Tuesday, November 4, 2025
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Tired of the LA Desert? Costa Rica Awaits You

By Mark Friedman, Environment Reporter

Random Lengths readers, are you interested in a spring break or summer vacation with an environmental experience by visiting Costa Rica and seeing firsthand a country with some of the greatest biodiversity of life in the world? A very large number of national parks comprising 25% of the land area, marine and terrestrial protected areas, sea turtle protection and volcanoes and jungles, cloud forests and beaches, beckon you.

Costa Rica, for a small nation of 5 million and small landmass, has taken some important environmental measures to try and minimize habitat destruction and loss and saving animal and plant species, some of which are listed on the CITES international endangered list of organisms.  Costa Rica has 5% of all the world species.

This reporter and RL photographer had an opportunity to spend a week in Costa Rica, the primary purpose of which was to present a lecture on ocean plastic pollution: problems and solutions at the University of Costa Rica in San Jose.(This campaign to educate and organize around ocean plastic pollution has been supported by Random Lengths and the LA Maritime Institute here in San Pedro.) (Unfortunately, we failed to see the sloth living on the campus grounds).

Costa Rica has tremendous US business investments, all the big-name companies you could think of, and a population of 50,000 Americans and 10,000 Canadians. The negative consequences is a very expensive cost-of-living… Almost on a par with prices in Los Angeles, and 30% youth unemployment, similar to the US.

We also were able to observe, over four hours late night high tide on a remote Pacific coast beach, the arrival of a previously tagged female leatherback turtle (called baula in Costa Rica), and her egg laying.  Participating with researchers and scientists who have been tracking these endangered animals, we learned that 20 years ago 1500 would arrive and lay eggs multiple times in the fall and early winter.  This past year, only nine have returned to do so after maturing for 7-13 years in the open ocean.  This female laid 65 fertile eggs and then added 65 infertile eggs on top of them to give an added protection from predators (humans, racoons, feral cats…) Leatherback’s are among the most endangered species of marine turtles.

In San Jose itself, several sites warrant special consideration for your visit.  The first is the Spirogyra butterfly farm, which houses an extraordinary collection of endemic butterflies, especially blue morphs, which flitter about and land on you as you walk through an enclosed recreation of their habitat. Exhibits display the metamorphosis of butterflies from caterpillars for multiple species

The second is the Museo La Salle, which houses the largest collection in central America of international marine organisms, especially shells (5,000 species), and 8500 butterflies, which is 10% of the world’s number.  They have impressive collections of 1200 different species of insects, 400 birds and mammals, fossils, minerals, etc.

An additional attraction, not to be missed, is the Museo de Arte Costarricense located in a large park and sports fields near their new national stadium donated by China.  It includes modern art and one of the most interesting and unique exhibits I have ever seen.  One exhibition is art produced by prisoners between 1873 and 1991 from the San Lucas prison.  These are scores of enlarged replicated photographs of the rudimentary drawings on prison walls.  Everything from political to religious commentary and drawings.

Why a Hardware Store Isn’t Like a Hospital

Laissez-faire capitalism meets the pandemic

By James Preston Allen, Publisher

Sam at my local hardware store has a supply of N95 masks that he’s not price gouging on but limits the purchase to three per customer. He says it’s been hard to stock enough of them because he has some large customers like police and fire departments that want to buy them by the pallet. He tries to accommodate them but still, there’s a national shortage and a huge demand because of the novel coronavirus pandemic.

One would think that with the demand so high for protective medical equipment that the manufacturers would be working day and night to fill the need. Yet, they were caught short as if they weren’t tipped off to the coming demand and the federal government is not telling these manufacturers where to prioritize their shipments. It’s probably one of the few sectors of the economy not laying off workers.

Hardware stores like hospitals are part of the “essential” economy along with a list of a few dozen other types of businesses that can remain open during this lockdown. And yet, unlike hospitals, hardware stores operate on a laissez-faire system of supply and demand — like most main street businesses do. If more people are buying sanitation supplies, the hardware store orders more sanitation supplies, not less. Sam’s suppliers seem to have plenty of sanitation supplies until they don’t. I find it curious that retail store chains can’t figure this out with toilet paper.

Hospitals, on the other hand, are a service. Why they are run like a business is one of those contentious discussions that has been thrown around like a bowl of hot minestrone soup hoping that it doesn’t spill. One side is committed to maintaining the status quo, which ensures the existence of insurance companies, while those committed to changing the system argue that the business of providing health care should be like a public utility. Long gone is the idea of community-owned hospitals or those that are run strictly as religious charities, most have been absorbed into chains operated on the business model.

There are some 40 million Americans who still don’t have health insurance as the Donald Trump administration and Republican controlled states try to roll back the Affordable Care Act — it probably should have been called the Mandatory Health Insurance Act — as it really didn’t deliver on the affordability part, due mostly on the part of Republicans obstructing anything that smelled of national health care.

