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California Governor Gavin Newsom Orders Closures of Indoor Operations Statewide

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California Governor Gavin Newsom Orders Closures of Indoor Operations Statewide

Effective July 13, 2020, all bars, breweries, and pubs in California must close both indoor and outdoor operations due to rising COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations. Additionally, statewide closures of indoor operations in the following sectors have been ordered:

  • Dine-in restaurants,
  • Wineries and tasting rooms,
  • Movie theaters,
  • Family entertainment centers including bowling alleys and similar venues,
  • Zoos and museums, and
  • Cardrooms

There are additional mandated closures for California counties that have been on the County Monitoring List for three consecutive days. Unless the activity can be modified to operate outdoors or via pick-up, the following industries and activities must shut down immediately:

  • Fitness centers
  • Worship services
  • Protests
  • Offices for non-essential sectors
  • Personal care services, including nail salons, and body waxing and tattoo parlors
  • Hair salons and barbershops
  • Malls

As of July 13, 2020, the following counties have been on the County Monitoring List for three consecutive days: Colusa, Contra Costa, Fresno, Glenn, Imperial, Kings, Los Angeles, Madera, Marin, Merced, Monterey, Napa, Orange, Placer, Riverside, Sacramento, San Benito, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Joaquin, Santa Barbara, Solano, Sonoma, Stanislaus, Sutter, Tulare, Yolo, Yuba, and Ventura.
According to the Official California State Government Website, as of July 13, 2020, California has 329, 162 confirmed cases of COVID-19. For more information, visit https://covid19.ca.gov/.

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COVID-19 Cases on the Rise in California; Sacramento County Bars Recommended to Close

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COVID-19 Cases on the Rise in California; Sacramento County Bars Recommended to Close

On June 28, 2020, the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) mandated the closure of bars for California counties who have been on the County Monitoring List for more than 14 days. The mandatory closures are in effect in Fresno, Imperial, Kern, Kings, Los Angeles, San Joaquin, and Tulare counties. The CDPH additionally recommended the closure of bars in counties that have been on the County Monitoring List for three or more consecutive days but less than 14 days. Those counties include Contra Costa, Glen, Merced, Orange, Riverside, Sacramento, San Bernardino, Santa Barbara, Santa Clara, Solano, Stanislaus, and Ventura.

According to the CDPH, the County Monitoring List consists of counties that have concerning levels of disease transmission, hospitalizations, or insufficient testing. As of June 28, 2020, California has conducted 3,955,952 tests and has 211,243 confirmed COVID-19 cases. For more information about state and local guidelines, visit cdph.ca.gov/covid19.

 

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California’s Face Coverings Requirement: What It Is

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California’s Face Coverings Requirement: What It Is

On Thursday, June 18, Governor Gavin Newsom announced that Californians are required to wear face coverings in public spaces, effective immediately. According to the California Department of Public Health, the specific higher-risk situations in which face coverings are required are:

  • Inside of, or in line to enter, any indoor public space;
  • Obtaining services from the healthcare sector in settings including, but not limited to, a hospital, pharmacy, medical clinic, laboratory, physician or dental office, veterinary clinic, or blood bank;
  • Waiting for or riding on public transportation or paratransit or while in a taxi, private car service, or ride-sharing vehicle;
  • Engaged in work, whether at the workplace or performing work off-site, when:
    • Interacting in-person with any member of the public;
    • Working in any space visited by members of the public, regardless of whether anyone from the public is present at the time;
    • Working in any space where food is prepared or packaged for sale or distribution to others;
    • Working in or walking through common areas, such as hallways, stairways, elevators, and parking facilities;
    • In any room or enclosed area where other people (except for members of the person’s own household or residence) are present when unable to physically distance;
  • Driving or operating any public transportation or paratransit vehicle, taxi, or private car service or ride-sharing vehicle when passengers are present. When no passengers are present, face coverings are strongly recommended;
  • While outdoors in public spaces when maintaining a physical distance of six feet from persons who are not members of the same household or residence is not feasible.

