gov. David Ige ordered the strict airline passenger quarantine Saturday.

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Packed parks and overflowing trains: Britain inches toward a crackdown on crowds

LONDON —The images abound on social media and newspaper front pages: a crowded Monday morning commute on the London Tube, parks and beaches packed with weekend joggers and walkers.

With many Britons appalled by compatriots who are flouting social-distance recommendations put in place to try to stem the spread of the coronavirus, pressure mounted on Prime Minister Boris Johnson to enact stricter controls.

Like President Trump, Johnson has taken reluctant steps toward imposing isolation measures that drastically curtail economic activity. Many public health experts say without swift action, Britain’s chances of averting an Italy-style trajectory, with an onslaught of cases, are dimming.

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Senate partisanship boils over as stimulus talks stall

WASHINGTON — Senate Republicans and Democrats grew visibly angry and emotional on the Senate floor Monday morning as negotiations over a financial rescue package appeared to stall, even as Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) said he and Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin were close to a final agreement.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) bitterly accused Democrats of fiddling with politics by trying to add to the deal unrelated environmental policies. Schumer similarly blamed Republicans for issuing “partisan screeds” instead of engaging in serious negotiation.

In a sign of the fiercely partisan back and forth, Schumer briefly blocked Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) from speaking on the floor. Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) shouted, “This is bullshit.”

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An estimated 13,500 American citizens stranded abroad, official says

WASHINGTON — A senior State Department official says that roughly 13,500 American citizens stranded abroad because of the coronavirus pandemic are seeking help in returning to the United States.

The official said Monday that thousands more Americans were expected to return on department-arranged flights in the coming weeks, about 1,500 of whom are booked on flights over the next several days. The official said the repatriations were being done with a combination of military flights, chartered passenger planes and commercial airlines where airports are still open. The official said the Department of Homeland Security had also offered to bring Americans home on planes that it used to return deportees to mainly Central American nations.

The official says that since late January the department has helped to evacuate more than 5,000 Americans from 17 countries, including early repatriation efforts for 800 people from China and more than 300 from the Diamond Princess cruise ship in Japan. Some 1,200 from were transported from Morocco last week, the official said.

The official urges Americans abroad seeking help to join the department’s Smart Traveler Enrollment Program to receive alerts from embassies. The official said the department had, over the weekend, doubled the capacity of the server that handled STEP enrollments to address complaints that the system was not working well. The department also set up call lines for Americans needing assistance: (888) 407-4747 (toll free) or (202) 501-4444.

A second official says fewer than 30 State Department employees at 220 embassies, consulates and other diplomatic facilities have thus far tested positive for the virus and that the number of U.S.-based employees is in the single digits, with clusters of one or two testing positive at offices in Washington, Boston, Houston, Seattle and Quantico, Va. The State Department employs some 75,000 people worldwide. Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to speak on the matter by name.

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L.A. City Council president cancels upcoming council meetings

Los Angeles City Council President Nury Martinez canceled council meetings that had been scheduled for Tuesday and next week, saying that the city needed to ensure it was ready to meet “recommended safety standards.”

The Tuesday meeting had been planned, in part, as a teleconferencing meeting during which members of the public could call in with comments. Some council members would also have been in the council chambers, Martinez said in her letter.

Martinez said that everything slated for the Tuesday meeting would be rescheduled for a future meeting. Last week, council members put forward a long list of proposals to address the needs of Angelenos during the coronavirus pandemic, including boosting sick leave and restricting evictions, that have not yet been formally drafted and passed as laws.

Martinez said that “one way or another, we must meet to resolve those items and assist the good people of Los Angeles.”

“Should there be any emergency items that the council needs to address, I will convene an emergency meeting to take action once all safety and logistical concerns have been met,” Martinez added.

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Verizon to offer free student internet for L.A. Unified

Supt. Austin Beutner announced Monday that Verizon will provide free internet access for all students who do not currently have it so learning can continue.

Beutner said he has authorized $100 million in spending on technology to help students as the district struggles to provide online learning for about half a million students, many without internet access at home. The district is working on a plan to distribute more computers to students and instructions for accessing the Verizon program.

Los Angeles Unified and San Diego Unified have appealed to the state for emergency aid, saying that costs related to the outbreak have thrown their budgets out of balance, creating serious financial problems.

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Coronavirus to cost California 125,000 hotel jobs, more than any other state, trade group says

Struck by a severe drop in travel demand, California’s hotel industry is expected to lose more than 125,000 jobs in the next few weeks, more than any other state, an industry trade group estimated Monday.

The hotel industry in the Golden State is expected to be hit hardest by the coronavirus outbreak because California has the most hotel jobs — about 285,000 — according to the American Hotel and Lodging Assn. trade group.

In addition to the loss of 125,000 hotel jobs, another 414,000 jobs that are supported by the hotel industry, such as waiters, busboys, bartenders and limousine drivers, could disappear in the next few weeks, the group said.

