Bay Area Coronavirus News: September 10-11

Anthony Fauci, director of the U. S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases,U. S. , Wears a Protective Mask from the Washington Nationals when it reaches a subcommittee hearing on the coronavirus crisis called “The Urgent Need for a National Plan to Contain the Coronavirus” in Washington, D. C. on Friday, July 31, 2020: People don’t expect to return to a general life, such as the renunciation of the mask and social estating , until the end of next year, assuming that a vaccine with an efficacy of 70 to 75% is discovered. and administered to the public, Fauci said on September 11.

Anthony Fauci, director of the U. S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases,U. S. , wear a Washington Nationals mask when you arrive at a special House subcommittee on the coronavirus crisis.

Anthony Fauci, director of the U. S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases,U. S. , Wears a Protective Mask from the Washington Nationals when it reaches a subcommittee hearing on the coronavirus crisis called “The Urgent Need for a National Plan to Contain the Coronavirus” in Washington, D. C. on Friday, July 31, 2020: People don’t expect to return to a general life, such as the renunciation of the mask and social estating , until the end of next year, assuming that a vaccine with an efficacy of 70 to 75% is discovered. and administered to the public, Fauci said on September 11.

Anthony Fauci, director of the U. S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases,U. S. , wear a Washington Nationals mask when you arrive at a special House subcommittee on the coronavirus crisis.

The Chronicle began covering the coronavirus crisis before the first cases in the Bay Area were reported and a pandemic was declared in 2020. We reorganized the newsroom to devote maximum resources to stories about fitness and economic disasters. Every day, we release live updates reflect top local, national and global critical updates on COVID-19, and this news is loose to keep our network informed.

Read updates September 8-9

Read updates September 12-13

Read the full timeline:

Friday, September updates

3:17 p. m. ” You can no longer even count on the color of the sky”: in a year with crisis after crisis after crisis, tension begins to accumulate after 8 months, intellectual aptitude experts say. San Francisco psychiatrist Scott Lauze says he does “huge hand in hand” and listens a lot to the word “apocalyptic”: “You can’t even depend on the color of the sky anymore. “Read the story here.

2:59 p. m. University campuses follow the trail of meat-packing plants and nursing homes: as coronavirus outbreaks emerge in schools and universities across the country, New York Times research found that last week, campuses had recorded more than 36,000 additional cases of coronavirus in general. 88,000 infections since the onset of the pandemic. Not all cases were new, and some were the result of more schools reporting the effects of a buildup on coronavirus tests. But the Times survey of 1,600 establishments also shows how contagion has spread to all types of campuses.

2:51 p. m. Democrats Investigate Trump Administration’s PR Contract On Virus: Wise House Democrats Introduced An Inquiry Into The Trump Administration’s $ 250 Million Communications Contract Award To Help ” Defeating Depression and Raising Hope “in the face of the coronavirus pandemic while questioning the taxpayer’s political motivations – Lawmakers call for the contract to be terminated while it is under investigation, according to a letter sent to Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar, that was shared with Politico.

2:46 p. m. Some Louisiana bars would possibly open: bars in a handful of Louisiana parishes will be able to reopen under the new, more flexible coronavirus restrictions announced Friday through Gov. John Bel Edwards. Bars in parishes where the percentage of positive deaths from COVID-19 is 5 You can open % or less for 4 weeks if ward leaders agree, Edwards said.

14:41 Increased cases in Eastern Europe: The number of new coronavirus cases showed higher on Friday in parts of Eastern Europe, with Hungary and the Czech Republic recording unprecedented spikes. Signs of the pandemic resurgence were also evident in Britain and the Netherlands.

2:38 p. m. Children transmit the virus at home after camp: young people who have stuck the coronavirus in kindergartens and in a day camp have passed it on to their loved ones, according to a new report that young people can bring the germ home and infect others. We already know that young people can spread the virus. But the study published Friday through the CDC “definitely indicates, in a way that previous studies have struggled to achieve, the possibility of transmission to members of the family circle,” a Harvard researcher said.

