August 4, 2020

04Aug

POLICY & POLITICS

North SJ Valley:

Modesto road signs in Spanish are part of the outreach to Latino community in the effort to contain the coronavirus

Modesto Bee

Lighted road signs in Spanish are part of the outreach to Latino community, which has higher rates of COVID-19 than its percentage of Stanislaus County’s population.

Modesto pastor’s mayor campaign videos show no COVID-19 safety. Here’s his response

Modesto Bee

Co-Senior Pastor Rick Countryman with Big Valley Grace Community Church has been conducting Facebook Live video interviews on Wednesdays since April 8 as part of his campaign to be Modesto’s next mayor in November’s election.

Central SJ Valley:

Fresno County passes 15,000 cases. Clovis workers ordered to return

Fresno Bee

Fresno County’s latest addition of 365 positive results, which follows a multi-day increase, brings the total number of cases to 15,448, according to figures from the California Department of Public Health.

Rural schools, nonprofits in Fresno region can get piece of Wonderful’s $1M grant. Here’s how

Fresno Bee

A huge agricultural company based in the central San Joaquin Valley is offering grants to schools and nonprofits in rural communities in Fresno or other counties. The Wonderful Co. established a $1 million relief fund for nonprofit organizations and schools hurt by the coronavirus pandemic and that support Wasco, Delano, Shafter, Firebaugh, Avenal, Sanger, Mendota or Del Rey.

See Also:

Urgent help arrives in Central Valley with state strike force, $52 million

abc30

The Central Valley is now the focus for a coronavirus crackdown coming from the governor’s office state. A state strike force arrived in Fresno County Monday.

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South SJ Valley:

The Wonderful Company pledges $1 million to help Central Valley school districts, non-profits

abc30

The Wonderful Company is pledging to help Central Valley school districts and non-profit organizations stay afloat during the pandemic.

See also:

Grand Jury finds many problems in California City’s purchasing practices

Bakersfield Californian

Members of the California City City Council have continued interfering in the daily operations of the city in violation of a local ordinance, according to a Kern County Grand Jury report released Monday afternoon. The practice has fostered a culture of animosity and mistrust between the council and department employees, the Grand Jury said, as well as a lack of trust between city residents and the departments themselves.

State:

California passes 500,000 cases; 97% of residents on watchlist

Sacramento Bee

California officially surpassed 500,000 total lab-confirmed coronavirus infections and set a new daily high for reported COVID-19 deaths over the weekend, while Sacramento County reached the 10,000-case mark.

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California may ban African trophies. Africans say that’s bad news for animals

Sacramento Bee

A bill making its way through the California legislature would ban the possession of trophies from animals killed in Africa. But some African conservation organizations and governments say the ban and others like it would actually harm wildlife.

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Do CA Democrats have time to pass laws after COVID outbreak?

Fresno Bee

A common maxim in the California Legislature holds that lawmakers shouldn’t fall in love with their bills.

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California lawmakers were globetrotters before pandemic

AP

Being a California legislator brings the perks of traveling the world, thanks often to the largess of groups that critics say are usually looking to sway lawmakers to their causes. The cost of the trips must be recorded by lawmakers on financial disclosure forms as “gifts,” but they are not required to specify many details about the trips’ purposes.

California Supreme Court says no go to referendum challenges to certain state laws

San Francisco Chronicle

Once a local water board approves a rate increase, voters cannot prevent it from taking effect by circulating a referendum, though they can seek to reduce it later, the state Supreme Court ruled Monday.

Federal:

Conservative revolt over stimulus deal puts pressure on vulnerable GOP senators

Modesto Bee

Conservative senators are resisting efforts from the White House and Senate Republican leadership to fashion a broad economic stimulus deal with Democrats that would provide more money for testing, schools and the unemployed.

