Monday, July 27, 2020

7-27: those pesky limits on public comments


Oakland protesters set fire to courthouse, smash windows -- A protest in Oakland, California, in support of racial j ustice and police reform turned violent when a small group of demonstrators wearing helmets and goggles and carrying large signs that doubled as shields set fire to a courthouse, vandalized a police station and shot fireworks at officers, authorities said.  Associated Press -- 7/27/20

 

Hundreds march in LA area Sunday after protests end with injuries, arrests Saturday -- Hundreds of protesters gathered outside the Federal Building in Westwood on Sunday, July 26, to protest police violence and to stand in solidarity with protesters in Portland, Ore. who have recently clashed with federal police officers. The item is in the Los Angeles Daily News$ -- 7/27/20

 

Public Commenters Limited During Coronavirus by Closed Government Offices, New Policies

Voice of OC

     Throughout the coronavirus shutdown, many of Orange County’s public agencies have struggled to provide access for constituent voices to be heard. 

     Since many government buildings closed their doors to the public in March, opportunities for county residents to comment on policy decisions have been limited by multiple agencies, with some favoring only in-person commenters or cutting out the observations altogether. 

     Orange County residents have taken issue with the decision across several meetings, accusing city councils and other elected officials of using the pandemic as an excuse to silence dissenting opinions. Additionally, legal experts have begun asking if municipal panels are circumventing open government and transparency laws to the detriment of constituents….

 

California desperate for signs of turnaround after stunning coronavirus setbacks

LA Times

     July has brought a month of grim COVID-19 headlines for California, with a state once seen as a model of prevention enduring a new surge in cases as the economy rapidly reopened.

 

Lightning Rod Professor Found Dead

Inside Higher Ed

     Mike Adams, whom the University of North Carolina at Wilmington recently paid $504,000 to retire, was found dead at home last week from an apparent gunshot wound, Port City Daily reported. Sheriffs went to Adams’s house after a friend of his requested a welfare check, according to 911 records obtained by Port City Daily. The friend reportedly said that Adams had been “erratic” due to stress and that he had firearms in his home. No formal cause of death has been released.

     Adams was due to retire Aug. 1, in accordance with his agreement with UNC Wilmington. The late professor of sociology and criminal justice had a long history of offending students and colleagues with his public statements. He most recently railed against COVID-19-related state shutdowns and some protests for police reform. In May, for example, he tweeted this criticism of Democratic governor Roy Cooper of North Carolina: “This evening I ate pizza and drank beer with six guys at a six seat table top. I almost felt like a free man who was not living in a slave state of North Carolina. Massa Cooper, let my people go.” Adams condemned the police officers who killed George Floyd while calling rioters “thugs.”

     Adams took UNC Wilmington to court in 2007 for allegedly denying him a promotion over his views and eventually won $50,000 in back pay and a $9,000 raise in 2014, according to Star News Online. Police are investigating his death but do not immediately suspect foul play.

Sunday, July 26, 2020

7-26: no doubt, the Lord will protect them

California sees large outdoor worship events despite virus - AP

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Even as coronavirus cases rise across California, hundreds of people gathered at the beach in Orange County for a religious event despite warnings from local officials.

     The Los Angeles Times reports Sunday several hundred people met in Huntington Beach Friday for Saturate OC, a weekly worship event that has been held since early July after the pandemic thwarted organizers’ plans to hold it indoors. Organizers provided hand sanitizers and masks, but many participants didn’t wear them.

     Police cited 34-year-old Parker Green over allegedly promoting the event without a permit, a violation that carries a potential $1,000 fine, said police spokeswoman Angela Bennett. The city said in a statement that it supports religious organizations’ right to worship but permitting and safety protocols must be followed.

     Green said he’s concerned about the virus but questioned why they were targeted when he sees crowds of people walking through the city’s downtown area not wearing face coverings.

     “When is it enforceable and when is it not?” he asked the newspaper.

. . .

     In Orange County, officials determined the Saturate OC event should be limited to fewer than 100 people and had asked organizers to postpone it to obtain a permit and follow health and safety protocols, the city’s statement said….

Police declare riots in Seattle, Portland as unrest continues - In Portland, authorities declared a riot after protesters breached a fence surrounding the city’s federal courthouse building. In Austin, a man was shot and killed at a protest.