Only last month, the average occupancy rate — the percentage of hotel rooms filled — was 62% across the country, according to STR Global, a Tennessee company that tracks hotel data. By mid-March, the average occupancy rate nationwide had dropped to 53%.

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Salvation Army offers stores and camps as homeless shelters amid outbreak, but it’s a leap

Just like for-profit businesses across California, the Salvation Army has taken a hit from the social distancing measures enacted to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

On Wednesday, with foot traffic drained, the giant nonprofit best known for its Christmastime bell ringers shut down 17 thrift stores in Los Angeles County and 10 in Orange County.

The next day, top brass from the military-structured organization made an unexpected appearance in federal court in Los Angeles, offering up its stores and several other facilities as part of the response to COVID-19, which threatens to ravage homeless encampments across the city.

The Salvation Army is now in talks with the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority to determine if any of its facilities, which include two mountain camps and an 80,000-square-foot warehouse in the city of Bell, would be useful for housing homeless people — either to prevent them from being exposed to the virus or to quarantine those who may come down with it.

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City of Hayward opens free testing center

The city of Hayward opened a free, public COVID-19 testing center Monday that officials say should be able to screen up to 350 people a day and provide results within 24 hours.

The center — at city Fire Station #7, 28270 Huntwood Ave. — will be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily and staffed by personnel from the Hayward Fire Department. It’s a cooperative effort between the Alameda County city and Avellino, a Menlo Park-based precision medicine company.

As of Monday morning, there were “dozens of people who have presented themselves for testing, arriving both by car and on foot,” said city spokesman Chuck Finnie.“It’s about testing sick people and first responders and health workers who’ve had recent exposure to COVID-19 or suspected exposures to COVID-19,” he said.

While no doctor’s referral is required, people arriving at the center will be screened for symptoms of the disease — such as fever, cough and shortness of breath — before they’re tested.The hope, city officials say, is that those who test positive will then be properly isolated, reducing community spread of the coronavirus.

“Suppression, through isolation after testing, or SIT, as we call it, is an approach that has proven to be most effective in countries on the leading edge of this pandemic,” Hayward Fire Chief Garrett Contreras said in a statement.

Finnie said the city hopes the testing center will become a model — both for the wider Bay Area and beyond.“We just think it’s essential that there’s a robust testing component to our efforts to address transmission of the virus, so we’ve done everything we can to create that in Hayward,” he said. “And, hopefully, it will be recreated in other places in the region and elsewhere.”

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COVID-19 lung patterns show few clues for treating pneumonia

Scans of the lungs of the sickest COVID-19 patients show distinctive patterns of infection, but so far those clues are offering little help in predicting which patients will pull through.

For now, doctors are relying on what’s called supportive care, which is standard for treating patients with severe pneumonia.

Doctors in areas still bracing for an onslaught of sick patients are scouring medical reports and hosting webinars with Chinese doctors to get the best advice on what has and hasn’t worked.

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Marin County’s public health officer has coronavirus and a message for community

Marin County’s public health officer, who has tested positive for coronavirus infection, offered an urgent message to others in his community.

In a video message recorded Sunday night, Dr. Matt Willis announced that he had tested positive for the virus that afternoon. Willis said he had been self-quarantined from his family since his symptoms first appeared late last week.

“My case is further proof that COVID-19 is with us,” said Willis. “While my symptoms are now mild, as most people’s will be, we also know that for many, especially our elders, this same illness can be life-threatening.”

Willis’ source of exposure is currently unknown, because he has met with healthcare workers in the Bay Area.

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TSA says 24 screening officers at 10 airports test positive

An airport worker at LAX amid the coronavirus outbreak.
An airport worker at LAX. The TSA says security lanes remain open but the number of passengers is at a record low.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

WASHINGTON — The Transportation Security Administration is reporting that 24 screening officers at 10 airports around the country have now tested positive for the coronavirus.

It also says an additional five employees who have limited interaction with travelers have also tested positive. Those numbers from Monday are up from just seven employees a week earlier.

Hardest hit is New York City’s John F. Kennedy Airport, where five screening officers have tested positive.

TSA says security lanes remain open, but there are fewer passenger than have ever been counted by the agency at U.S. airports.

In addition to both New York City airports, officers have tested positive at airports in Newark, N.J.; Washington, D.C.; New York City; Fort Lauderdale and Orlando in Florida; Atlanta; Cleveland; St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands; and San Jose.

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Puerto Rico announces $777-million financial package, 90-day moratorium on mortgages

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Puerto Rico has announced a record $777-million financial package to help alleviate the economic effects of the coronavirus in the U.S. territory.

The package is the biggest so far compared with any U.S. state.

Gov. Wanda Vázquez said Monday there would be a 90-day moratorium on mortgages as well as car, personal and commercial loans. She also announced a flurry of bonuses, including $2,000 to $4,000 bonuses for nurses, police and other emergency workers.

The announcement comes amid a 13-year recession on an island still struggling to recover from Hurricane Maria and a string of recent strong earthquakes that together caused billions of dollars in losses.