Prosecutor seeking Trump’s taxes cites probe of his business

Los Angeles Times

A Manhattan prosecutor trying to get President Trump’s tax returns told a judge Monday that he was justified in demanding them, citing public reports of “extensive and protracted criminal conduct at the Trump Organization.” Trump’s lawyers last month said the grand jury subpoena for the tax returns was issued in bad faith and amounted to harassment of the president.

Census Bureau To End All Counting Efforts On Sept. 30

NPR

The U.S. Census Bureau is ending all counting efforts for the 2020 census on Sept. 30, a month sooner than previously announced, the bureau’s director confirmed Monday in a statement. That includes critical door-knocking efforts and collecting responses onlineover the phone and by mail.

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Why Senate Republicans and the White House can’t agree on badly-needed COVID aid

Brookings

Amid growing pressure to hash out a deal, Senate Republicans have still not solidified their positions on various aspects of the next COVID-19 aid package. Molly Reynolds explains the motivations of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, the Trump administration, and congressional Republicans during a time in which Americans badly need financial relief.

Column: As COVID-19 pandemic tightens grip on U.S., Trump ratchets up the cruelty

Los Angeles Times

Let’s dispense with the myth that the Trump administration has no strategy related to the coronavirus pandemic. In his statements and the actions of federal agencies under his control, as well as the positions held by his Republican congressional caucus, the strategy is clear: Use the pandemic to make America a crueler place.

Coronavirus Trackers:

Coronavirus (COVID-19) in California

Covid19.ca.gov

COVID-19 is a new illness that can affect your lungs and airways. It’s caused by a virus called coronavirus.

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Elections 2020:

Cuban-American Republicans attack potential Biden VP pick Karen Bass over Cuba ties

Sacramento Bee

Florida’s two highest-ranking Cuban-American Republicans are preemptively attacking California Rep. Karen Bass, one of Joe Biden’s potential vice president picks, due to her past work in Fidel Castro’s Cuba with the Venceremos Brigade, a group that has organized annual trips to Cuba for left-leaning Americans since 1969.

California donors spend $38 million trying to tilt Senate races around the country

Los Angeles Times

Californians have spent $38 million and counting trying to tilt Senate contests across the nation, making the state one of the top sources of campaign contributions in races that will decide which party controls the body next year, according to campaign finance disclosures. That’s despite the state not having a Senate race on its ballot in November.

Trump’s base starting to erode, new poll shows

Los Angeles Times

In Central Valley and other conservative parts of California, small but significant numbers of Republican voters have turned against Trump.

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How the Media Could Get the Election Story Wrong

New York Times

We may not know the results for days, and maybe weeks. So it’s time to rethink “election night.”

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Factbox: Trump, Biden offer clashing visions on reopening economy 

Reuters

The coronavirus pandemic threw tens of millions of Americans out of work, ended the longest U.S. economic recovery on record and undermined a key argument for President Donald Trump’s re-election.

Biden’s Top 3 Running-Mate Contenders Emerge as He Enters Key Week

WSJ

Joe Biden is entering his most crucial week since becoming the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, as he decides which woman he will ask to be his running mate.

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Women’s suffrage was a giant leap for democracy. We haven’t stuck the landing yet.

Washington Post

The House delayed the vote as long as it could. The year was 1921, and the U.S. Senate had already passed the Sheppard-Towner Act, which provided funding for programs helping new mothers and babies. A few key congressmen, though, thought the bill contained too much social welfare and too much feminism.

Other:

Another fake Pelosi video goes viral on Facebook

Mercury News

Facebook’s fact-checkers on Sunday labeled as “partly false” a video that it said was manipulated to make it appear as if House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was drunk or drugged. The video had been circulating on Facebook since Thursday and by Sunday night had been viewed more than 2 million times.

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The Mask Slackers of 1918

New York Times

As the influenza pandemic swept across the United States in 1918 and 1919, masks took a role in political and cultural wars.