Still, what we have seen over the course of the past 40 years is a drift to the privatization of hospitals with a business model that even some “not for profit” health care networks use that looks more like a for profit business than a charitable institution. This pandemic has exposed the failings of our expensive health care industry – and one can hardly call it a “system” at this point.

State governments are scrambling to open and operate closed facilities, create new ones with the help of the Army Corps of Engineers or call on the federal government to supply hospital ships to Los Angeles and New York, clearly the laissez-faire capitalism that conservatives tout as the best economic model doesn’t work when called upon to combat an pandemic. The response that seems to be working are those solutions that progressive Democrats come up with. But why is that?

For the past decade, if not before, there has been a series of policies to defund certain government spending, almost all of them on the domestic front but almost all of it justified by conservative fiscal policies to lower taxes, spend less on public schools and cut funding for what we now realize belatedly as critical public health infrastructures.

Much of these policies were promoted on the basis of lowering the national deficit and yet, here we are after 10 years of a boom-boom bull economy, passing a $2 trillion legislation to both fight a virus and save that same capitalist economic structure. And what do they use as a cure? A congressional mandate for $1,200 in the pocket of every tax paying citizen who’s not a millionaire, an idea that we all thought former Democratic candidate Andrew Yang was crazy for suggesting and economic support for workers and small business that even Sen. Bernie Sanders voted for. Sanders still has some reservations about $450 billion going to large corporations during an election year.

So some have asked, “Why is it that countries like Italy and Spain, who have robust national health care fail, so miserably in the current pandemic?” The answer is explained by Sebastiaan Faber, a professor of Hispanic Studies at Oberlin College and the author of Memory Battles of the Spanish Civil War.

In a Real News Network interview he explains:

So in response to the great recession of 2008- 2010, the Spanish government, both the central government and regional governments … cut back on healthcare funding, reducing the number of beds, reducing the number of personnel, surgeons, nurses, at all kinds of levels. So that trend has really hurt the system, and it’s a crisis like this that brings that to the fore.

The second big trend that has weakened the public healthcare system in Spain has been the constant steady push toward privatization, especially by conservative governments at the regional level, that have consistently pushed to take public facilities and privatize them, or to allow private for-profit companies to manage or take over public healthcare services.

This all sounds rather familiar to what we’re witnessing here in America, yet we don’t even have a national health care system, except for Medicare for old folks and a patchwork of county and state health departments and a few dozen privatized hospital monopolies whose main job is to lower their expenses.

As it becomes clearer that the Trump administration did nothing to prepare for this pandemic, even though they were briefed on it in December of last year, the growing chorus of stunned disbelief at his daily press briefings only adds to the chaos that we’ve grown to accept in his reality TV show mayhem.

Recently Trump said, “We would be doing a great job” if the number of deaths resulting from the coronavirus was limited to 100,000. Trump said this not long after he said he wanted everybody to go to church on Easter Sunday. This is perhaps the most bizarre part of his delusional thinking. Perhaps he thinks he could raise the dead like Jesus on Easter? Trump is using the press briefings as a way to spread misinformation, campaign for re-election and bully reporters who challenge him.

By contrast, the daily press briefings by California’s Gov. Gavin Newsom and New York’s Gov. Andrew Cuomo show what effective government leadership and what a social democracy that “does for the people that they can’t do for themselves,” looks like.

Running a health care system is nothing like running a hardware store and please help us from a man who can do neither and would bankrupt both if allowed. Oddly enough creating a national health care infrastructure is now being done state by state, week by week as COVID-19 spreads. But the nation will not call it socialism, but a necessary cure to stem the tide of this pandemic.

Labor During COVID-19: Fight for Safety and Protection On the Job

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Maintain physical distance, but expand our social and human solidarity

By Mark Friedman, Reporter

Workers around the world are demanding safety precautions on the job as they face the spreading  coronavirus.

In Los Angeles, Newark, La Guardia and JFK in New York and Australia, airport workers have organized public demands for safety measures, explaining that they are vulnerable to the virus that may be carried by plane-loads of passengers and cargo returning from other countries. These workers include baggage handlers, ticket agents, flight attendants, cabin cleaners and wheelchair assistants. Those at the low end earn below $15 an hour with no health coverage.

As reported in the March 19 issue of Random Lengths News, the 150,000-member National Union of Nurses has been demonstrating for more effective protective gear, while at the same time, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been trying to get them to accept looser fitting masks. CDC reports show that coronavirus is most commonly transmitted from person to person via coughing and sneezing, which suggests a surgical mask should be sufficient to protect staff. Federal officials and healthcare workers however are still recommending that staff wear the tighter masks during procedures that may induce coughing and make the virus airborne.