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LAUSD spring sports season remains uncertain

With the Los Angeles Unified School District announcing on Monday that was extending school closures through at least May 1 in trying to deal with the coronavirus outbreak, there’s growing uncertainty whether the spring high school sports season will be able to resume.

“It’s so fluid,” said City Section commissioner Vicky Lagos. “We’re in wait-and-see mode. We’re still suspended.”

The 10 section commissioners of the CIF are scheduled to hold a teleconference on April 3. In their last teleconference, on March 17, they declined to make a decision on whether to cancel regional and state competitions.

“It gives us time to assess where everyone in the state is and what our options are,” said Ron Nocetti, executive director of the CIF.

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Pentagon to provide Seattle, New York with military field hospitals

The Pentagon is planning to provide military field hospitals to Seattle and New York City later this week to treat non-coronavirus patients and free up bed space in civilian hospitals, Defense Secretary Mark Esper said at a news conference Monday.

The planned move is still awaiting approval by officials at the Department of Health and Human Services.

Field hospitals can supply as many as 1,000 beds in tents and are staffed by military medical personnel. They are mainly equipped for trauma care, not infectious diseases, but could alleviate crowding at civilian facilities, officials.

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Neil Diamond’s coronavirus parody of ‘Sweet Caroline’ is so good (so good, so good!)

Neil Diamond shared a real gem on social media this weekend while in self-quarantine.

In an effort to boost spirits as the coronavirus continues to cause panic, the music icon updated a classic song to comment on these surreal times.

On Saturday, Diamond debuted a new version of his 1969 hit “Sweet Caroline,” with some fresh, CDC-approved lyrics.

“I know we’re going through a rough time right now, but I love you, and I think maybe if we sing together, well, we’ll just feel a little bit better,” Diamond, 79, said at the top of the brief video. “Give it a try, OK?”

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Hollywood Burbank Airport employee tests positive for the coronavirus

A ground-support employee responsible for handling luggage at Hollywood Burbank Airport has tested positive for the coronavirus, according to a statement released on Monday by the company that employs the worker.

The employee, who works for GAT Airline Ground Support, last worked at the Burbank airport on March 15 and is “recovering at home and doing well,” Mike Hough, chief executive of the company, said in a statement on Monday.

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UC Irvine in clinical trial to test drug’s potential to treat COVID-19

UC Irvine will participate in a National Institutes of Health clinical trial to test the antiviral drug remdesivir as a potential therapy for COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the coronavirus that has triggered a global pandemic, the university said Monday morning.

UCI Health scheduled an 11 a.m. news conference call to provide details.

COVID-19 can involve mild to severe respiratory illness, with symptoms including fever, cough and shortness of breath. In older adults and people with preexisting medical conditions that may compromise their immune systems, the illness can develop into severe pneumonia.

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United Nations wants worldwide cease-fire

UNITED NATIONS — U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called Monday for an immediate cease-fire in conflicts around the world to tackle the coronavirus pandemic.

The U.N. chief said: “It is time to put armed conflict on lockdown and focus together on the true fight of our lives.”

Guterres said people caught in armed conflicts, which are raging around the world, were among the most vulnerable and “also at the highest risk of suffering devastating losses from COVID-19.”

He told reporters from U.N. headquarters in New York that it was time to silence guns, stop artillery, end airstrikes and create corridors for lifesaving aid.

“End the sickness of war and fight the disease that is ravaging our world,” the secretary-general said.

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WHO says outbreak is accelerating but insists trajectory of pandemic can be altered

GENEVA — The head of the World Health Organization says the coronavirus outbreak is accelerating but insists “we can change the trajectory of this pandemic.”

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus noted that COVID-19 has now been reported in nearly every country in the world.

He said 67 days elapsed from the first reported case to 100,000 cases; it took 11 days for the second 100,000 cases to be reported; and just four days for the third 100,000 cases.

Tedros said he would speak with heads of state and government from the G20 countries regarding “lifesaving tools” that are in increasingly short supply. He said he would ask leaders to help increase production, avoid export bans, and ensure fair distribution of the tools.

He noted measures put in place to slow the spread of the virus might be exacerbating shortages of essential protective gear and the materials.

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Malibu beach parking lots closed

L.A. County Sheriff Alex Villanueva closed beach parking lots along Malibu’s 26 miles of coastline on Monday to promote social distancing in an effort to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

Among the parking lots shut:

  • Topanga
  • Surfrider
  • Corral Canyon
  • Point Dume
  • Zuma
  • El Matador
  • La Piedra
  • Nicholas Canyon
  • Leo Carrillo

The move came after a weekend that saw crowds flocking to the beaches along the California coast.

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Navy hospital ship heads to Los Angeles

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Butcher shops are seeing a huge spike in meat sales

Now is the time to turn on the slow cooker, set it and forget it.

Butcher shops have seen a dramatic rise in sales in the last week due to the virtual citywide quarantine, with many customers stocking up on cuts that lend themselves well to freezing and long cooking times.