Washington Post

 

Willie Brown: We’re creating separate and very unequal school systems -- Distance teaching is turning into what could be a giant step back to the days of de facto segregation in American education. Willie Brown in- the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/26/20

 

Trump directs a campaign ad in Portland

At White House briefings, in far-right outlets and among Republicans, Trump’s allies have made a sound stage out of protests across four city blocks.

POLITICO

…At White House briefings, in far-right outlets and among Republicans, Trump’s allies have made a sound stage out of four blocks in Portland, turning it into a campaign ad for the president. On Friday, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany showed a video of Portland protesters yelling obscenities at police. On Capitol Hill, Republican Sen. Ted Cruz on Thursday announced he would hold a hearing on “antifa terrorism” and wrote an op-ed promising to “take back Portland.” On Fox News, pundits have turned attention to other cities, such as Chicago, that they claim are in similar situations. In short, they say, it’s the America Joe Biden would create….


40 million Americans face student loan cliff - Unless Congress or the administration intervenes, monthly loan payments paused due to the pandemic will come due for tens of millions of borrowers.

Politico

…The looming end of the benefits also comes with a clear political dilemma in an election year: Unless Congress or the Trump administration intervenes, the Education Department will demand monthly loan payments from tens of millions of borrowers in October, just before they head to the polls. The department is already preparing to send warnings to borrowers, starting Aug. 15, about the expiration of their benefits, according to people familiar with the plan….
OC NUMBERS

Saturday, July 25, 2020

7-25: Mr. Trump backs down


Week of retreat: Trump backs down as virus surges out of control

Rather than bending others to his will, the president has reversed course from long-held positions in the face of resistance from fellow Republicans or popular opposition, scrambling to resurrect his reelection campaign while the pandemic continues.

Washington Post



"Saturate OC Continues Despite Citation In Huntington Beach"

The interesting part starts at about 10:50

Organizer Green "calls on Donald Trump"

Friday, July 24, 2020

Team Irresponsibility


Saturate OC revival meeting held in Huntington Beach despite city orders to cancel,

OC Reg


Wagner defends the indefensible:

Wagner: Mainero and Smoller Can’t Get Their Facts Right

Voice of OC (Wagner defends himself)


     Nice diversion, Don. Sure, two of your critics got some details wrong. The real issue is that we face a health crisis that requires such measures as mandated mask-wearing and social distancing—and who’s been pushing back against precisely those measures all this time? –Don Wagner, is who.

     Wagner’s response (check it out) is all hat and no cattle; it does nothing to defend and explain his disastrous actions. The best leaders were those who took their cues from medical experts. Why weren’t you—why aren’t you—one of them, Don?

7-24: OC numbers



Today's numbers in OC, Covid-wise

Thursday, July 23, 2020

7-23: Huntington Beach a "symbol"

Coronavirus Hospitalizations Plateau in Orange County After Sharp Rise

Voice of OC

     The number of people hospitalized with coronavirus in Orange County has plateaued at around 700 current patients – after rising sharply for several weeks starting in mid-June.

     Doctors and hospital officials say they’re cautiously encouraged that hospitalizations are not rising, while also urging the public to wear masks and physically distance.

     According to experts, the local hospital system can manage the current volume of patients, with several local hospitals converting regular patient rooms into intensive care rooms as part of their separation of COVID and non-COVID patients into separate wings of a hospital.

     Yet at the same time, the pandemic is taking a toll on nurses and other staff, whom hospitals say are stretched thin, and some hospitals have paused non-emergency surgeries to help conserve protective gear.

     “We’re at a sort of tipping point right now, where if things get worse, we are going to be in a situation where the hospitals are going to need help to deal with increased COVID hospitalizations,” including bringing in outside staff, said Dr. Saahir Khan, an infectious disease specialist who works at the intensive care unit at UC Irvine Medical Center, speaking about the overall hospital system in Orange County.

     “So this is really a critical time for people to be responsible and maintain adherence to all the guidelines to prevent the spread of COVID-19,” he added.

     “We’ve been able to handle what we’ve got. If we disregard social distancing, wearing a mask, if we start opening up in an irresponsible fashion, we’ll flood the system…you can see that in the states that did that” like Florida and Arizona, said Dr. Todd Newton, the Orange County medical director for Kaiser Permanente, which has two hospitals in Orange County….

