
More local control over reopening
Gov. Gavin Newsom may have resorted to having his children cut his hair, but most of you won’t have to.
The governor cleared 47 of California’s 58 counties Tuesday to reopen hair salons and barbershops with modifications, marking a shift to the third stage of loosening the stay-at-home order as the state’s number of positive coronavirus cases nears 100,000.
The announcement came a day after Newsom said churches and in-store retail shopping could reopen statewide with modifications, signaling his commitment to giving counties more control over reopening.
Newsom: “As we move into phase three of where this state is going, more accountability, more responsibility, more flexibility at the local and regional level. And recognizing again that one size does not fit all and they can pace accordingly.”
Eleven counties — Alameda, Contra Costa, Imperial, Los Angeles, Marin, Monterey, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz and Tulare — can’t reopen hair salons and barbershops because the state hasn’t yet given them permission to reopen businesses like dine-in restaurants and shopping malls.
But this isn’t necessarily because the state wouldn’t approve their application to do so, Newsom said — some counties have simply decided on their own they’re not ready to progress, a decision he will “respect and honor.”
Meanwhile, some lawmakers and public health officials are questioning Newsom’s rapid loosening of restrictions as the number of positive cases continues to rise.
Newsom said last week his administration is focusing on the percentage of positive cases rather than the total number, which will grow as testing capacity increases, and subsequently changed county reopening requirements. Whereas counties originally had to prove that they had no more than one new COVID-19 case per 10,000 residents in the past 14 days, the new criteria call for less than 8% testing positive in the past seven days.
Newsom said Tuesday it’s “inevitable” that cases will increase as the economy reopens and people begin to mix more frequently.
Newsom: “But that’s not in and of itself an alarm bell. It’s the positivity rate, it’s our capacity to hospitalize … as we move into that next phase, that is foundational.”
The Bottom Line: As of 9 p.m. Tuesday night, California had 92,710 confirmed coronavirus cases and 3,646 deaths from the virus, according to a CalMatters tracker.
Fight over mail-in ballots appears to end Trump and Newsom’s ceasefire
Well, it looks as though Newsom and President Donald Trump’s uncharacteristically friendly relationship during the pandemic may be drawing to a close. On Tuesday, Trump castigated Newsom for ordering an all-mail election in November. “The Governor of California is sending Ballots to millions of people, anyone living in the state, no matter who they are or how they got there, will get one,” he tweeted, adding, “This will be a Rigged Election. No way!” Twitter later flagged the tweets with a label reading “Get the facts about mail-in ballots” that links users to a series of articles refuting Trump’s claims, drawing further ire from the president.
Newsom didn’t mince words during his Tuesday press conference, saying there “was no evidence” that mail-in ballots increase the potential for voter fraud and pointing out that California will also have in-person voting options in November. “Utah, hardly a bastion of progressive politics, has been doing mail-only ballots for a number of years,” he added. “It doesn’t skew Democrat, doesn’t skew Republican. … I hope we can temper our comments on the other side, though I recognize we are in a political season.”
The Republican National Committee and California Republican Party sued Newsom on Sunday for ordering an-all mail election. Republicans won both of California’s special elections last month, which were held almost entirely by mail.
—CALMatters