California health officials can keep their home addresses secret, governor says
SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday allowed health officials to hide their addresses under a California state program designed to protect people from harassment and violence.
Newsom’s executive order permits the secretary of state to make the Safe at Home confidentiality program available to local health officers and other public health officials.
The order says those officials have been subjected to harassment and threats.
Some threats targeted their homes, “which threatens to chill the performance of their critical duties,” the governor’s order stated.
The order is designed “to protect local health officers and other public health officials on the front lines of the fight against the virus,” said a statement from the governor’s office.
L.A. County can only enter a new tier on the state’s color-coded reopening blueprint if the positivity rate and number of COVID-19 cases remain low.
A California community college instructor was arrested last month and charged with sending two dozen misogynistic and threatening letters to Dr. Sara Cody, Santa Clara County’s top public health official.
Alan Viarengo, 55, of Gilroy, is charged with felony counts of stalking and threatening a public official.
He hasn’t entered a plea.
The Safe at Home program “provides a substitute mailing address for victims and survivors of sexual assault, domestic violence, stalking, human trafficking, elder/dependent adult abuse, as well as reproductive healthcare workers,” according to the statement.
Newsom’s order also contains a series of other actions related to the impact of COVID-19, including extending an authorization through next March 31 for local governments to halt evictions of commercial renters.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.