Most Americans Still Don’t Trust Trump’s Coronavirus Comments—Except For Republicans

Forbes

A new NBC News/SurveyMonkey poll finds that a majority of Americans continue to distrust what President Donald Trump says about the Covid-19 pandemic as it continues to rage across the U.S., despite recent attempts by the president to combat his lagging poll numbers by pushing mask-wearing and acknowledging the pandemic’s seriousness.

AGRICULTURE/FOOD

Salmonella outbreak causes 50-state onion recall. Sellers include Walmart and Kroger

Fresno Bee

Onions sold under various brands have been recalled in all 50 states and the District of Columbia after being linked to a salmonella outbreak that’s sickened 359 people in 34 states, according to the CDC.

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Cal/OSHA enforcing COVID guidelines in Valley ag

Porterville Recorder

There’s no denying for Tulare County and the San Joaquin Valley to overcome the COVID-19 pandemic, what’s being done in agricultural will play a huge role. With that in mind, efforts on several fronts are being made to make sure agriculture does its part in the battle against COVID-19.

China sent us … cabbage? USDA identifies some of the seeds in mystery packages

Sacramento Bee

Some of the mysterious seeds from China turned out to be the makings of a vegetable garden or flower bouquet — but officials warn they still shouldn’t be planted. The “suspicious, unsolicited” seed packets started showing up in mailboxes across the United States in July and were apparently shipped from China, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

A bumper crop of California ballot measure lawsuits

Los Angeles Times

For the California voter who doesn’t see the TV ads or (somehow) ignores the avalanche of glossy flyers in the mailbox before election day, the explanations of ballot measures contained in the state voter guide are the last, best chance to understand the proposal and to weigh its merits or drawbacks.

Fresno Program Aids Small Farmers While Feeding Communities

Valley Public Radio

About 35 small farmers signed up for the buyback put on by the Asian Business Institute and Resource Center in Fresno. It’s called a buyback because the institute purchases some of the fruits and vegetables growers aren’t able to sell due to the pandemic and then gives the produce back to communities facing food insecurity.

Marijuana in California: How red tape and black market weed are buzzkills for California’s legal weed industry

CBS News

When voters legalized marijuana three years ago, advocates said illegal operations would be pushed out and the state would make hundreds of millions in tax revenue. So far, those dreams have not panned out.

CRIMINAL JUSTICE/FIRE/PUBLIC SAFETY

Crime:

‘Rapists have gotten away with it.’ Protest calls attention to sexual assault at Fresno State

Fresno Bee

A group of about 75 people gathered at Fresno State on Monday afternoon to speak out against sexual assault and violence on campus and to support survivors. Most protesters were young people who wanted to send a message that rapists must be held accountable.

Public Safety:

2 California prisoners die of suspected virus complications

Fresno Bee

Two more inmates at San Quentin State Prison near San Francisco died from what appear to be complications of the coronavirus, corrections officials said Monday. The inmates, including one on death row, died Sunday at outside hospitals, the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation said.

Kids getting caught in crossfire as US gun violence surges

KBAK

July in Chicago ended as it began: Mourning the death of a child whose only mistake was venturing outside to play when someone with a gun came to the neighborhood hunting for an enemy.

Fire: 

1st big Southern California wildfire of 2020 keeps on raging

Fresno Bee

A huge wildfire in mountains east of Los Angeles that is Southern California’s biggest blaze so far this year was still raging Monday, with thousands of people forced to evacuate their homes.

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Update: Evacuations remain for wildfire in Colusa County, smaller blaze on Nevada state line

Sacramento Bee

Evacuations were ordered for several homes Sunday afternoon for a wildfire in Colusa County quickly spread to more than 500 acres. The Sites Fire started just after 4 p.m. near Sites Lodoga and Campground roads, southeast of Stonyford, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection’s Sonoma-Lake-Napa unit. 

