San Francisco mayor orders strict new lockdowns as pandemic spirals
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[December 05, 2020]
By Dan Whitcomb and Doina Chiacu
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The mayor of San
Francisco on Friday ordered new lockdowns and business restrictions
across the Bay Area in the face of the COVID-19 surge, as political
leaders nationwide ramp up pressure on Americans to stay home until
vaccines can be distributed.
The new measures announced by Mayor London Breed, a first-term Democrat,
apply across five Bay Area counties and are among the harshest of any
major U.S. city, closing all personal services, outdoor dining and most
public gatherings.
"What we are seeing in our city, our region, our state and our country
is a virus that is taking over," Breed, 46, said in announcing the new
clamp down.
California Governor Gavin Newsom, also a Democrat, said on Thursday he
would impose similar stay-at-home orders statewide, to take effect
region-by-region as intensive care beds reach capacity.
Breed said she was unwilling to wait for Newsom's mandate to take effect
in the Bay Area, adding: "If you're not working to stay ahead of this
virus you're falling far, far behind and very quickly."
Starting at 10 p.m. this Sunday, San Francisco will close all outdoor
dining, outdoor playgrounds, zoos and aquariums along with other
measures, according to a statement on the mayor's website.
"Low contact retail such as pet grooming, electronics or shoe repair
services, may only operate in a curbside drop-off context," the
statement read. "All other retail, including grocery stores must reduce
capacity to 20%."
Both Newsom and Breed have been criticized after dining on separate
nights in November at the same posh Napa County restaurant, the French
Laundry, despite repeatedly admonishing Californians to avoid such
outings.
More than 213,830 new cases and 2,861 deaths were reported on Thursday,
according to a Reuters tally of official data. With U.S. COVID-19
hospitalizations also at record levels, some experts project the death
toll could soon surpass 3,000 per day.
The University of Washington's Institute for Health Metrics and
Evaluation now projects nearly 539,000 COVID-19 deaths by April 1,
almost double the current death toll, even as vaccines start to become
available.
'FIRST IN LINE'
The spiraling pandemic has prompted state and national political leaders
to order increasingly aggressive countermeasures while Americans wait
for governmental approval of vaccines developed by drug companies Pfizer
Inc and Moderna
The two medications could soon receive emergency use authorization from
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, clearing the way for the
inoculation of some 20 million Americans by the end of the year, FDA
Commissioner Stephen Hahn told Reuters in an interview on Friday.
"I will be first in line and I will encourage my family to take this
vaccine," Hahn said.
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San Francisco's Mayor London Breed speaks during the California
Democratic Convention in San Francisco, California, U.S. June 1,
2019. REUTERS/Stephen Lam/File Photo
The U.S. government's first shipment of a vaccine will be shared
among states and federal agencies, including the Department of
Defense. But it will fall far short of protecting high priority
groups such as healthcare workers, a Reuters analysis has found.
"For the time being, and the foreseeable future, the demand for
vaccines is going to exceed the supply by a lot, even for the
highest priority groups that are identified," said Josh Michaud, the
Kaiser Family Foundation's associate director of global health
policy.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, a member of the White House coronavirus task
force, said on Friday he expected to see another surge in infections
following the Thanksgiving holiday, when many Americans traveled to
visit family.
"We really have to intensify our public health measures," Fauci,
director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases, told NBC's "Today" show.
Fauci also said he has accepted President-elect Joe Biden's offer to
be his chief medical adviser.
Biden, a Democrat who defeated Donald Trump in the November
election, has said that upon taking office on Jan. 20 he would enact
mask mandates where he has authority, such as federal buildings and
for interstate travel.
"On the first day I'm inaugurated ... I'm going to ask the public
for 100 days to mask, just 100 days to mask, not forever, 100 days,"
Biden told CNN in an interview on Thursday.
Biden also told CNN he would get vaccinated publicly, as former
presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama have
pledged, in order to boost public confidence in the medications.
The latest IHME projection showed that if mask-wearing increased to
95%, combined with the expected vaccine rollout, approximately
66,000 lives could be saved, compared to a vaccine rollout scenario
with current mask-wearing levels remaining the same," it said in a
news release.
"Even with a vaccine, if states do not act to bring current surges
under control, the death toll could reach 770,000 by April 1," the
IHME news release said.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu, Susan Heavey, Julie Steenhuysen, Rebecca
Spalding, Carl O'Donnell, Peter Szekely, Anurag Maan, Daniel Trotta
and Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Bill Berkrot, Bill Tarrant and Daniel
Wallis)
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