2:29 p. m. SF Music shop reopens: Amoeba Music plans to reopen its San Francisco store on September 17, when shoppers will be able to search for records at its Haight Street location for the first time since the city crashed in March due to the coronavirus pandemic. more here.

2:24 p. m. Fauci says it does not expect generality until the end of 2021: other people should not expect a return to a general life, such as the renunciation of mask and social estating, until the end of next year, assuming that a vaccine with an 70-75% efficacy is discovered and administered to the public, Dr Anthony Fauci, the country’s leading infectious disease specialist, said Friday. Getting a vaccine doesn’t mean it’s “like turning off a switch,” he said in an interview with CNN. “It’s going to be progressive. ” He said he would be surprised if a vaccine was more than 75% effective, meaning it “will have to have a public fitness component. “Only with “a very, very low point of infection,” he said, “then we can start talking about generality. “

1:58 p. m. La poor air quality forces the closure of the East Palo Alto review site: Verily coronavirus reviews in East Palo Alto were canceled today due to dangerous air quality, authorities said. The data is here.

1:22 p. m. Technology personnel leaving the Bay Area may have to settle for pay cuts: VMware Inc. employees. who subscribe to the company to offer paintings remotely and permanently get a pay cut if they leave Silicon Valley expensive for a less expensive city, a Denver pay cut, for example, told Bloomberg other people close to the case. Other corporations can do the same. Facebook has publicly stated that it can also reduce employee salaries depending on where they move to.

1:14 p. m. Sacramento exceeds 20,000 instances, Bay counties are experiencing an increase: Alameda County has reported another 108 instances of coronavirus, Total Friday amounting to 19819 instances, Contra Costa has added 92 instances for a total of 15,058 to date, Sacramento surpassed 20,000 instances on Friday and Contra Costa County surpassed 15,000 cases overall as the virus continued its relentless march.

1:06 p. m. Stocks have an unstable day: the Dow Jones trading average rose by about 0. 5% on a mediocre day for stocks on Friday.

1:01 p. m. Cal State University is heading to virtual courses by 2021: The California State University formula will continue its training at the time of the mainly virtual category pandemic for the period beginning in January, Formula Rector Timothy White announced Friday in a letter to students, college, and staff. It will also continue with population relief in campus housing.

11:59 a. m. CDC affiliates offer meal service with a higher infection rate: adults who tested positive for coronavirus were about twice as likely to have eaten at a place to eat than those who tested negative, a new test the Centers for Disease Control found. “Eating and drinking on-site in places with such characteristics can simply be a significant threat factor,” the CDC said. “Efforts to reduce potential exposures where the use of masks and social distance are difficult to maintain, such as when eating and drinking, should be seen as a shield for customers, workers and communities. “

11:54 A. M. When virus regulations and wildfire smoke collide: San Francisco still does not allow meals indoors, however, the city has no plans to suspend outdoor meals, despite the city’s recommendation that citizens deserve to stay indoors to protect their fitness. air quality tests, Dr. Naveena Bobba, deputy director of the Department of Public Health, said at a briefing Friday.

11:13 a. m. SF, San Mateo County instances continue to increase: San Francisco has shown 68 cases of coronavirus for a cumulative total of 10,688 through Friday, while San Mateo County has reported 71 cases, bringing its total to 8,966 cases to date.

10:28 a. m. The Fauci questions Trump’s rounded comment: Dr. Anthony Fauci said Friday that he disagreed with President Trump’s comment Thursday that the country returns to the corner to take vigorous action against the coronavirus. “I’m sorry, but I don’t agree with that,” the country’s leading infectious disease specialist said in an interview with MSNBC. Fauci said the statistics are “concerned”: “We’re limiting about 40,000 cases a day and the deaths are around 1,000,” a baseline worried for the fall, when other people spend more time indoors, he said. “You don’t need to start with a top baseline anymore. “

10:12 a. m. New knowledge linking pollutants to coronavirus death: A new exam released Friday is the most recent linking exposure to contaminants with a higher threat of coronavirus death. The study published through the IOP found that an increase in the concentration of several hazardous air pollutants was linked to a 9% increase in COVID-19 mortality. The study also related exhaust gases, soot and diesel engine smog separately to increase coronavirus mortality rates.