Exemptions

Individuals exempt from wearing a face covering include persons age two or younger; persons with a medical condition, mental health condition, or disability condition that prevents wearing a face covering; persons who are hearing impaired or are communicating with someone who is hearing impaired; persons for whom wearing a face covering would create a risk to the person related to their work, as determined by local, state, or federal regulators or workplace safety guidelines; persons who are obtaining a service involving the nose or face for which temporary removal of the face covering is necessary; persons seated at a restaurant or other establishment that offers food or beverage service, while they are eating or drinking, provided they can keep a distance of six or more feet away from those who are not members of their household; persons who are engaged in outdoor work or recreation, when alone or with household members, and when they are able to keep a six foot distance from others; and persons who are incarcerated.

According to the Office of Public Affairs, Governor Newsom explained his reasoning for mandating face coverings in public spaces now: “Simply put, we are seeing too many people with faces uncovered – putting at risk the real progress we have made in fighting the disease. California’s strategy to restart the economy and get people back to work will only be successful if people act safely and follow health recommendations. That means wearing a face covering, washing your hands and practicing physical distancing.”

For more info see: https://www.cdph.ca.gov/Programs/CID/DCDC/CDPH%20Document%20Library/COVID-19/Guidance-for-Face-Coverings_06-18-2020.pdf

 

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Paycheck Protection Program Flexibility Act of 2020

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Paycheck Protection Program Flexibility Act of 2020

H.R.7010 has passed both the House and the Senate and is expected to be signed by the White House momentarily. This bill provides much needed relief to the PPP program:

  1. The 8 week limit to spend their fund has been extended to 24 weeks;
  2. The requirement that 75% be spent on salaries has been reduced to 60%, meaning that not 40% can be spent on utilities & rent;
  3. The “workforce amnesty” provision that allowed employees to be replaced or rehired in sufficient number to replace the entire workforce was rolled back from June 30th to December 31st;
  4. There will be no payment due until five years after the borrower received the PPP loan (with the 1% interest in tact);
  5. Forgiveness for laid off employees who them, or a replacement, are not rehired if the borrower can show that they were unable to find similarly qualified employees or get that employee back; and
  6. Also,  employers will be able to defer paying the 6.2% payroll tax that employers are charged for employees for a period of two years, regardless of whether the borrower receives loan forgiveness under the PPP program

There are no new talk of increased funding, thus if you were unable to apply that is unlikely to change. Still, for those lucky enough to meet the PPP requirements, this is great news.

For more information see the full text at: https://www.congress.gov/bill/116th-congress/house-bill/7010/text.

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Governor Newsom Signs Executive Order Advancing Protections Against Domestic Violence and Other Needed Additions

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Governor Newsom Signs Executive Order Advancing Protections Against Domestic Violence and Other Needed Additions

Order N-65-20 was issued to help ease the strain on domestic violence service providers by waiving the 10 percent cash or in-kind matching requirements for state grants awarded to these organizations. The order also waives the deadline to verify grade point average and waives certain certification requirements and selective service registration verification for Cal Grant applicants. Additionally, the order suspends programmatic deadlines for entities that receive funding from the Energy Commission for the development and deployment of new technologies that support the state’s clean energy and decarbonization goals.

A full copy of the order can be found here: https://www.gov.ca.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/5.19.20-EO-N-65-20.pdf

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California Moves Towards Late State Two Reopening to Allow Dine-in Restaurants and Hair Salons and Barbershops

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California Moves Towards Late State Two Reopening to Allow Dine-in Restaurants and Hair Salons and Barbershops

California slowly moves towards Stage Three of the Covid-19 release. Therein, Yolo, Sacramento, and Placer counties have all been cleared to reopen Dine-in restaurants and hair salons and barbershops. Specific guidance for opening such can be found here: https://covid19.ca.gov/roadmap-counties/.  Also open are Curb-side retail; Manufacturers; Logistics; Childcare for those outside of the essential workforce; Office-based businesses (telework remains strongly encouraged); Select services: car washes, pet grooming and landscape gardening; Outdoor museums, open gallery spaces and other public spaces with modifications.

San Francisco, and surrounding counties, have not yet reached this point.