And in Oakland, dock workers, members of ILWU, threatened to shut down the SSA terminal after risking COVID-19  exposure. They are demanding sanitary conditions while working at ports that serve as major shipping arteries. ILWU Locals 10 and 34 hosted a press conference where leaders and rank-and-file articulated their need for proper health and safety in their port jobs. Tra-Pack was forced to clean the equipment and is demanding the same action from SSA. They also discussed the issue of the conditions of the Grand Princess Crew docked at Hunters Point.

Some of the biggest battles have been in Europe, especially Italy, which has the highest percentage of fatalities to virus infections. Workers ordered to continue in manufacturing plants staged strikes and demonstrations to demand safety equipment. At an Italian Amazon warehouse near Milan, strikers protested the company’s reaction to two of their coworkers testing positive for coronavirus.

Union representatives told La Repubblica that Amazon isn’t implementing proper hygiene and social distancing measures.

“For them, business comes ahead of workers’ health,” said Pino De Rosa from local workers’ union UGL Terziario.

Workers in the metalworkers’ union in Lombardy and the engineering, chemical, textile, paper, cardboard and printing industries have announced strikes in Lombardy, the region worst hit by the pandemic, which has killed more than 6,800 people in Italy to date.

In Africa, Zimbabwe’s public hospital doctors went on strike over a lack of protective gear as the coronavirus begins to spread in a country whose health system has almost collapsed. It’s the latest blow to a system where some patients’ families are asked to provide such basics as gloves and even clean water.

In response to collapsing healthcare systems, and appeals from many nations, including France, Cuba has sent brigades of “white coats” (medical teams of doctors and nurses) to more than 50 countries. They are bringing with them thousands of doses of Interferon Alpha 2b, which has been shown to be effective in reducing duration, severity and mortality from COVID-19 and has reportedly been responsible for the massive reduction of cases and recoveries in China. Because of the U.S. blockade of Cuba, this medicine is banned from the United States of America.

In London, postal workers have mounted a de facto wildcat strike/work to rule over concerns regarding coronavirus safety. They did so in the face of the refusal of the Communication Workers Union to mount any protest against Royal Mail management. Workers have accused Royal Mail of inaction over concerns that they are being exposed to the virus unnecessarily.

Pennsylvania sanitation workers refused to show up for work until provided with sufficient gear to protect them from coronavirus. Workers protested at the Pittsburgh Environmental Services building.

“We are risking our lives, we could be contaminated as well,” Sheldon White, a city worker, told CBS News.

While non-essential businesses are forced to shut down across the nation, essential employees still have to show up for work everyday as the virus continues to spread.

“We want better equipment, better protective gear, we have no masks,” White said. “We want hazard pay.”

In Portland, Oregon unionists at Burgerville Workers Union organized a one-day strike, demanding protective measures and issuing demands to the company, including a $2 an hour raise for hazard pay, two weeks severance in the case of layoffs and an additional two weeks of paid sick time to allow workers to stay at home if they fall ill — the union calls it “2-2-2.” Essential workers, for example, at grocery stores, who are exposed to hundreds of people daily, have focused more on pay increases.  The Los Angeles Times reported that at Kroger’s, they were offered bonuses of $150 for part-time workers and $300 for full-time workers, but safety equipment was not discussed. The president of local 1167 of the United Food and Commercial Workers, Joe Duffle, responded to the company in a letter that read:

“This is obviously an attempt to make as much money as you can during this crisis. This is not the time to worry about your rich investors’ returns, but it is time to take care of the communities that you claim to serve and of the employees you put on the front lines.”

Other grocery chains increased hourly wage by $2 per hour for the next four weeks. Every grocery store is recording record sales and profits as shelves are emptied daily. This reporter, visiting several stores noticed a significant markup of prices in the big chains for basic staples. I saw no extra protection offered the grocery workers and checkers other than hand sanitizer.

As we all keep our physical distance, we must maintain our social and human solidarity. This means no hoarding … no running to buy ammo and guns and above all supporting every worker’s right to protective gear, free virus testing, expanded paid sick leave, full pay on layoff or to stay home and take care of children. There should be no bailout to the giant businesses making record profits for the past 12 years. Instead there should be regular full paychecks for workers and aid to small farmers. Can the bosses afford it? Sure they can, they have all been making record profits to our detriment for years.

And in Other Labor Matters

This past March, a Portland judge handed down a reduced judgment of $19 million in damages against the ILWU for a slowdown action against terminal operator ICTSI, which began in 2012 in Portland, Oregon. The $19 million in damages, reduced by a judge from the original award of $96 million, is still more than twice the ILWU’s total assets. However the judge offered this settlement to parties and asked for them to agree upon it otherwise the penalty portion of the trial would have to be heard over again.  ICTSI  is reported to have chosen to have a new trial and with the courts mostly closed because of the COVID-19 epidemic it may be months before this happens.  It serves as a stunning reminder how one of America’s oldest and strongest unions can be threatened by a court action by a company that has an internationally bad reputation when it comes to workers’ rights and labor violations.