10:03 am Sweden has reached the lowest positive rate: Sweden has recorded its lowest rate of positive controls for coronavirus, even after its control regime has been extended to record levels, which a fitness officer has said is a justification for its non-intrusive COVID-19 strategy, the Times reports. Over the following week, the country has carried out more than 120,000 controls, of which only 1. 3% knew the disease; at the height of the pandemic, the proportion was 19%.

9:45 a. m. Autumn threatens to increase the number of deaths in the US. U. S. : The number of deaths in the U. S. Because of coronavirus it is shrinking after peaking in early August, but scientists warn that a new fight against the disease this fall may the arrival of cooler weather and the likelihood of more indoor meetings will increase the importance of protective precautions, experts say. And a dozen states are fighting the national downward trend in deaths, adding Iowa, North Carolina, West Virginia, and Kansas.

9:17 Wednesday Orange, “The World Is Not Over”: Mary Ellen Carroll on the fifth podcast

9:09 am The memorial occasions of September 11 are different this year: Americans commemorated September 11 on Friday as a new national crisis, the coronavirus pandemic, reconfigured birthday ceremonies. In New York, relatives of the victims amassed memories of the split screen. one at the World Trade Center Memorial Square and one on a nearby corner through a separate organization after the monument made the decision to give up classical reading of the names of the dead through relatives. Memorial officials said the replacement was a protective precaution opposed to coronavirus.

8:51 am Monterey Jazz announces its programming for a virtual concert: seven new musical performances through famous jazz artists, live conversations with Angela Davis and Clint Eastwood, and socially remote viewing nights are on deck for the 63rd annual Monterey Jazz Festival this year when it will be virtual from September 25-27. Read the main points here.

8:36 am The San Quentin inmate’s family circle is suing for the death of COVID-19: The circle of relatives of a San Quentin inmate who contracted the coronavirus filed the first death complaint opposed to California’s pandemic-like correctional formula. Mentioning the failed movement of inflamed criminals as the cause of his death, the Los Angeles Times reports. Daniel Ruiz among those who fell under the epidemic of the virus that followed the transfer of criminals to San Quentin of a criminal in Chino.

8:04 am The global death toll exceeds 910,000: COVID-19 has claimed more than 910,000 lives worldwide, according to a follow-up on Friday by researchers at Johns Hopkins University. In the United States, more than 191,000 people were killed, and in California, the death toll stood at 14,095 through Friday morning.

7:58 am: The IRS needs to distribute money: the IRS is looking for you if you have not yet cashed a pandemic collection check because of you. It is estimated that nine million other people have not yet done so. letters to millions of other people who have not yet connected online to see if they were eligible for a $2 trillion stimulus payment under the Cares Act, the Washington Post reports, and with Congress stuck in a new package, this would possibly be the only chance to rescue them in the event of a pandemic.

7: 4 a. m. 5 a. m. La pandemic is wreaking havoc on the intellectual fitness of young Americans: adults under the age of 35 of the pandemic will likely report negative emotions or revel in physical or emotional symptoms related to tension and anxiety, according to a new survey. Most Americans over the age of 18 to 34 (56%) they say that at least infrequently they have felt remote in the last month, compared to about four out of 10 older Americans, according to NORC’s new COVID follow-up exam at the University of Chicago. 56% of older people say their intellectual aptitude is right or very good, compared to only 39% of young adults.

6:51 a. m. Stocks are looking up: stocks rose Friday morning, the Dow and Nasdaq have risen slightly. Economists are involved in the strength of recovery in the face of declining stimulus investment and continued demand for unemployment.

Updates on Thursday, September 10:

5:20 pm: San Francisco will open beauty salons and indoor nails, gyms and hotels next week: businesses, as well as massage parlors, tattoo and piercing services, as well as entertainment and circle tours of family members, will be able to reopen with limited capacity on September 1. 14. They have been closed since the existing shelter orders came into force on March 17. Learn more here.

3:26 p. m. Democrats and the Republican Party deeply divided on viral politics and aid: Deep political divisions on responses to the coronavirus pandemic were published thursday when Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham told a Congressional committee that New Mexico needed more federal assistance for recovery. relief on restrictions to return to painting and school in an effort to revive the economy.