“It’s been a crazy couple days,” said Jered Standing, owner of Standing’s Butchery on Melrose Avenue. “Monday we sold 10 times more than a normal Monday. I would have thought it was impossible to sell that much meat in that short amount of time.”

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Orange County to house older homeless people not showing signs of virus

A former juvenile correctional facility in Orange County will be used as a shelter for older individuals who are homeless but not showing signs of coronavirus infection, officials said.

The temporary shelter at Joplin Youth Center — which the Orange County Probation Department operated in Trabuco Canyon until May — will be open for “sheltered homeless persons who are older but not exhibiting any symptoms of COVID-19,” county officials said in a statement Sunday.

“The county is working with shelter providers to identify individuals who fit this category and to maximize the space at Joplin while maintaining safe social distance.”

Officials also are moving to identify and secure other alternative shelters.

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Tom Hanks says he and Rita Wilson ‘feel better.’ Meanwhile, she’s rapping

Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson “feel better,” the “Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood” actor tweeted Sunday.

The Hollywood couple has been quarantined in Australia after contracting COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus. Hanks was down there filming Baz Luhrmann’s untitled Elvis Presley movie, in which he plays Col. Tom Parker.

“Sheltering in place works like this: You don’t give it to anyone — you don’t get it from anyone,” Hanks continued in his tweet. “Common sense, no? Going to take awhile, but if we take care of each other, help where we can, and give up some comforts ... this, too, shall pass. We can figure this out.”

Hanks and Wilson, both 63, were the first celebrities to go public with their positive coronavirus test, announcing their situation March 11. Since then, they’ve been sequestered.

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel tests negative

BERLIN — Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokesman says the German leader has tested negative for the coronavirus.

Spokesman Steffen Seibert told news agency dpa on Monday that “further tests will be conducted in the coming days.”

Merkel went into quarantine at home on Sunday evening after being informed that a doctor who had administered a vaccine to her had tested positive for the coronavirus.

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School closures at LAUSD and other districts extended to at least May 1

Los Angeles public schools will remain closed until May 1 in response to the coronavirus outbreak, district officials announced Monday in communications sent to parents.

The announcement extended a closure that was originally scheduled for two weeks — with Monday marking the beginning of the second week. The extension came after the county’s top education official, Debra Duardo, who has no direct authority over L.A. Unified operations, recommended that all school districts in the county remain shuttered until May 5.

Gov. Gavin Newsom said last week that was likely that campuses would remain closed for the remainder of the traditional school year.

Schools and school districts are turning to online learning to keep academic activities going, with mixed results.

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Coronavirus clears out famed Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills

Most California residents appear to be following an order by Gov. Gavin Newson to stay home as a precaution against the spread of coronavirus.
Most California residents appear to be following an order by Gov. Gavin Newson to stay home as a precaution against the spread of coronavirus.
(Jay L. Clendenin/Los Angeles Times)

Gov. Gavin Newsom’s stay-at-home order has changed the landscape throughout the state. Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills is no different. The high-end shops are closed, the normally bustling sidewalks empty. The iconic location now resembles more of a closed movie set than a tourist destination.

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Harvey Weinstein has tested positive for coronavirus, source says

Harvey Weinstein has tested positive for the coronavirus inside a New York state prison, according to a state source with knowledge of the matter.

The positive test came back Sunday at the Wende Correctional Facility where Weinstein is being held, roughly 30 miles outside of Niagara Falls, N.Y., according to the source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity in order to discuss Weinstein’s medical status.

The president of the union that represents New York State correctional officers also told Reuters Weinstein had tested positive and that several prison employees had been quarantined as a result.

State corrections officials have not responded to requests for comment from The Times. On Sunday, the department issued a statement confirming two people had tested positive for the virus at the facility where Weinstein is being housed.

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Sen. Amy Klobuchar’s husband tests positive

Sen. Amy Klobuchar announced today that her husband, John, tested positive for the novel coronavirus.

The three-term Minnesota senator and former presidential candidate said that her husband’s symptoms began when he was in Washington, D.C. and she was in Minnesota. He initally believed he had a cold and quickly quarantined himself, later developing a “bad, bad cough” and soon began coughing up blood, Klobuchar said.

“(John) now has pneumonia and is on oxygen but not a ventilator,” she said.

Klobuchar said her doctors advised her not to get a test because she is outside the 14-day period for getting sick.

“As everyone is aware, there are test shortages for people who need them everywhere and I don’t qualify to get one under any standard. I love my husband so very much and not being able to be there at the hospital by his side is one of the hardest things about this disease,” Klobuchar said. “I hope he will be home soon.”

The senator remains in Washington while her husband is in Minnesota.

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Top doctor said he can’t stop Trump from talking at briefings

WASHINGTON— Dr. Anthony Fauci says he can’t jump in front of the microphone to stop President Donald Trump from speaking at daily White House briefings on the coronavirus outbreak.

The nation’s top infectious disease expert tells Science magazine in an interview that Trump listens “even though we disagree on some things.”