Coronavirus Stimulus Shows Big Government is Back

By Paul Rosenberg, Senior Editor

Speaker Nancy Pelosi was proud of how Democrats transformed the $2 trillion stimulus bill Republicans had proposed.

“[House and Senate Democrats] were able to flip this over from corporate trickled down Republican version to bubble up worker first families first legislation,” she said at her March 26 press conference. “We did jiu-jitsu on it.”

And from a relatively narrow perspective, there’s some truth in that.

There’s expanded unemployment insurance — covering more workers more generously and for a longer period of time. There’s a one-time $1,200 check for the majority of adults and $500 for children under age 17. There’s $350 billion in small business loans that may be forgiven if used to keep workers on payroll — in effect, the government is paying workers’ salaries to keep them on the job. And there’s also restrictions banning stock buybacks while receiving government assistance and for an added year for those receiving government loans.

But there’s also gaping holes, as well as an unprecedented de facto $4.5 trillion corporate bailout fund, using the Federal Reserve to leverage $450 billion from Congress tenfold.

“It’s no New Deal,” market analyst Marshall Auerbach wrote in the Naked Capitalism blog. “Rather it’s a massive economic slush fund that does its utmost to preserve the old ways of doing things under the guise of masquerading as a response to a public health emergency.”

“Democrats did manage to influence [the bill’s direction],” Politico’s Michael Grunwald wrote. “But Republicans won some huge concessions from Democrats … And Democrats didn’t get much that Trump didn’t actually want.” Significantly, they didn’t get automatic stabilizers — provisions that go into effect automatically the next time a serious downturn hit — which 74% of the public supports, according to a poll by Data For Progress.

In fact, a series of DFP polls showed substantial public support for more robust progressive policies, many of which Democrats didn’t even attempt to push. For example, 51% of voters support a monthly (not one-time) payment of $2,000—enough to really keep families afloat for the duration—while another 36% support $1,000.  Voters also favored a $2 trillion Green Stimulus plan — similar in scope to the Green New Deal — by a 20% margin.

“Pelosi’s right in the sense that they improved the provisions of the bill,” Auerbach told Random Lengths News.  “But there’s still a tremendous amount of pork in there… You got a tax break worth $170 billion, for example, for real estate moguls, along with a bunch of other corporate tax breaks that have nothing to do with relief for anybody.

“If we had another 2008-style crisis, then we would be in a situation where politically I think it would be impossible to just recycle money back to the oligarchs. I don’t think society would stand for it…. But now, now under the guise of a public health emergency, you got a new opportunity to funnel stuff from the public trust to the corporate pigs again. That’s what I think is going on.”

And there’s a great deal more that’s not being done to meet broader social needs.

$2 Trillion Stimulus is No New Deal

“If you look at the New Deal [during the Great Depression], you have 60% of the unemployed in public works and conservation projects, they planted about a billion trees, they saved the whooping crane, they modernized rural America — electrified a lot of it — they built the Cathedral of Learning in Pittsburgh, the Montana state capitol, much of the Chicago lakefront, New York’s Lincoln Tunnel and Triborough Bridge and the Tennessee Valley Authority,” Auerbach noted in contrast. “In total, they built 2,500 hospitals, 45,000 schools, 13,000 parks and playgrounds, 7,800 bridges, 700,000 miles of roads, a thousand airfields, they employed 50,000 teachers, they rebuilt the entire rural school system and hired 3,000 writers, musicians, sculptors and painters, including Willem de Kooning and Jackson Pollock.”

Nothing like that is possible during a pandemic (though planning for it certainly is). That’s when serious direct relief is needed. And, what the Democrats have provided pales compared to other countries, he noted.

“In Canada, for example, you’ve got direct aid which is about $1,400 compared to U.S. $1,200, and it is a one-time payment, whereas Canada’s direct pay goes on for four months,” he noted. “And, of course, you got a healthcare system that normally does cover everybody. There’s also ‘a 75% wage subsidy for small- and medium-size businesses retroactive to March 15.’ And, there’s a provision to cover gig workers as well. He ticked through several other countries — Britain, France, Spain, Denmark, Norway — each a bit different, but all of which were similarly robust in providing aid to workers that realistically reflects their looming needs. The Danish government is covering 75% to 90% of all workers’ salaries over the next three months.”

In contrast, the American response is potentially ominous.

“One of the horrifying consequences of this is that it continues to exacerbate the inequality problem as it devastates more and more of the middle and working class,” Auerbach said. “That’s my real fear…. And, if we don’t solve that, then you’ve got a country where millions of people have guns and that’s not a pleasant thing to contemplate.”