Approval has not yet been provided for reopening Personal services such as nail salons, tattoo parlors, gyms and fitness studios; Indoor museums, kids museums, gallery spaces, zoos and libraries; Community centers, including public pools, playgrounds, and picnic areas; Entertainment venues, such as movie theaters, gaming, gambling, arcade venues, pro sports; Hospitality services, such as bars, wineries, tasting rooms and lounges; Nightclubs; Concert venues; Live audience sports; Festivals; Theme parks Hotels/lodging for leisure and tourism – non-essential travel; and Higher Education. But, that is expected soon, as both Placer and Yolo county have recently been able to reduce casualties related to COVID-19 to “0.”

For more details see: https://www.cdph.ca.gov/Programs/CID/DCDC/Pages/COVID-19/County_Variance_Attestation_Form.aspx

 

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California COVID-19 Positive Blood Drive

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California COVID-19 Positive Blood Drive

California is asking everyone who tested positive for COVID-19 and survived to donate blood so they can use those antibodies to help currently ill individuals.

Who can donate COVID-19 plasma?

  • A person who had a test that showed coronavirus infection,
    AND
  • Has felt well for at least 14 days,
    AND
  • Passes the usual rules for blood donation. 

Most blood centers require a negative swab test if you plan to donate before one month has passed since you recovered. The blood center may also have other rules.

You can find a donation center at: https://covid19.ca.gov/plasma/.

 

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COVID

California Enters Stage 2 of Reopening the Economy

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California Enters Stage 2 of Reopening the Economy

As of May 8th, lower-risk businesses can reopen with social distancing guidelines. The new guidance can be found at https://covid19.ca.gov/roadmap/. Stage two will gradually be implemented but so far allows:

  • retail (curbside and delivery only);
  • related logistics and manufacturing;
  • office workplaces;
  • limited personal services;
  • outdoor museums;
  • child care; and
  • essential businesses can open with modifications

Since the Stage-2 opening, there has been a 3% increase in COVID-19 deaths and tested cases. Individuals are encouraged to maintain vigilance and safe practices. As such, a reminder 0f businesses still disallowed from opening are:

  • Personal services such as nail salons, tattoo parlors, gyms and fitness studios
  • Entertainment venues with limited capacities, such as movie theaters, gaming, gambling, and arcade venues, and pro sports
  • Indoor museums, kids museums and gallery spaces, zoos and libraries
  • Community centers, including public pools, playgrounds, and picnic areas
  • Limited-capacity religious services and cultural ceremonies
  • Nightclubs
  • Concert venues
  • Live audience sports
  • Festivals
  • Theme parks
  • Hotels/lodging for leisure and tourism – non-essential travel
  • Higher education

For more info visit: https://www.cdph.ca.gov/Programs/CID/DCDC/Pages/COVID-19/Local-Variance-Attestations.aspx

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California Will Allow All Registered Voters to Vote by Mail

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California Will Allow All Registered Voters to Vote by Mail

Executive Order N-64-20 will allow all registered voters in California to vote by mail in the November 3, 2020 General Election. The Governor’s office will continue to work with the Legislature and the Secretary of State to determine how requirements for in-person voting opportunities and other details of the November election will be implemented, while preserving public health and giving county elections officials needed flexibility.

The full Order can be read here: https://www.gov.ca.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/05.08.2020-EO-N-64-20-signed.pdf

 

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The House Introduces the HEROES Act for Third Rounds of COVID-19 Economic Stimulus

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The House Introduces the HEROES Act for Third Rounds of COVID-19 Economic Stimulus

Friday will bring the releases of the Health and Economic Recovery Omnibus Emergency Solutions Act (“HEROES Act”). The bill provides relief for essential workers, such as aviation, rail and Amtrak workers, extends work visas for immigrants, and further provides assistance to state and local governments, hazard pay for frontline health care workers, forgiveness of student debt and bolstering Medicaid and Medicare, provisions to assist farmers, protect renters and homeowners from evictions and foreclosures, and extends family and medical leave provisions previously approved by Congress.

The Bill does not have wide support, unlike previous stimulus bills to assist with COVID-19. After the infamous handling of the PPP, as well as a several trillion dollar price tag on for economic stimulus payments, conservative lawmakers have advised this bill will not pass the Senate. With the economy set to reopen soon, the fate of this bill is unknown.

The full bill can be read here: https://docs.house.gov/billsthisweek/20200511/BILLS-116hr6800ih.pdf