“He goes his own way. He has his own style,” Fauci, the longtime director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said in the telephone interview with the magazine on Sunday. “But on substantive issues, he does listen to what I say.”

Trump complained at a recent briefing that China should have told the world about the virus much earlier. The new coronavirus originated in China. Fauci says he told the “appropriate people” after Trump made the comment that “it doesn’t comport, because two or three months earlier would have been September.”

Fauci said that Trump’s aides may caution him against repeating the statement but that if the president chooses to say it again, “I can’t jump in front of the microphone and push him down.”

Trump and Fauci sparred politely but publicly last week over whether a malaria drug would work to treat people with the coronavirus disease.

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India halts its crucial train network

NEW DELHI— As India expanded its virus-containment measures and halted its train network, the country’s lifeblood, the federal government warned Monday of strict legal action for those who flout the rules. The wholesale shutdown of India’s massive train system is unprecedented.

“Please save yourself, save your family,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted in Hindi, calling for states to follow the preventive measures issued by the federal government to contain the spread of the virus.

The strict legal action vowed wasn’t immediately clear. Other places have simply sent violators home, since alternatives like detention would create crowded conditions where the virus could spread.

To contain the outbreak, authorities have gradually started to lock down much of the country of 1.3 billion people, sending stock markets to record lows. Parliament adjourned its session, and India’s civil aviation authority banned all commercial flights within India starting Wednesday. International flights were kept from landing from Sunday until at least March 31.

At least 80 districts where cases of infection have been detected are under stringent lockdown. Police and health care were operating, but commercial establishments have closed except for essential services. Banks have asked their customers to switch to online transactions and reduced their office staff. The government has fervently appealed for people to practice social distancing and wash their hands often.

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Reading Camus’ ‘The Plague’ in the time of coronavirus

In my self-isolating household in upstate New York, the pandemic has thus far produced boredom eating, boredom watching, hiking, candlelight dinners and, later in the evening, some reading out loud. We are living in the eerie, low-pressure vacuum before the storm. A friend emails from the Bay Area to say she’s baked her first loaf of bread; another writes from Australia to say that this epidemic will be “a giant mirror held up to everyone,” and that he is reading Mary Shelley’s “The Last Man.” A neighbor walking his dog halloos from across the fence. He doesn’t dare come closer, but he has something he wants to say: “Perhaps this will be a Great Reset.”

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Here are the latest L.A. County communities with confirmed COVID-19 cases

With more testing, the number of coronavirus infections in Los Angeles County continued to spike over the weekend, growing by 132.

Officals on Sunday reported an additional death related to COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus; it was the county’s fifth. The Culver City resident was older than 65 and had underlying health conditions, the county Department of Public Health said.

The county recorded 71 new cases of coronavirus infections, bringing the total to 409. Of the total, 319 were ages 19 to 64.

Eighty-four people have been hospitalized, public health officials said.

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USC women’s water polo deals with ‘insane’ event for second season in a row

Denise Mammolito could barely believe the news. Even though the USC water polo player was sitting in virtual class — a sign of the growing coronavirus outbreak — she couldn’t grasp that the virus could possibly take the NCAA championships away too.

They were still two months away, she reasoned. Then the feeling of shock only intensified when she noticed the date.

March 12.

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As COVID-19 deaths rise to 35, California enlists National Guard, Navy hospital ship for help

With the number of COVID-19 deaths in California at 34, federal, state and local officials are moving to protect hospitals from what is expected to be an onslaught of patients while tightening unprecedented restrictions on movements in an effort to slow the spread of the virus.

There are now more than 1,800 cases of coronavirus infection in California, and that number is expected to grow as more testing occurs.

Los Angeles County health officials on Sunday confirmed another death from the disease caused by the virus, bringing the total to five. They also reported 71 new cases in the county, with the total now 409. There were 132 new cases reported over the weekend.

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U.S. futures, world markets sink as virus crisis deepens

NEW YORK —U.S. futures slipped more than 3% on Monday and share benchmarks in many world markets logged sharp losses as governments tightened restrictions to fight the coronavirus pandemic.

Stocks fell in Paris, London and Frankfurt, Germany, after a brutal session in Asia on Monday.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 index was the outlier, gaining 2.0% after the International Olympic Committee and Japanese officials indicated they are considering postponing the Tokyo Games, due to begin in July.

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U.S. stocks open lower as economic relief bill stalls in Congress

U.S. stocks opened lower Monday after a bill to provide emergency help to the coronavirus-stricken economy stalled in Congress.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index was down 2.3% around 6:50 a.m. Pacific time. The Dow Jones industrial average fell 2%, or about 375 points. The Nasdaq composite was off 1.3%.

The market had been set to open even lower until the Federal Reserve announced its most aggressive action yet to protect the economy from the extensive damage being caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

The Fed said it would buy as much government debt as it deems necessary and will also begin lending to businesses and local governments.

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In Alaska, Medicaid funding is depleted, local outlet report

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The state of Alaska fears it will run out of money to pay doctors, hospitals and clinics who treat Medicaid patients.