There are things to be done, with more legislation and more spending sure to come. Two things Auerbach sees as priorities are eliminating independent contractors, so that all workers get the same kinds of benefits and protections under law.

“I would be looking to reestablish domestic supply lines of vital goods, not just food but hospital mask ventilators, respirators,” he said, secondly.

This leads into a larger point.

“Hopefully we will start to rethink this whole notion that you can just offshore all of your manufacturing and leave it all in the hands of a country which may not have our best interests at heart,” he said. “I hope that people start to think in those terms. At the very least build some redundancy into supply networks so that we have adequate domestic provisions.

“We used to think that industrial policy wasn’t a dirty word…. We actually believed in that until the 1980s. There’s nothing wrong with reorienting the state, so that it has an active role again as it did in the 50s, 60s and 70s (a period when prosperity was much more broadly shared). The idea that the state should be a neutral umpire that just allows the free interplay of forces of the market, that’s just BS, because we’re not doing that here.”

Reviving a commitment to industrial policy dovetails perfectly with the idea of a Green Stimulus addressing pressing national needs, as explained by J. Mijin Cha, an Occidental College professor of urban and environmental policy and a senior fellow at Data for Progress.

“We see the convergence of three different crises — the coming economic crisis from the coronavirus, the record levels of inequality and the climate crisis,” Cha told Random Lengths News. “And these three are inter-linked as we’re seeing now in stark detail. The Green Stimulus is a way to address all of them and also invest in our future.”

It’s a bold idea, and deliberately so, she explained.

“Too often Democrats try to think about what is politically feasible and then build policies around that, instead of thinking about what is the right thing to do, and then building the political will to pass that,” Cha said. “So, our idea is to plant a flag, with the understanding that there will be compromise, but we don’t want to start from a position of compromise.”

Presented broadly as “a $2 trillion, 10 year investment in clean energy and jobs,” it enjoys a 20% margin of support: 49% support versus 29% oppose. But, as is generally the case, when it’s broken down into more specific parts, most are significantly more popular. In fact, Data For Progress noted:

[M]ore Republicans support than oppose investments in renewable energy, electric buses, underground high-voltage transmission, electric minivans and pickup trucks for rural and suburban areas, smart grid technology, retrofitting buildings with an emphasis on low-income housing, and battery technology.

It’s visionary in one sense, but hardly pie-in-the sky.

“The proposals we have are mostly things we’re already doing, but at a much bigger scale,” Cha said. “So we were not reinventing any new wheels, we’re just investing in projects we know are good — both good for the climate and create good jobs for people who need work and then will put an investment into our low carbon future.

“There’s going to be a stimulus…. It is up to us to make sure that the stimulus is one that helps working people and the climate and not bailout big companies.

The Green Stimulus proposal is grounded in four key strategies:

  • Create millions of new family-sustaining, career-track green jobs.
  • Deliver strategic investments — like green housing retrofits, rooftop solar installation, electric bus deployment, rural broadband development and other forms of economic diversification — to lift up and collaborate with frontline communities.
  • Expand public and employee ownership.
  • Make rapid cuts to carbon pollution.

There’s also a commitment to a just transition for fossil fuel industry workers and communities. Cha called Trump’s designation of coal miners as “essential workers” a “false promise,” like so many others. Coal jobs have been declining for decades and the recent industry collapse is driven primarily by natural gas.

“The outlook of coal is already decided, we need to invest in those communities now,” Cha said. “We’re not going to be able to shut down coal mines, or oil and gas drilling, or fossil fuel power plants tomorrow,” she pointed out. “But we need to start thinking about it now, and investing in ways to diversify those economies and retrain and place those workers in different occupations and industries.”

The concern about workers extends to whole communities.

“What we’re really worried about is communities that are solely reliant on a power plant, or coal mine or some kind of fossil fuel infrastructure,” Cha said. “You can’t just shut down those plants and those mines and expect those communities will be fine. We have a history of unjust transitions in this country, so now is the moment that we need to start investing in those communities to help diversify their economies, to help think about what will happen to those workers when that time comes, so [who] will be able to transition in a way that is a just and equitable solution.”

The amount of money needed to do this properly—$2 trillion over 10 years—has just been spent by Congress in a matter of weeks to respond to the coronavirus, with another $4 trillion coming from the Federal Reserve. The idea that we can’t spend that much to respond to climate change as well — and take care of everyone in the process — may have been conventional wisdom as recently as February. But no one can believe it anymore.