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ECONOMY/JOBS

Economy:

Fresno-based video surveillance company Pelco sold for $110 million, new owners say

Fresno Bee

The Fresno-based security video company Pelco has been acquired by Motorola Solutions for $110 million in cash, Motorola Solutions announced Monday. Motorola Solutions now has control of the Pelco company, which has been a Fresno-based job manufacturer of security and surveillance systems since 1982.

See also:

Application period for small business loans begin today

Porterville Recorder

Efforts to help small businesses affected by the COVID-19 pandemic will be stepped up this week in Tulare County and Porterville. Applications for the Tulare County Small Business COVID Relief Fund will open today. The application period will last through August 16.

More than 100 CEOs ask for relief bill for small businesses

Fresno Bee

More than 100 current and former CEOs and other major business leaders are urging Congress to pass a relief bill for small businesses, warning of “catastrophic” consequences of the coronavirus pandemic.

California Has Lost A Greater Share Of Revenue Than Most States Due To COVID-19

VPR
California’s progressive tax structure means state revenue does well in good economic times but suffers more than most other states when there’s a downturn. In January, California was projecting a $5.6 billion surplus, but the pandemic quickly transformed that into a $54 billion deficit. 

Covid Supercharges Federal Reserve as Backup Lender to the World

WSJ

When the coronavirus halted the global economy, the U.S. central bank lent massively to foreign counterparts.

Jobs:

Federal family leave for parents affected by coronavirus has run out. State workers weigh options

Fresno Bee

The federal government extended a lifeline to working parents in April when it provided 12 weeks of expanded paid leave for those affected by the coronavirus. The leave has run out for parents who have used it continuously since then. Now that schools have canceled in-person classes in Sacramento, Los Angeles and other parts of the state, some California state workers face difficult choices about what to do next.

State workers got a smaller pay cut than planned this week due to payroll mistake

Sacramento Bee

California state workers saw pay cuts in their checks this week, but the reduction wasn’t quite as big as it was supposed to be. That’s because the California State Controller’s Office, working on a tight turnaround, made a mistake in calculating workers’ retirement contributions, the office told employees Thursday.

California unemployment agency workers say internal problems are stalling claims process

Los Angeles Times

As California grapples with a deluge of requests for unemployment benefits amid the COVID-19 pandemic, some state workers processing claims say they are buckling under pressure, hampered by outdated technology, bureaucratic red tape and a shortage of trained, experienced staff.

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1.13 million workers trapped in EDD payment limbo

Orange County Register

EDD to 889,000 California workers: “We can’t approve these claims at this time.”

When Workers Can Live Anywhere, Many Ask: Why Do I Live Here?

WSJ

Coronavirus prompts Americans to reassess the need to reside near hot job markets.

Opinion: vWage Inequality Caused by Growing Skill Inequality

National Review

In recent years, the gap between the highest and lowest income brackets has become an area of growing concern for economists and policymakers, not to mention the low-wage workers who have been left behind. In late 2013, President Obama said that inequality was the defining issue of our time.

EDUCATION

K-12:

Parents struggle as schools reopen amid coronavirus surge

Fresno Bee

Putting your child on the bus for the first day of school is always a leap of faith for a parent. Now, on top of the usual worries about youngsters adjusting to new teachers and classmates, there’s COVID-19.

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Fresno Unified School District working to provide internet access for all families in district

abc30

Fresno Unified estimates 90-94% of its students are ready and equipped for online lessons this year.

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Here’s what Modesto-area private schools have planned for fall classes during coronavirus

Modesto Bee

While Stanislaus County public schools agreed to begin August with remote instruction weeks ago, private school plans vary and continue to change as start dates approach.

KHSD votes to push back school year start date to Aug. 24

Bakersfield Californian

The Kern High School District board of trustees heard a number of reports during its Monday night meeting, including pushing the 2020-21 school year start date to Aug. 24.

Shafter residents on a mission to ‘Save the Shafter Library’

Bakersfield Californian

The news seemed to hit Shafter residents particularly hard. When they learned that the county of Kern planned to reopen only a fraction of its two dozen library branches after the conclusion of the COVID-19 lockdown — and that Shafter was not on the short list — residents of the Kern County farming community got busy. 