3:14 p. m. The government will avoid coronavirus detection at airports: emphasizing that coronavirus transmission may come from others without symptoms, the CDC says that as of Monday, the government will no longer require flights from China and other specified countries to land at one of the 15 designated airports and will complete the advanced fitness test at the helm of those passengers. “The test is limited in use because other people with COVID-19 may have no symptoms or fever at the time of the test, or only mild symptoms. It can pass through passengers who have no symptoms or have not yet developed symptoms of infection,” the CDC said on Wednesday.

3:10 p. m. A new study examines situations that require the concept that other young people are impervious: a letter from Harvard studies found that of 3222 young adults hospitalized by COVID-19, approximately 2. 7%, 88 patients, died. A breathing fan. The study “states that COVID-19 is a deadly disease in others of all ages,” wrote Dr. Mitchell Katz, deputy editor-in-chief of JAMA Internal Medicine.

3:03 p. m. The Pleasure County health officer resigns after authorities declared an end to COVID-19’s local health emergency: Dr. Aimee Sisson resigned as a Pleasure County health officer, starting September 25, after county supervisors unanimously declared an end to the county’s local health emergency. a Memorandum of 8 September that the supervisors’ action “made it clear that I can no longer play my role effectively. “Sisson said she was grateful for the privilege of “protecting and selling the fitness of the other 400,000 people in Placer County. “County general manager Todd Leopold said in a statement that his leadership in reaction to the pandemic had placed the county “to continue to safely reopen our economy while taking mandatory precautions. “

2:21 p. m. California exceeds 14,000 deaths: Alameda County showed 115 more cases of coronavirus, bringing its total to 19711 cases on Thursday; Contra Costa County has reported 81 cases, for a total of 14,966 to date; COVID-19’s death toll in California exceeded 14,000 emerging at 14020 on Thursday afternoon.

2:13 p. m. La JPMorgan Health Conference in San Francisco in San Francisco becomes virtual in 2021: the largest annual conference in the fitness industry, which attracts another 9,000 people in the Union Square area, will be held online from January 11-14, 2021, JPMorgan confirmed. the bank had planned to return to San Francisco despite long-standing court cases about peak prices and homelessness in the area.

2:05 p. m. The CDC says the death toll in the country can be successful at 217,000 through early October: the Centers for Disease Control projected Thursday, founded on forecasts, that new COVID-19 deaths over the next 4 weeks will take the nation’s total to 205,000 to 217,000 lives lost through October 3.

1:16 p. m. Stocks have a difficult day: the Nasdaq plummeted by 2% on Thursday, as all primary indices got into trouble.

1:07 p. m. La ballot opens a window into the distrust of the pandemic: public confidence in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Dr. Anthony Fauci has fallen dramatically since April, especially among Republicans, according to a new ballot through the Kaiser Family Non-Partisan Foundation. The survey found that almost a portion of adults have at least one misconception about coronavirus prevention and remedy, adding one in five who dress in a mask is destructive to physical condition and one in 4 that says hydroxychloroquine is an effective remedy for coronavirus. Less than the part of respondents would like to be vaccinated against COVID-19 if they want to have a vaccine before November, according to the survey conducted from 28 August to 28 September.

12:49 p. m. La Stanford Medical School exploits Trump’s adviser: nearly 100 Stanford Medical School professors signed an open letter this week denouncing Dr. Scott Atlas, former Stanford professor and pandemic advisor to President Trump, saying that “many of his reviews and statements go counter to established science “that can lead to “immense preventable harm. “Atlas, a member of the Hoover Institute at Stanford, Professor and Head of Neuroradiology from 1998 to 2012, has no pleasure in treating infectious diseases. in spaces such as epidemiology, fitness policy and infectious diseases, Atlas’ technique is passed on to the reopening of schools and the economy. Read the story here.

12:35 p. m. The South Dakota Motorcycle Rally is a massive super spreader: the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally in South Dakota, where Smash Mouth was held for thousands of viewers, may be the largest known coronavirus spraying occasion in the United States, according to a new study The 10-day event in August caused more than 250,000 cases of COVID-19 and public fitness prices estimated at $12. 2 billion , according to the study published by the German Institute of Labour Economics. Read the story here.