The Anchorage Daily News reported effects of the shortfall on health care expected to begin Monday could not be precisely determined. The shortfall is a consequence of last year’s budget cuts and the Legislature’s failure this year to approve a $360 million supplemental budget.

Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy and the Legislature cut nearly $170 million from the Medicaid budget last year. The governor has proposed to reverse cuts, but in the meantime the state’s Medicaid accounts have been depleted.

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Puerto Rico has second death

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — The second death from COVID-19 in Puerto Rico is a tourist from the United States.

The Health Department says the victim is a 73-year-old man who was vacationing in the U.S. territory with his wife and had other health problems.

The island has 31 confirmed coronavirus cases and at least 69 pending test results. Police have detained and cited more than 200 people for violating a two-week curfew imposed last week.

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South Africa’s cases jump to 402, has most in Africa

JOHANNESBURG — South Africa’s coronavirus cases jumped to 402 on Monday. That is an increase of 128 cases from the day before as it is the country with the most cases in Africa.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa is expected to speak to the nation about the growing threat and many expect him to announce new restrictive measures to try to slow the spread of the disease.

More than half of South Africa’s total cases are in the Gauteng province, which include Johannesburg and Pretoria. Johannesburg has 5.7 million people, South Africa has 57 million people.

The new government figures put South Africa ahead of Egypt, which has 372 cases. South Africa has not registered a death from the disease.

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UCLA’s beach volleyball team was aiming for title until coronavirus ended season

Stein Metzger noticed the precautions taking hold early. Instead of post-match handshakes, UCLA beach volleyball players offered fist bumps. Hand sanitizer became as common as water bottles. Special care was to be taken while traveling.

But even those signs didn’t feel like sufficient foreshadowing for the two days that erased months of preparation.

UCLA’s hope for a third straight national title ended suddenly on March 12 when the NCAA canceled its winter and spring championships amid the coronavirus outbreak. The No. 2 Bruins had a chance to break a tie with USC for the most national titles in the five years since beach volleyball became an NCAA-sanctioned sport.

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Column: The New Deal has lessons for the coronavirus crisis — but not the ones you think

As a student of the New Deal, I’m often asked what’s most surprising about what I learned.

Here it is: Most people are wrong about Franklin Roosevelt’s goals. Until it was drawing to a close, his New Deal was not primarily aimed at jump-starting the faltering economy, although he hoped it would do so.

His policies’ most important components, instead, aimed to alleviate financial hardship for individuals and families, keeping them fed, clothed and sheltered to give the economic cycle time to right itself.

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California companies jump in to supply ventilators needed in coronavirus fight

Last week, Bloom Energy Chief Executive KR Sridhar realized his fuel-cell business could help alleviate the state’s critical shortage of ventilators.

The San Jose company repairs and refurbishes the fuel-cell power generators it sells to large companies and nonprofits, and Sridhar saw similarities with ventilators, which help patients breathe. After speaking with Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office, Bloom Energy would embark on refurbishing the state’s supply of 200 older ventilators.

The ventilators are especially crucial now in treating cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, because critically ill patients often suffer severe respiratory symptoms.

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Federal Reserve to lend up to $300 billion to businesses, cities

The Federal Reserve on Monday announced a massive second wave of initiatives to support a shuttered U.S. economy, including buying an unlimited amount of bonds to keep borrowing costs low and setting up programs to ensure credit flows to corporations and state and local governments.

The Fed will buy Treasuries and agency mortgage-backed securities “in the amounts needed to support smooth market functioning and effective transmission of monetary policy to broader financial conditions and the economy,” and will also buy agency commercial mortgage-backed securities, according to a statement.

The Fed had said a week ago it would buy at least $500 billion of Treasuries and $200 billion of agency mortgage-backed securities.

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Coronavirus will make California’s affordable housing problems worse, experts say

Tyrone Dixon, 53, center, waits Friday after arriving with other homeless people at the Echo Park Community Center, which is being turned into a shelter because of the coronavirus pandemic.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

California already faced a shortage of more than 1 million homes for low-income families before the novel coronavirus hit. And now many advocates, economists and politicians say the pandemic is only going to make the situation worse.

Major job losses, particularly in low-wage restaurant and hospitality sectors, and what will probably be severely depressed tax revenues for California and its cities, could create an even greater need for affordable housing at a time when government has less money available to help finance it.

“There’s all these households that are one paycheck away from not being able to pay their rent,” said Carolina Reid, faculty research advisor at UC Berkeley’s Terner Center for Housing Innovation. “Well, now that paycheck is gone. And there’s no prospect for when that paycheck is coming back.”

On Thursday, Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered all 40 million Californians to stay at home — with limited exemptions for crucial businesses, such as grocery stores — to slow the spread of the coronavirus. While many people are now working from home, that option isn’t available to restaurant and hospitality workers, who have lost jobs and seen their hours cut as food service is limited to grocery stores, and takeout and delivery services.

