EUROPEAN UNION MAY BAN U.S. TRAVELERS DUE TO FAILURE TO REDUCE COVID-19

Printer-friendly versionPrinter-friendly version Share this

San Diego has eight community outbreaks, reopenings halted

By Miriam Raftery

Image:  Comparison of U.S. and European Union COVID-19 cases based on Johns Hopkins University medical data.

June 25, 2020 (San Diego)—If you’re planning a European vacation anytime soon, you may be out of luck. The European Union is looking to reopen to tourism from countries with low rates of the virus, travelers from the U.S. are expected to be banned, along with travelers from Brazil and Russia, the New York Times reports.

COVID-19 has largely diminished in Europe thanks to swift and aggressive actions by government in nations hard-hit there in late March. By contrast, cases have skyrocketed in the U.S., which had a similar number of cases in late March as Europe. But President Donald Trump never ordered a national lock-down or made masks mandatory; the U.S. was also late disseminating testing and sent inadequate numbers of personal protection equipment to medical providers.

The U.S. has had 11.3 million cases to date, more than any other nation on earth.  Over 120,000 Americans have died of COVID-19, which is more lives lost than from World War.

Local community outbreaks high for past week

San Diego County had a record number of new cases reported yesterday, 332.   The region also has had eight community outbreaks in the past week, a “trigger”  that mandates a halt to reopening new business sectors, such as movie theaters or amusement parks.

The outbreaks occurred in businesses, a campground, a social club, a restaurant, private homes and a federal facility. NBC 7 reports several cases also occurred in people who visited local casinos.

COVID-19 community outbreaks are one of 13 metrics the County is monitoring that could trigger new restrictions. The measure stipulates that no more than seven new outbreaks can be reported over a seven-day period.  A community outbreak is defined as three or more COVID-19 cases in a setting and in people of different households.

“Given the number of COVID-19 community outbreaks being identified and the higher number of cases, the County has paused the reopening of additional sectors of the economy and won’t move forward, even if the state releases new guidance, until it is safe to do it,” according to a press release issued yesterday by the County.

Supervisors push to open more, despite rise in outbreaks

Despite rising numbers of cases and outbreaks, County Supervisors voted 4-1 for a proposal by Supervisor Jim Desmond to ask the state for permission to ultimately reopen certain sectors faster than the state currently allows, including wedding receptions,  hotel conferences, some private events, team sports and street fairs.

Supervisor Nathan Fletcher cast the only vote against this, citing public safety concerns given the spike in local cases that has currently prompted a stop to reopenings per state rules.  Fletcher stated, "Given these facts, it is reckless and irresponsible to propose expedited reopening of additional in-door close contact group gatherings without any restrictions on the number of attendees.”

The rate of those testing positive for the virus locally has also risen, another concern.  Yesterday alone, 6,981 tests were provided and 5% tested positive for COVID-19, compared to a 3.1% average over the past 14 days.

To date, the county has had 11,626 cases, of which 14.3% required hospitalization.  A total of  437 people in our county have died, including six deaths reported between June 12 and June 22.

Stopping the spread

When a COVID-19 outbreak is connected to a business, such as a restaurant, it closes on its own to make sure all of its policies and procedures are being followed. Those include appropriate hygiene and sanitation, the use of face coverings, physical distancing and employee and customer health screenings.

“Most businesses are very responsible because they want to protect their employees and their customers,” said Wilma Wooten, M.D., M.P.H., County public health officer.

Dr. Wooten reminders the public, “It’s important for people to remember that the virus has not gone away. As more people interact with each other, the risk for exposure increases. People should stay home as much as possible.”

San Diegans are required to wear a facial covering while in public and close to other people. Stay six feet apart where possible and stay home if you are ill.

More COVID-19 Information

More information on COVID-19 and detailed data summaries can be found at the County’s coronavirus-sd.com website.

Miriam Raftery, editor and founder of East County Magazine, has over 35 years of journalism experience. She has won more than 350 journalism awards from the Society of Professional Journalists, San Diego Press Club, and the American Society of Journalists & Authors. Her honors include the Sol Price Award for responsible journalism and three James Julian awards for public interest reporting from SPJ’s San Diego chapter. She has received top honors for investigative journalism, multicultural reporting, coverage of immigrant and refugee issues, politics, breaking news and more. Thousands of her articles have appeared in national and regional publications.

East County Magazine gratefully thanks the Facebook Journalism Project for support through its COVID-19 Local News Relief Fund Grant Program to help make this reporting possible. #FacebookJournalismProject. You can donate to support our local journalism efforts during the pandemic at https://www.EastCountyMedia.org/donate.


Error message

Support community news in the public interest! As nonprofit news, we rely on donations from the public to fund our reporting -- not special interests. Please donate to sustain East County Magazine's local reporting and/or wildfire alerts at https://www.eastcountymedia.org/donate to help us keep people safe and informed across our region.

Comments

Where have Trump and his voters led us?

Just a few short years ago our CDC led an international effort to defeat of Ebola, and won. Now the CDC is boxed up, such that we can't even help our own damn country. Wearing masks - proven effective - is politicized. I have never seen my country so weak, so incapable, so incompetent. The President is so out of the game he does not even know what the "19" in Covid-19 means, per his own admission in front of 3000 Republican youth just two days ago! He says these things, out loud where other people can hear them! That we should investigate shooting up bleach? That parade of random thought led toward him stopping Covid-19 press conferences all together, to go hide from his responsibility. Now every sign is that he is just going full head in the sand. Hand him a fiddle while Covid-19 burns? The scale of this failure is just so vast, so dense, so historic. And so many lemmings followed him first into traffic, and soon off the cliff! For the first time, I think the world has real pity for us. Europe and China could ultimately make the right moves. We still can't. Can some of you in the Republican base take some responsibility and pressure the president to free the CDC and let the experts lead on this? This is the health of our country that you are harming. Are you just part of a death cult now? Are you all going to ride a sinking ship down and try to take the rest of America with you? Is that really better than just asking for forgiveness now, and re-entering the rational mainstream of American politics? Or are you going to burn it all down just so nobody is left to say you were wrong all along? That would make you: no kind of patriot.