12:24 pm Why those colors ?: Dr. Mark Ghaly, Secretary of State for Health and Human Services, said Thursday that “it’s a little early” to say how well the new state color-coded surveillance formula works for reopening consultant counties. At a press conference, he did not directly explain why the espresso colors had been selected (red is the highest unfavorable time, for example), but he said at a conference that the new grades are meant to be an easier and more direct way to track Progress opposed to the virus, “to make sure that we pass slowly and unbridledly, and that we have strict rules” about what countries can do.

12:15 p. m. International deaths exceed 900,000: the global death toll from the 905624 coronavirus pandemic lost at noon on Thursday, according to researchers at Johns Hopkins University.

11:57 a. m. , Newsom presents symptoms of a bill that increases the poor health benefits of state staff for COVID-19: Governor Newsom passed a law wednesday to promptly make greater protections against poor health days paid to state staff. means that each and every California worker who has been exposed or tested positive for COVID-19 will have access to paid days in case of ill health for the remainder of the 2020 calendar year, state officials said.

11:53 Florida helps keep some school knowledge of fitness a secret. A month after the forced reopening of Florida schools, dozens of study rooms, and some entire schools began, they were temporarily closed due to coronavirus outbreaks. Infections among school-age youth increased But parents in many parts of the state do not know if epidemics are connected to their own schools, as the state ordered some counties to keep knowledge of physical fitness secret, the Washington Post reports.

11:42 a. m. The GOP’s stimulus effort fails to get out of the Senate: Senate Republicans failed Thursday to promote their particularly small stimulus package when Democrats resisted, calling the measure inadequate, underlining the ever-lower chances of Congress adopting some other pandemic economic recovery before the November 3 election. Democratic opposition, as expected, rejected the 60 votes needed to move forward to the measure. Republicans held the vote largely in an effort to blame Democrats for the lack of progress in a compromise.

11:12 a. m. Trump’s new counterattack accuses Woodward of not reporting sooner: President Trump now argues that if his admission that he publicly downplayed the severity of the coronavirus, he knows how fatal it was, it was “so bad or dangerous,” he editor Bob Woodward would do. Woodward’s taped interviews with the president appear in his new ebook “Rage,” and the reporter says he needed time to investigate the veracity of Trump’s comments and provide the story in context before the November election.

Trump’s crusade is pressuring the court to block mail-in ballots in Nevada: President Trump’s re-election crusade is urging the federal government to pass a ruling in Las Vegas to block a Nevada law and prevent ballots from mailed to the entire active electorate in less than 8 weeks before the November 3 election and amid the coronavirus pandemic, the crusade argues that it is harm through state law because it asks Republicans to divert resources to “educate the Nevada electorate on those adjustments and inspire them to keep voting. “

10:50 A measure through FS can simply help cuts: The mayor of London Breed and San Francisco supervisors are campaigning aggressively for a corporate tax measure, Proposition F, which they say is essential to maintaining the city’s sensitive budget of $13. 1 billion The city faces a $1. 5 billion deficit , largely caused by the pandemic. If the electorate abandons the major trade tax reform, the city will have to locate $100 million this fiscal year and $200 million next year, which is likely to mean layoffs and service cuts. Read the story here.

10:38 Alameda County takes strong action against emerging fitness violations: Pandemic-born Broke Ass Cooks, on the run, has just become another emerging place to eat that will be closed through Alameda County fitness inspectors, according to its founders The resolution indicates that the county is beginning to take strong action against the growing number of food corporations operating in the legal shadows of the Pandemic. Read the story here.

10:30 am California arrives in 750,000 cases: San Francisco has shown 46 more cases of coronavirus, for a cumulative total of 10120 cases on Thursday, while San Mateo County reported 88 cases, bringing the total to 8,895 cases. The coronavirus to date amounted to 747969 on Thursday morning.