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Amid coronavirus, West Hollywood’s LGBTQ community hears echoes of the AIDS crisis

West Hollywood’s Sunset Strip was largely devoid of motor and pedestrian traffic on Thursday
(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

This month, David Cooley, owner of the iconic West Hollywood LGBTQ club the Abbey Food & Bar, watched in horror as news changed by the hour — as restaurants shut in France, as countries sealed their borders with Italy, as friends in Barcelona were quarantined.

Cooley recognized the severity of the situation and acted before others did — partly because the new pandemic instantly recalled another health crisis that slammed his community 40 years ago. He closed the Abbey and its sister club, the Chapel, on March 12, four days before Los Angeles County mandated that bars bolt their doors amid coronavirus fears.

And he worried that young people — who weren’t alive in the early 1980s when the first news reports broke about a mysterious “gay cancer” stalking U.S. cities — weren’t taking the new menace seriously enough.

“I lived through the AIDS crisis,” he said. “I was marching the streets and telling the people to get out of the bars and go home.”

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‘This is serious.’ Garcetti scolds Angelenos for not staying home as coronavirus spreads

Mayor Eric Garcetti on Sunday admonished Angelenos who haven’t taken orders to practice social distancing seriously, announcing the closure of the city’s golf courses, parking lots at Venice Beach and organized group sports at city parks as they have continued to attract throngs of people.

“This weekend we saw too many images of too many people crowding beaches or canyons beyond their capacity. Too many people, too close together, too often,” Garcetti said during his daily briefing on the impact of the novel coronavirus. “The longer we do that, the more people will get sick, and the more people will die. There’s no way to sugarcoat that.”

Starting Monday, parking lots near Venice Beach and the boardwalk will be closed, he said. In Santa Monica, the city also decided to close its beach parking lots.

The measures build on Gov. Gavin Newsom’s sweeping order, issued Thursday, urging Californians to stay home — with a few exceptions — and put distance between themselves and others to slow the spread of COVID-19. Garcetti issued similar orders last week, which have closed most businesses in the city.

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‘It’s just too much’: Asian Americans confront xenophobia, economic devastation and the coronavirus

It’s been a long week for all of us, so forgive me if I don’t have the energy to participate in a debate about whether President Trump calling the virus “Chinese” is racist.

Of course it is. And it’s something we’ve all seen before, when Vincent Chin was murdered in 1982 during a recession that politicians blamed on Japan; when Muslim Americans were targeted after 9/11; when the AIDS crisis was blamed on gay men; when Japanese Americans were sent to incarceration camps during World War II. When this country faces an existential threat, fear looks for a target.

I’m weary of this debate because the harm to Asian Americans is already done, and what a pundit says will never change that. Nor will yelling at Trump do any good — he has repeatedly shown throughout his presidency that he values his ego over the safety of the American people.

What we need to be talking about is how to protect people and neighborhoods from more economic and physical harm. This epidemic threatens and affects all of us in ways we are all still trying to understand, but what’s increasingly clear is that the most permanent, drastic effects will be on the most vulnerable among us.

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Travel hub UAE to halt flights as virus reaches Gaza, Syria

The United Arab Emirates, home to the world’s busiest international airport, announced early on Monday that it was suspending all passenger and transit flights for two weeks to stymie the spread of the new coronavirus.

The announcement came a day after the first cases were reported in the Gaza Strip and Syria, where years of conflict have severely degraded the local health care infrastructure. The new cases also raised fears about other vulnerable areas, like war-torn Libya and Yemen.

Dubai’s airport is a vital hub connecting Western nations with countries in Asia and Australia, and suspending transit flights there affects travelers around the world.

Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, announced that an evening curfew would go into effect starting Monday from 7 p.m. to 6 a.m. for three weeks.

Countries across the Middle East have ramped up restrictions on daily life in an effort to contain the global pandemic.

There are around 26,800 cases of the virus confirmed in the Middle East, but more than 21,000 of those cases are in Iran and many others are linked to travelers from Iran, which has reported nearly 1,700 fatalities.

The UAE’s emergency and crisis management body and its Civil Aviation Authority said in a statement that the decision to stop all commercial flights, including even transit flights, would take effect in 48 hours. The aviation authority said cargo and emergency evacuation flights would be exempt from the ban.

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Amid restaurant shutdown, Lucques lays off staff and closes for good after 21 years

There will be no fond farewell for one of L.A.’s most venerable restaurants.

Amid a statewide restaurant shutdown with no clear end in sight, Suzanne Goin and Caroline Styne have decided to permanently close Lucques, their 21-year-old Californian-Mediterranean restaurant, more than a month and a half early.

Goin said in an Instagram post Sunday that the duo had laid off their staff, spent the last few days packing up the Melrose Avenue space and were now closed for good.

“Definitely not how @carolinestyne and i had envisioned it,” she wrote. “When we announced a week ago wednesday we had a job planned for every lucques employee—72 hours later we were in the unimaginable position of laying off our staffs at all the restaurants—people we love like family, people who can not sustain this shutdown...our hearts are broken.”