New Office, New Challenge

San Pedro clinic is the first line of defense

By Hunter Chase, Reporter

These days, when patients walk through the doors of  any of the three Harbor Community Health Centers they must undergo a temperature screening and answer several questions about their recent health and travel. They are asked if they have had a fever or cold symptoms, or if they have travelled or been in contact with anyone who was infected. This is a procedure that probably should be in place at any clinic, airport or port of entry. To date there have only been 10 confirmed cases of novel coronavirus in San Pedro and just one death.

Once known as the Harbor Free Clinic, the HCHC now has three offices, including one that recently opened at 425 S. Pacific Avenue in San Pedro. It has immediately answered the call to screen for COVID-19.

“If someone calls in and says I have a cough, I have a fever, what we’re trying to do is meet them in the car,” said Tamra King, CEO of the local community health centers. “That can act as a further barrier.”

The staff will do as much as it can outside the building, but if necessary, patients will be brought into an isolation room with a mask on,” said Jennifer Chen, a nurse practitioner and director of clinical operations at the Harbor Community Health Centers. Anyone who sees the patient will wear full-protective gear, including goggles, a mask, gloves and a gown.

The Harbor Community Health Centers are taking extra precautions to prevent the spread of COVID-19, but so far, they have not treated anyone infected with the virus.

The centers initially only had 10 kits for testing for the virus.  As of March 26, three people have been tested­— all results negative — leaving seven kits in stock.

The centers are not administering the tests unless the patient is displaying prominent symptoms.

“We’re just trying to be very judicious with who we test,” King said.

Because the health centers receive more than 100 patients a day, King said an individual’s symptoms  must be acute to be administered one of the seven remaining testing kits. The main reason there are so few testing kits is because so few have been produced.

“We’re mostly reserving testing for anyone that has risk factors such as travel or exposure, or if we just have a really strong clinical suspicion based [on] their symptoms that we should test them for it,” Chen said.

The centers also reserve the testing kits for patients whose care would be different if they tested positive for COVID-19, under public health guidelines.

“If someone has mild symptoms and they test positive for coronavirus, it won’t necessarily change our treatment plan,” Chen said. “Whereas if someone’s, you know, in the hospital with more severe symptoms it could potentially change their treatment plan.”

Chen said they want to identify which patients can be safely treated at home, as opposed to the patients that need to be sent to the emergency room for intensive monitoring and treatment. Patients that are elderly or have multiple chronic illnesses will need to be monitored closely.

The results from the tests for COVID-19 take several days, King said. If a patient were to test positive for the virus, the staff would have him or her stay home and get rest and fluids. If the patient was experiencing trouble breathing, he or she should go to the hospital.

The staff is unsure when more testing kits might arrive, Chen said. Quest Diagnostics, a COVID-19 test kit provider, has not given a time frame for when they will be restocked.

Quest Diagnostics performs the results of 25,000 tests per day, according to their website.

Chen explained that the tests are administered nasally after checking a patient’s temperature. But most of the patients that come to the centers don’t go because of COVID-19, but because of other maladies such as the common flu.

King noted that the centers are running low on other supplies as well, including flu swabs. The symptoms for the flu are very similar to COVID-19.

“If you have the flu then you pretty much don’t have COVID-19, so we can rule that out,” King said.

This has been a terrible season for the flu, but they have a vaccine for it. No such treatment exists for COVID-19.

The centers are also running out of personal protective equipment (PPE), which is used to prevent staff from catching the virus, King said. Near the end of March, they received more masks from Direct Relief and the Community Clinic Association of Los Angeles County. However, they are running out of hand sanitizer and soap, so they are in the process of acquiring more.

The staff has been trying to use their usual channels to get more supplies, as well as any other connection they can. King has driven to different hardware stores in San Pedro and Long Beach to buy things individually, as have other members of the staff.

“It’s kind of a shocking situation, the lack of equipment that we have, the lack of testing, the lack of support from the federal government,” King said. “But all of our city, state and county representatives have been amazing.”

King also expressed appreciation for the work Rep. Nanette Barragán has done to alleviate the shortage, but acknowledged there was only so much the representative could do.

King reported that the San Pedro Health Centers received additional federal funding totaling $50,000 on March 24 to be distributed amongst their three sites including the clinic on 5th Street and Pacific Ave., the Grand and 6th Streets site and the small clinic at the county’s new homeless shelter on 8th and Beacon streets across from the San Pedro post office.

The clinic at the homeless shelter is open intermittently based on what the residents need. They see patients there about one day a week. They’ll do an initial health assessment, including a physical and do bloodwork and figure out what medication they need.

The Los Angeles County shelter opened on March 2 and within a month was at capacity with all 40 beds filled.  The clinic started operating in the basement shortly afterward, but it flooded during the weekend of March 21 and 22. There have not been any cases of COVID-19 at the shelter.

“We’ve been temperature screening and monitoring all of them for any symptoms,” Chen said. “We’ve also advised them to kind of shelter in place and not try to go out for any unnecessary errands.”