10:19 am Oakland Hospital did not isolate patients with COVID-19, according to the report: COVID-19 patients at Alta Bates Summit Medical Center were dispersed to Oakland Hospital, in a period that persists elsewhere, despite CDC rules that hospitals isolate patients with COVID-19 to restrict exposure and retain protective equipment Kaiser Health News reports. A KHN investigation found that dozens of nursing homes and hospitals across the country ignored the rules, fueling the spread of coronavirus in some places and leaving unprepared and inflamed or, in some cases, dead.

10:10 a. m. A New York student arrested after insisting on going to school every day: a Long Island high school student was suspended this week after attending user categories on the day of his distance learning, then arrested after proceeding to run in protest despite Maverick Stow , 17, told school officials that he thought he would be provided with a user five days a week, according to a statement from the school district.

9:46 am Voters are not convinced by Trump’s admission that it downplayed the fatal nature of the virus: most voters in the war states did not want to hear Trump’s duplicity, on tape, to make a decision on how to deal with the pandemic, writes Joe Garofoli of The Chronicle. Array Trump’s admission that he knew the virus was fatal , but that’s why he told the public in a different way doesn’t replace his brain taken months ago, and that’s why Trump is lagging behind in the top of the box states. Battle.

9:24 am The administration lags behind the need for N95: despite statements by the White House that hospitals have all the medical materials needed to combat coronavirus, scarcity is still widely reported, adding a critical mask of N95. Management took months to sign contracts with corporations that manufacture a very important component within the N95: molten textile, which promises virus blocking. Manufacturers say management has not yet made the mandatory investments to succeed at full capacity. Products melted out of the country as domestic demand for masks soared.

9: 0four am Virus in other people’s minds, other people need to vote early: approximately six out of 10 registered voters in the country say they need to vote before voting day, a significant difference from previous years, according to a Washington Post-Vote from the University of Maryland through Ipsos: fear of coronavirus and doubts about the reliability of mail voting after months of attacks through the president Trump weighs heavily on Americans as they know how to make sure their vote is counted safely, according to the poll. four out of 10 votes were cast early.

8:53 am SF State plans layoffs: San Francisco State University announced to 131 members that they will be fired on November 9th due to lack of funds. The COVID-1nine pandemic, as well as enrollment and budget issues, has led to layoffs, school president Lynn Mahoney said in an email. No member of the university was fired. Read the story here.

8:23 am Giroir said that the home review was “very close”: Admiral Brett Giroir, who is reviewing the tsar of the White House Coronavirus Working Group, said Thursday that “we are very close to getting very precise home checks” for the coronavirus. “Don’t expect that in a month or two,” he added in an interview with CNN. But he said it would soon be that the generation would come to fruition. Giroir also stated that detection of asymptomatic Americans is necessary, making an attempt to explain previous CDC rules that gave the impression of implying otherwise.

8:09 A pandemic of traps sends equipment on board: when coronavirus outbreaks closed borders, sailors in shipments around the world had no way home. Six months later, there’s no solution in sight, the New York Times reports. , some team members began to refuse to work, forcing shipments to remain in port.

8:06 a. m. , the UN is asking nations for cash for a faster vaccine: the UN Secretary-General is calling on donor countries and others to invest $35 billion in a World Health Organization-led initiative to drive and advance coronavirus testing, remedies and vaccines.

7:49 am What happens to the reopening of schools? County fitness officers approve exemptions in consultation with state fitness officers. Schools consult with parents, unions, and network teams and publish a reopening plan online. Read the main points about each of the bays The area county’s position on the schools here.

7:05 a. m. Random test approach, as few schools open for classes in the user: only 1% of Bay Areas academics get commands in the user at this time, however, all California schools will need to locate a verification plan of coronavirus to do so. manage checks, how they will be done, who will be checked, and how schools will pay for them, showing the random way and catches that schools and districts are largely the only ones getting it . . . Read the story here .

6:38 a. m. Shares continue to recover: after a large multi-day sale, stocks rose on Thursday when investors who had parked cash the pandemic retreated to the market in search of opportunities.

5:53 a. m. Unemployment programs haven’t changed: the number of Americans who reported task calls remained strong last week. Californians continued to represent a disproportionate share of the new unemployed, and acting in the Golden State accounted for more than part of the claims in the recent peak period.

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