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First inmate in California’s prison system tests positive for coronavirus

The first inmate within California’s prison system has tested positive for COVID-19.

The prisoner is at California State Prison, Los Angeles County, state corrections officials announced on Sunday night.

The officials also said that five prison workers have COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus. Two are at California State Prison, Sacramento, outside of Folsom; one is at Folsom State Prison; and two are at the California Institution for Men in Chino.

The prisoner in L.A. County was in stable condition and being treated on site, according to a statement from the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. The department said the prisoner reported feeling unwell and was put into isolation Thursday, was tested Friday, and the results came back Sunday. The agency would not provide information on the health of the infected workers.

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Trump approves declaration of major disaster in California over coronavirus

President Trump approved a request Sunday from Gov. Gavin Newsom to declare a major disaster in California to help the state respond to the COVID-19 pandemic with “mass care,” emergency aid, unemployment assistance and disaster legal services, among others.

“Unfortunately, California has been disproportionately impacted by COVID-19,” Newsom wrote to Trump. “Besides California being home to nearly 40 million people, which itself poses significant logistical issues few other states face, California partnered with the federal government in several extremely complex and challenging repatriation missions, which strained California’s resources and impacted California’s healthcare delivery system.”

Newsom noted in the letter that he has issued 10 executive orders in the last week to facilitate a quick response to the outbreak.

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Canada won’t send athletes to Tokyo Olympics unless Games are postponed

The Canadian Olympic Committee says it won’t send athletes to the Tokyo Games unless they’re postponed for a year, becoming the first country to threaten such a move in the face of the coronavirus outbreak.

The committee sent out a statement Sunday evening saying it was willing to help the International Olympic Committee search for alternatives, but that it was not safe for athletes, “their families and the broader Canadian community for athletes to continue training for these Games.”

“In fact, it runs counter to the public health advice which we urge all Canadians to follow.”

Canada brought 314 athletes who combined to win 22 medals at the Rio Games in 2016.

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‘It’s like losing a family’: An L.A. nightclub and its workers fight for survival during the coronavirus outbreak

Khalilah Pianta, a bartender at Lodge Room and a freelance photographer: “All my jobs have been canceled at the photo studio, and now my safety job has disappeared too.”
(Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)

On March 12, Johnny Luna showed up for work at Lodge Room in Highland Park. The 33-year-old father of two is the lighting director for the club, a 500-capacity independent music venue right off a popular stretch of Figueroa Street. He runs the lighting boards at the Wiltern, the El Rey and other venues too, but that evening, he was booked to DJ in Lodge Room’s adjacent restaurant, Checker Hall.

Luna walked up the stairs at Lodge Room with his heavy crates of vinyl in tow. The former Masonic venue has an occult-ish vibe, with a mural of an ancient temple behind the stage and a five-pointed wooden lattice star and wrought-iron candelabras mounted above the dance floor. The venue is a favorite of goth-friendly acts like Billy Corgan, Death Valley Girls and Deerhunter. Phoebe Bridgers and Lawrence Rothman have played breakthrough sets there, and Dave Chappelle once dropped in for a surprise stand-up gig.

But fears of the coronavirus had been circulating all week, and the club’s usual crowds had thinned out. Only two people were in the restaurant. The venue’s general manager gave Luna a free dinner and sent him home.

When Luna got back to his place in Boyle Heights, he saw a deluge of panicked emails.

“That’s when I started to get the mass cancellations,” Luna said. “I was starting to sweat a bit when I realized that all of March was canceled, and then by Saturday, we realized the whole industry would be shut down for the time being.”

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In the end, Holocaust survivor couldn’t outlast virus, becoming Israel’s first COVID-19 fatality

Arie Even had a knack for survival.

As a youth, with the help of his grandfather, he managed to hide out in a countryside basement from the Nazis who slaughtered more than 500,000 Jews in his native Hungary.

At 39, while serving as an Israeli envoy to Brussels, he crammed his family of six into a Renault 8, fleeing a summer holiday in Spain when a cholera outbreak threatened to engulf them.

One year later, he survived his first heart attack.

But Even’s luck finally ran out in the coronavirus pandemic of 2020.

On Friday night, Even, 88, became the first, and only, Israeli thus far to die of COVID-19, which has infected more than 1,000 fellow citizens, according to Israeli officials.

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Why this Nobel laureate predicts a quicker coronavirus recovery: ‘We’re going to be fine’

Michael Levitt, a Nobel laureate and Stanford biophysicist, began analyzing the number of COVID-19 cases worldwide in January and correctly calculated that China would get through the worst of its coronavirus outbreak long before many health experts had predicted.

Now he foresees a similar outcome in the United States and the rest of the world.

While many epidemiologists are warning of months, or even years, of massive social disruption and millions of deaths, Levitt says the data simply don’t support such a dire scenario — especially in areas where reasonable social distancing measures are in place.

“What we need is to control the panic,” he said. In the grand scheme, “we’re going to be fine.”

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