Join the book club with Kern County Library virtual groups

Bakersfield Californian

Those who want to read but lack the motivation have a new savior in the form of book clubs hosted by the Kern County Library. The library’s 24 branches were some of the first to fight against boredom or monotony during quarantine with virtual programs including e-books, daily storytimes, yoga sessions, English and Spanish conversation groups, and even encouraging children to read books out loud to help boost confidence. All of which can be found on Kern County Library’s Facebook. 

California elementary schools could open with state waivers

Los Angeles Times

Some California elementary schools may be able to reopen for in-person classes this fall under a strict waiver system announced Monday by state officials. 

Which Parents Need the Most Support While K–12 Schools and Child Care Centers Are Physically Closed? 

RAND

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has been particularly challenging for parents as schools and child care centers closed or switched to distance learning in spring 2020. 

Virtual Learning Means Unequal Learning

PEW

Many educators and experts fear that inequities in local school systems will be exacerbated by remote learning and hybrid plans in response to the rapidly spreading coronavirus.

Higher Ed:

After controversies, will Fresno-area community college leader get a contract extension?

Fresno Bee

State Center Community College District trustees will be tasked with renewing Chancellor Paul Parnell’s contract on Tuesday, deciding whether to give the leader another year at the helm of the region’s largest community college district.

SCCCD Chancellor Paul Parnell up for contract renewal

Fresno Bee

State Center Community College District trustees will be tasked with renewing Chancellor Paul Parnell’s contract on Tuesday, deciding whether to give the leader another year at the helm of the region’s largest community college district.

Merced College to loan more than 1,500 laptops to students enrolled in fall semester

Merced Sun-Star

Merced College announced Monday, that it will loan more than 1,500 laptops to students enrolled in the college’s fall semester. Quantities are limited and priority will be given to full-time students enrolled in 12 or more credits who are in good academic standing, according to a Merced College news release.

What will it take to reopen colleges? Testing for COVID-19 every two days, study says

Sacramento Bee

Colleges should test students for COVID-19 every two days to safely reopen during the pandemic, according to a new study. Frequently screening students for coronavirus using a rapid and inexpensive test with even poor sensitivity will be required to open campuses safely, the study published Friday in the journal JAMA Network Open says.

UC Regents want to investigate top salary cuts

CALmatters

Two key members of the UC Board of Regents are in favor of a model that would reduce top salaries to help offset pandemic expenses. Also, next year’s UC budget has more money for policing and the stage has been set for a likely September vote about a telescope in Hawaii.

CSUB shines brightly amid pandemic

California State University

The coronavirus pandemic changed many aspects of Californians’ lives. But one constant remains: California State University campuses are a beacon of hope, locally and statewide. While pivoting students, faculty and staff to virtual operations, the 23-campus system — including CSUB — took opportunities during the health crisis to demonstrate countless times its initiative, vitality and drive in powering California’s recovery. CSUB students have been at the frontlines in hospitals battling the pandemic, and the university also created face shields for the local community. 

Making the switch: Online teaching during COVID-19

California State University

While the COVID-19 pandemic drove the CSU online this spring, that didn’t stop faculty and staff from digging in to connect with students and offer the quality education on which the CSU prides itself. As spring terms ended, the CSU wisely made an early decision to plan for online courses in the fall. That decision gave faculty the time and opportunity to expand their skills and prepare for a productive virtual experience, armed with the latest technology and best practices for online teaching.

Counting them in or out?

Insider Higher Ed

With campuses mostly empty, college towns are reporting low response rates for the 2020 Census. The U.S. Census Bureau is allowing colleges to submit more data to get a more accurate count of students.

Replace the federal student loan system with an income share agreement program

AEI

A better solution to the student loan crisis would be a government-sponsored income share agreement and a simplified IRS-managed income withholding repayment system.