Chen is the only member of the staff who is still going to the homeless shelter, but other staff at the shelter have not been reduced, said Ivan Sulic, field deputy LA. County Supervisor for Janice Hahn. The staff is taking extra precautions recommended by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, including social distancing.

Clinical staff at the centers has been reduced by about 20 percent, Chen said. At the site on Grand and 6th Street there are four providers seeing patients, as well as six medical assistants, two licensed vocational nurses and five front office personnel. They also have a behavioral health team, which includes a psychologist and two social workers. For the pediatric branch at 5th Street and Pacific Ave, there is still a pediatrician and one OB-GYN physician, as well as three medical assistants and three front office staff.

The staff has been conducting telephone visits with patients to keep them at home as much as possible, Chen said.

“Between the telephone visits and having people not physically come into the clinics, it’s about the same workload [as before the outbreak], we just changed the type of work we’re doing,” Chen said.

Governor Newsom Announces Agreement Between Teachers, Classified Employees and School System Management to Support Student Instruction During COVID-19 Outbreak

SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom April 2, announced an agreement between teachers, classified employees, school boards, superintendents, and principals to work collaboratively to provide distance learning to California’s students as a result of school closures due to mitigation efforts against the COVID-19 outbreak. The agreement is to ensure more students will be able to get school resources, such as quality distance instruction, and empowers teachers to create lessons within clear parameters.

The agreement includes a collaboration framework for school employers and employees to work together on matters of labor and management to minimize any impact to students—including direction on implementation and delivery of distance learning, special education, and meals through the end of the school year. Endorsing organizations include the following: California Department of Education, Association of California School Administrators, California Teachers Association, California School Boards Association, California Federation of Teachers, California County Superintendents Educational Services Association, California School Employees Association, California Association of School Business Officials, Service Employees International Union, Small School Districts’ Association, AFSCME California, and the California Labor Federation.

The Governor also announced a partnership with Google to provide mobile hotspots and Chromebooks to students in rural areas to facilitate distance learning. Google will donate Chromebooks and will fund the use of 100,000 donated mobile hotspots to provide free and unlimited high-speed Internet connectivity for the remainder of the school year. The California Department of Education will be distributing these resources, prioritizing rural communities.

The framework for student instruction can be found here:

https://www.gov.ca.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/4.1.20-Labor-Management-Framework.pdf

LA County Emphasizes Protections For Tenants Affected By COVID-19

Los Angeles, CA— Rent is due for many Los Angeles County residents who have lost their source of income due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The County wants the public to know that there are protections in place for renters who are at-risk of being evicted due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Chair of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors Kathryn Barger has signed an executive order banning landlords from evicting residential renters affected by the coronavirus. The ban is in place through May 31, 2020. The order states:

“During this local emergency, and in the interest of protecting the public health and preventing transmission of COVID-19, it is essential to avoid unnecessary housing displacement, protect the County’s affordable housing stock, and prevent housed individuals from falling into homelessness.”

The order protects people who have suffered “financial impacts” due to the coronavirus. This means a substantial loss of household income due to business closure, loss of compensable hours of work or wages, layoffs, extraordinary out-of-pocket medical expenses or child care needs arising from school closures.

The protection extends to those who have been diagnosed with COVID-19 or who are caring for someone diagnosed with the virus. The order also protects individuals who have suffered financial impacts due to compliance with the County’s recommendation to stay at home, self-quarantine or due to avoiding congregating with others during the state of emergency.

Under the order, tenants must notify their landlord in writing within a week after their rent is due — unless there are extenuating circumstances — that they are unable to pay their rent because of the pandemic.

The following are other important facts and protections in place:

-The executive order ensures that all people in the County will continue to have access to running water during this public health crisis. This enables compliance with public health guidelines to wash hands often and have access to clean drinking water.-

-The order ensures that all customers in the County who receive power services from Southern California California Edison and Southern California Gas Company continue to have access to electricity so they may receive crucial COVID-19 information, keep critical medical equipment functioning and utilize power as needed.

-Public utilities have announced that they will suspend service disconnections for nonpayment and waive late fees, effective immediately, for residential and business customers impacted by the COVID-19 crisis.

-The moratorium applies to only unincorporated L.A. County.

-Los Angeles, Beverly Hills, Burbank, Culver City, Glendale, Long Beach, Pasadena, Santa Monica, South Pasadena, and West Hollywood have issued similar orders.

If you have questions about landlord-tenant issues, please visit the Los Angeles County Department of Consumer and Business Affairs online at rent.lacounty.gov, call (833) 223-RENT (7368) or email rent@dcba.lacounty.gov.

Train Operator at Port of Los Angeles Charged with Derailing Locomotive Near U.S. Navy’s Hospital Ship Mercy

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LOS ANGELES – A train engineer at the Port of Los Angeles was arrested April 1, on federal charges for allegedly running a locomotive at full speed off the end of rail tracks near the USNS Mercy.

