Wednesday, July 15, 2020

7-15: hospitals bracing; 22 new dead reported

     Orange County hospitals are preparing to enter surge mode as the county saw another bump in coronavirus hospitalizations, while the virus continues to spread.

     “Hospital Surge Plans are already activated to an extent, as conditions worsen,” reads a Wednesday situation report from the county office of Emergency Medical Services. 

     “The trends are very concerning and we can continue to expect the impact on the healthcare system to get worse in the coming days and weeks,” states the report. 

At the beginning of June, 292 people were hospitalized, including 121 in intensive care units. There were also 226 dead out of 7,767 confirmed cases. 

     Since then, cases have more than tripled, while hospitalization and death counts keep climbing….

An attention-grabbing "political gesture"

✅ OC school board’s symbolic bid to put kids in class grabs attention (OC Reg)

Orange County’s Congressional delegation “deeply concerned” over advocacy by the Orange County Board of Education in support of a full return to campus, without face masks or social distancing.

Ken Williams
     The Orange County Board of Education, a five-member body with little power, on Monday voted 4-1 to issue a document saying students should return to traditional classrooms, without masks, when local schools resume next month.
     A day later, that symbolic vote – which urges a plan that, if implemented, could run counter to federal and state health guidelines – drew national media attention and a letter of rebuke from the county’s congressional delegation.
     “We are deeply concerned by the Board’s decision to not address the health threats that COVID-19 poses to our community with its recommendations to reopen schools without the use of face masks, social distancing or reduced class sizes,” wrote House members Linda T. Sanchez, Harley Rouda, Katie Porter, Alan Lowenthal, Gilbert Cisneros, Lou Correa and Mike Levin, all Democrats.

. . .

     On Tuesday, Santa Ana Unified said it will offer only online instruction when education resumes in the district, possibly next month. And trustees for Anaheim Union High School District will consider a similar online-only plan when they meet on Thursday.

     Meanwhile, lawmakers who wrote to the Orange County Board of Education requested a briefing and asked a number of questions.

. . .

     The board’s specific responsibilities include approving the Orange County Department of Education’s annual budget and serving as an appellate board for cases of expulsion and transfer requests….

     But the board has no control over the county’s 27 school districts, and it doesn’t set policy regarding school re-opening plans during the current health crisis.

     It’s why some observers on Tuesday described the conservative board’s push for in-class education – something also urged by President Donald Trump and many national Republicans – as a partisan move.

Fred Smoller
     “It’s clearly a political gesture,” said Fred Smoller, Chapman University associate professor of political science.

     It also got attention. News of the School Board’s push for no masks and no social distancing in schools … was picked up by CNN and National Public Radio, among others.

     Smoller said this is the type of attention that paints Orange County in its former conservative mold,  pushing back against experts who say resuming in class instruction could boost the pandemic and possible endanger teachers and at-risk students.

. . .

     Though some parents support the board’s push for in-class instruction, many others do not. A recent survey by Santa Ana Unified found one in four parents in that district support putting kids back in classrooms full-time next fall, while about half want a hybrid program and another 24 % prefer going strictly online. And a national survey posted Tuesday by CNN found 71% of American parents don’t want in-class schooling in the fall.

     Also, a local online petition critical of the school board’s white paper collected more than 51,000 signatures as of Tuesday.

     Still, at least one board Trustee, Ken Williams, argues it’s the push for online instruction during the health crisis that’s the more political path.

     “This public effort is political and consistent with the narrative that governors from blue states and unions want to keep schools closed (as a way) to protect union power. They disregard the concept of doing what is in the best interests of the children,” Williams said….

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...