Newsom provides path for elementary schools to open, strictly limits youth sports

POLITICO

California elementary schools that want to open their doors for in-person learning must consult with parents, labor unions and others on campus and demonstrate their plans for contact-tracing and other public health measures that have been widely implemented in summer camps and child care settings, according to new guidelines released Monday night.

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ENVIRONMENT/ENERGY

Environment:

A rare disease is killing Northern California deer. Here’s what you should look out for

Fresno Bee

A rare disease that can kill thousands of fawns in a single outbreak has been confirmed in Northern California, and wildlife officials are pleading with rural property owners to not feed deer or put out water for them.

Exclusive: California’s Clean Air Programs Take A Hit In New Funding Squeeze

Capital Public Radio

Some of California’s key environmental programs for battling smog and climate change have lost nearly $105 million as the state grapples with the economic fallout of the coronavirus pandemic. 

Heat Waves Exacerbate COVID-19 Racial Disparities

PEW

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is predicting the next three months will be hotter than normal for much of the country; 2020, it says, likely will rank as one of the hottest years on record.

Energy:

PG&E Proposes Program to Determine Age of Transmission Line Equipment

California Energy Markets

Pacific Gas & Electric is planning a new program to identify the age of certain critical transmission components, and aims to start a pilot of the program in the first quarter of 2021, the utility told its felony probation judge in a July 28 filing.

Commentary: Approve Assembly Bill 1720: Two energy storage projects would create jobs

CALmatters

Assembly Bill 1720 will help the state move forward building clean energy storage and create jobs through infrastructure projects.

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HEALTH/HUMAN SERVICES

Health:

Governor Newsom addresses Fresno County teen coronavirus death

Fresno Bee

At a press conference on Aug. 3, 2020, California Governor Gavin Newsom addressed the death of a Fresno County teen due to coronavirus. The death is the first reported death of a minor under age 18 from COVID-19.

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California sees decline in COVID-19 cases, but not in the Central Valley

abc30

California’s coronavirus cases and hospitalizations saw a small decline statewide Governor Gavin Newsom reported on Monday. However, he said while the statistics were encouraging, it does not reflect the reality of all parts of the state, including Central California.

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Tulare County health officials tie large number of COVID-19 cases to gatherings

ABC30 Fresno

Tulare County has been averaging about 1,000 new cases of COVID-19 each week.

106 new COVID-19 cases in Kern reported Monday

Bakersfield Californian

Kern County reported 106 new COVID-19 cases Monday morning, according to the public health service department’s website. That brings total cases to 20,651 and deaths remain at the previously reported 144. However, recent data suggests people are dying everyday from the virus in Kern. Between July 3 and July 23, an average of 2.5 people died everyday in the county from COVID-19.

See Also:

Fauci warns of ‘really bad situation’ if daily coronavirus cases don’t drop to 10K by September

TheHill

Anthony Fauci, the country’s top infectious disease expert, warned on Monday that the U.S. could be in a “really bad situation” if the number of new coronavirus cases confirmed daily does not drop to 10,000 by next month.

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Human Services:

How this San Joaquin Valley woman helped save her father’s life

Fresno Bee

David Oppedyk had a bad liver and little chance of getting a new one in time. The 52-year-old Tulare man suffered from liver cirrhosis and was near the bottom of a long waiting list for organ donations in November 2019. But then his luck changed.

Local company struggles to procure ventilators for state’s COVID-19 response

Bakersfield Californian

A Bakersfield medical equipment supplier has fallen far short of its contractual commitment to provide the state with ventilators.

Bakersfield hospitals still strained with influx of patients

Bakersfield Californian

In his 30 years of hospital administration, Bruce Peters has seen nothing like it.

Ballot battle underway to keep stem cell agency alive

Capitol Weekly

The California stem cell agency has just finished pumping $5.3 million into the fight to save the lives of COVID-19 victims. And — in a ballot-box bonus — its efforts are already surfacing in the ballot campaign to rescue the agency from its own demise. 