California shatters another record for new coronavirus cases, hospitalizations -- Gov. Gavin Newsom said Wednesday that 12,807 new coronavirus infections had been reported statewide in the past 24 hours — a record high — bringing California’s total to 413,576. Luke Money in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/23/20

 

California State U. Board Approves Ethnic-Studies Requirement That Dismays Ethnic-Studies Professors
CHE

California’s online community college still has much to prove
EdSource

     California’s online community college still has much to prove -- Calbright College, California’s online community college, may have survived elimination in the state’s budget, but the pressure is on to prove its value to the state. Ashley A. Smith EdSource -- 7/23/20

     …Phil Hill, an online education consultant, who has helped the state’s community college system with its Online Education Initiative, enrolled in Calbright last year as a student on his own to see how it measures up to similar online college programs.

Hill said he wasn’t paid by the system or the college to test Calbright, and he doesn’t describe himself as a critic or advocate of the online college. As an online education expert and California taxpayer, he was curious. But what he found was a poorly-designed and confusing class that could hinder students’ and Calbright’s success…..

‘I don’t believe it’: Huntington Beach a symbol of mask resistance as doubters abound -- As Brad Colburn whisked his metal detector over the tan sands of Huntington Beach, a rejection of Orange County’s spiking coronavirus infection rates surfaced. “I don’t believe it. I don’t believe the rates are rising,” Colburn said. “They’re inflated. It’s another way of shutting everything down … of the Democrats trying to get what they want.” Jake Sheridan in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/22/20

 

COVID-19 Roundup: Colleges Tilt Toward Online Openings

Inside Higher Ed

 

Trump details ‘difficult’ cognitive test he says he aced

Politico

     “Joe should take that test because something is going on, and I say this with respect,” Trump said. “I mean, [it’s] going to probably happen to all of us, right? You know, it’s going to happen. But we cant take a chance of it happening.”

Dems rebuke culture of sexism in defense of Ocasio-Cortez

Politico

     Ocasio-Cortez recounted the confrontation with Yoho — which was witnessed by a reporter — in a speech Thursday morning, lamenting the incident as an outgrowth of a toxic and sexist culture that some lawmakers still perpetuate on Capitol Hill.

     “These are the words representative Yoho levied against a congresswoman,” Ocasio-Cortez said, saying aloud the words that Yoho was overheard saying to describe her: "F---ing b----.”…. 
 

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

The OC Board of Education, playing games

OC Board of Education Releases Previously Silenced Comments on Starting School Without Masks

Voice of OC

     Orange County’s Board of Education approved recommendations last week calling for a return to schools without masks or social distancing before giving any kind of voice to nearly 4,000 submitted comments from the community.  

. . .

     Public speakers at the meeting – which was streamed live on Zoom and YouTube – were widely supportive of the board’s plan.

     Many viewers watching the public meeting wondered what had happened to all the comments that poured in. Voice of OC immediately filed a public records request to review the comments.

     On Tuesday, OC Board of Education officials complied….

     The board’s original report called for a return to school without the use of masks or social distancing in classrooms, directly contradicting the county’s own department of education and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

     Even some of the experts that were listed as consultants on the report came out against it, saying they never saw a draft of what was released to the public. 

     At the meeting, only 21 speakers were allowed in, and 18 were supportive of the Board’s plan, with many thanking them for their reliance on “the actual science.” 

     “This is not an at risk population, and they are not going to bring this disease home to grandma and kill grandma. There is no reason to make any changes to what we are doing,” said the first speaker on the dais.  

     One of the other commenters allowed to speak was Dr. Jeff Barke, husband of Mari Barke, the board’s vice president. Barke has been an outspoken opponent against masks and social distancing and is opening a new charter school this year. Their relationship was not disclosed from the dais. 

. . .

     The first batch of 50 comments released by the OC Board of Education [Tuesday] tell a very different story than what public commenters shared at the meeting. 

. . .

     Only four of those emails supported the Board’s decision, and only one of the commenters said they currently had children in an Orange County public school. That commenter also identified themselves as an emergency room nurse at a local hospital.  

. . .

     The rest of the emails sent were overwhelmingly against the Board of Education’s plan, and came from a variety of teachers, parents and community members who did not identify in their emails whether or not they were involved in public schools. 

. . .

     The Board of Education released the remainder of the 4,259 emails to Voice of OC on Tuesday afternoon, and they are currently under review by staff.

     “You are supposed to have the best interest of our students in mind when you make decisions. Use science, not politics when making those decisions,” one commenter wrote. “Thank you for considering my comments.” 

California tops New York with most coronavirus cases in the United States 
OC Reg

Orange County's latest numbers

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...