Eduardo Moreno, 44, of San Pedro, was charged April 1, in a criminal complaint with one count of train wrecking as a result of an incident Tuesday afternoon.

In a criminal complaint filed in United States District Court, Moreno admitted in two separate interviews with law enforcement authorities that he intentionally derailed and crashed the train near the Mercy.

Moreno ran the train off the end of tracks, and crashed through a series of barriers before coming to rest more than 250 yards from the Mercy. No one was injured in the incident, and the Mercy was not harmed or damaged in any way. The incident did result in the train leaking a substantial amount of fuel oil, which required clean up by fire and other hazardous materials personnel.

The train crash was witnessed by a California Highway Patrol officer, who took Moreno into custody as he fled the scene. The Los Angeles Port Police then took custody of Moreno, conducted an interview and obtained permission to search his residence. The FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force and the Port of Los Angeles Police are now leading the investigation.

In his first interview with the Los Angeles Port Police, Moreno acknowledged that he “did it,” saying that he was suspicious of the Mercy and believing it had an alternate purpose related to COVID-19 or a government takeover, the affidavit states.

Moreno was held overnight on local charges, and he was turned over to FBI agents. Moreno is expected to make an initial appearance in federal court April 2.

LASD Warning of Spike in Online Scams and Hacking Attempts Related to the COVID-19 Emergency

LOS ANGELES-Trusted websites:

https://covid19.lacounty.gov/

https://www.coronavirus.gov/

In light of the recent increase in online scams and hacking attempts related to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Fraud and Cyber Crimes Bureau – Emerging Cyber Trends Team has published this bulletin for public awareness.

OVERVIEW:

Criminals use phishing emails to get access to your computer or network. These phishing emails often appear to be from familiar company names or pretend to be someone you know.  If you click on a link, scammers/attackers can install ransomware or other programs that can lock you out of your data.

Protect your computer and electronic devices by:

  1. Keeping your software up to date and by using security software
  2. Your cell phone should be set to update software automatically
  3. Your accounts should have multi-factor authentication
  4. Your data should be regularly backed up and the backup should be taken offline

COMMON TACTICS:

  1. Fake charities: When a major health event like the coronavirus happens, you might be looking for ways to help. Some scammers use names that sound a lot like the names of real charities. This is one reason it pays to do some research before giving. When you give, pay safely by credit card never by gift card or wire transfer.

The FBI has also released the below information related to cyber enabled crimes related to the COVID-19 emergency.

  1. Fake CDC emails: Watch out for emails claiming to be from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) or other organizations claiming to offer information on the virus. Do not click links or open attachments you do not recognize.
  2. Phishing emails. Look out for phishing emails asking you to verify your personal information in order to receive an economic stimulus check from the government. While talk of economic stimulus checks has been in the news cycle, government agencies are not sending unsolicited emails seeking your private information in order to send you money.
  3. Counterfeit treatments or equipment. Be cautious of anyone selling products that claim to prevent, treat, diagnose, or cure COVID-19. Be alert to counterfeit products such as sanitizing products and personal protective equipment (PPE), including N95 respirator masks, goggles, full face shields, protective gowns and gloves. More information on unapproved or counterfeit PPE can be found at www.cdc.gov/niosh.

The following tips are the FBI’s recommendations for good cyber hygiene and security measures. By remembering these tips, you can protect yourself and help stop criminal activity:

  • Do not open attachments or click links within emails from senders you don’t recognize.
  • Do not provide your username, password, date of birth, social security number, financial data, or other personal information in response to an email or robocall.
  • Always verify the web address of legitimate websites and manually type them into your browser.
  • Check for misspellings or wrong domains within a link (for example, an address that should end in a “.gov” ends in .com” instead).”

Governor Newsom Announces Initiative to Expand Workforce to Fight COVID-19

SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom March 30, launched California Health Corps, a major new initiative to expand California’s health care workforce and recruit health care professionals to address the COVID-19 surge. Health care professionals with an active license, public health professionals, medical retirees, medical and nursing students, or members of medical disaster response teams in California are all encouraged to join the new California Health Corps.

Interested medical and health care professionals can visit healthcorps.ca.gov for more information and to register for the California Health Corps. Medical doctors, nurses, respiratory therapists, behavioral health scientists, pharmacists, EMTs, medical and administrative assistants, as well as certified nursing assistants are encouraged to step up and meet this moment to help California respond to the outbreak.

The governor also signed an executive order that will temporarily expand the health care workforce and allow health care facilities to staff at least an additional 50,000 hospital beds the state needs to treat COVID-19 patients. A copy of the governor’s executive order can be found here, www.tinyurl.com/healthcorpsCalifornia