Dozens of COVID-19 vaccines are in development. Here are the ones to follow.

National Geographic

Here are the COVID-19 vaccine prospects that have made it to phase three trials and beyond.

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Lack of Public Data Hampers COVID-19 Fight

PEW

Thin public health budgets and dated technology stymie reporting efforts.

Patients Fled Primary Care During COVID-19

PEW

Forty percent of primary care providers said they weren’t sure they could stay open through August, according to a survey from Primary Care Collaborative in late June.

Opinion: Trump promised a health-care plan in two weeks. It’s been two weeks. 

Washington Post

It was a typical Sunday in the presidency of Donald J. Trump. A few early-morning tweets to get the day going. Then, he hopped in his motorcade and headed for the links, as he has done more than 250 times since taking office.

IMMIGRATION

International tribunal rules it has authority in case of man killed by U.S. border officials

Los Angeles Times

U.S. law enforcement’s killing of a man at the San Diego-Tijuana border a decade ago will go on trial before an international tribunal, after the organization decided it has authority to hear the case.

LAND USE/HOUSING

Black Fresno developer sues city, says racism and loss of millions impacted business

Fresno Bee

A Fresno developer who previously butted heads with city officials has filed a lawsuit alleging racism is behind city actions that have cost him millions. According to the suit filed by Terance Frazier, an unfinished audit related to Granite Park was released by Fresno Mayor Lee Brand’s administration, costing him about $4.3 million.

See also:

Rent is coming due in California: ‘Two weeks to avoid complete catastrophe’

San Francisco Chronicle

The California Legislature has less than a month left in its pandemic-shortened session to deal with one of the state’s worst economic crises in decades, and there’s no greater emergency than what to do about the rent.

Calls Grow to Address Racism in Urban Planning

PEW

Advocates are intensifying their calls for city and state governments to remove the highways that destroyed Black neighborhoods.

The pandemic has changed what home-buyers want. 

Barron’s

As stocks tumbled this past week, mortgage rates quietly shrank to near record lows, which means that conditions are perfect for house buyers, except for some nitpicks. Almost no one is selling. Prices are high. Open houses don’t pair well with pandemics. And banks are reluctant to lend—but only to people who need money

PUBLIC FINANCES

Is it time to raise taxes on the rich? California Democrats call for new millionaire’s tax

Modesto Bee

California’s wealthiest households pay the highest income tax rate in the country. It could go up a few more percentage points if Democrats follow through next year on a new proposal that would levy on a new millionaire’s tax for seven-figure earners.

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Here’s What California’s Revenue And Budget Look Like During COVID-19

NPR

From March To May, Tax Revenue Was Down 42% In California Compared With Last Year.

TRANSPORTATION

Is the subway risky? It may be safer than you think

Boston Globe

Five months after the coronavirus outbreak engulfed New York City, riders are still staying away from public transportation in enormous numbers, often because they are concerned that sharing enclosed places with strangers is too dangerous.

WATER

Water bills would fundamentally change under proposal headed for CPUC

Bakersfield Californian

Some Bakersfield residents’ water bills will be fundamentally restructured, with big cost implications, if the California Public Utilities Commission votes Thursday to end an experiment that 12 years ago erased a financial incentive to sell people more water.

“Xtra”

Central Sierra Christian summer camps fight to stay alive during coronavirus pandemic

Fresno Bee

San Joaquin Valley Christian summer camps are struggling as the coronavirus pandemic continues to punch holes in the economy. The financial strain of COVID-19 has touched Christian camps like Calvin Crest above Oakhurst and Hume Lake Christian Camp near Grant Grove.

Candy Cane Lane Parade canceled amid pandemic

Visalia Times Delta

“We know the holiday time is a special time for all families and the tradition of the parade is an integral part of the holiday festivities.”