As Thanksgiving approaches, the mood in California isn’t too festive.

Los Angeles County, which will ban outdoor dining starting Wednesday, is considering another stay-at-home-order that would bar residents from leaving their homes unless they’re essential workers or accessing essential services. Ninety-four percent of California residents are currently under a curfew, and more could join them today, the state’s top health official warned Monday. And Gov. Gavin Newsom, still under fire for the French Laundry debacle, is quarantining at home at a critical inflection point for the state.

Amid a 77% increase in hospitalizations and 55% increase in intensive-care admissions, tensions are flaring up across the state. Protests against the curfew broke out in Huntington Beach, Redding, Fresno and other cities. A surge in weekend gun violence propelled Los Angeles to surpass 300 homicides in one year for the first time in a decade. Unemployment claims are rising again. Late-night and Los Angeles restaurants that had counted on remaining open over the Thanksgiving holiday are now facing massive losses for outdoor tents and heaters they won’t be able to use.

And although many county sheriffs aren’t enforcing the curfew, the state Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control is threatening noncompliant restaurants and bars with fines or revoked liquor licenses. It’s yet another frustration for restaurants, a group of which sued government agencies last month to recoup millions in liquor, health and tourism fees.

Although 61% of Californians said they approved of Newsom’s handling of the pandemic in October, the French Laundry fiasco has reignited a longshot attempt to recall Newsom. Meanwhile, the Secretary of State on Friday cleared for circulation a 2022 ballot initiative that would limit the government’s authority amid public health emergencies.

______________

The coronavirus bottom line: As of 9 p.m. Monday night, California had 1,110,370 confirmed coronavirus cases and 18,726 deaths from the virus, according to a CalMatters tracker.

Also: CalMatters regularly updates this pandemic timeline tracking the state’s daily actions. And we’re tracking the state’s coronavirus hospitalizations by county.


Advertisement


1. Pressure over Senate seat ramps up

Newsom answers questions at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento on Oct. 29, 2020. Photo by Renée C. Byer, The Sacramento Bee/Pool

Aside from steering California through a pandemic, Newsom has another politically dicey situation on his hands: who to appoint to Vice President-elect Kamala Harris’ Senate seat. The pressure on the governor is reaching new heights. Longtime Assembly Speaker and former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown is assembling a group of prominent Black leaders to urge Newsom to appoint a woman of color, even as rumors swirl that Newsom is leaning toward Secretary of State Alex Padilla, who would be California’s first Latino senator, Politico reports

  • Brown: “There’s no way that Gavin Newsom should allow anyone other than a Black woman to fill the seat of Harris, who’s only the second Black woman in the history of the U.S. Senate.”

Also on Monday, 150 of California’s biggest women donors took out full-page ads in the Los Angeles Times and San Francisco Chronicle encouraging Newsom to appoint a woman of color, Recode reports. Some of the signatories are among Newsom’s top financial backers. 

Meanwhile, a myriad of Latino advocacy groups have launched statewide campaigns of their own, arguing that with Latinos making up nearly 40% of California’s population, now “is the time for Gov. Newsom to act.”

2. General Motors drops lawsuit against CA

Image via iStock

In a signal of how California’s national influence will likely grow under a Biden-Harris administration, General Motors announced Monday that it would no longer support the Trump administration in lawsuits challenging the Golden State’s authority to set its own fuel economy standards. In the stunning — and politically charged — reversal, General Motors said it supports President-elect Joe Biden’s plan to expand zero-emissions cars, CalMatters’ Rachel Becker reports. That has big implications for California, which wants to ban new gas-powered cars by 2035. General Motors also encouraged other car companies fighting California’s stricter fuel emission standards — including Toyota, Fiat Chrysler, Mazda and Mitsubishi — to abandon ongoing litigation.

3. Battle at the beach

Nathan Sedlaczek rides a quad at Oceano Dunes on March 24, 2014. Photo by David Middlecamp, San Luis Obispo Tribune

Welcome to Oceano Dunes, the most contested stretch of sand in California. For 40 years, the park south of San Luis Obispo has not only divided two branches of state government, but also the surrounding community — and things may have finally reached a breaking point, CalMatters’ Julie Cart reports. Oceano Dunes is one of only nine state parks established expressly for motorized recreation, including off-roading and dirt biking — activities that threaten endangered animals. One state agency, the Coastal Commission, recently issued a cease-and-desist order to its sister agency, the state Department of Parks and Recreation, ordering it to stop harming imperiled birds. But the parks department — which collects fees paid by off-roaders — plans to expand motorized recreation into new areas of the park.

Baked into the conflict is a disconnect between the park’s constituencies. There are fiercely devoted off-roaders; there are conservationists determined to protect endangered birds; and there are neighbors frustrated by the dust pollution kicked up by the trucks and the violence that seems to accompany off-roading, Julie reports.

  • Lea Rigo-Hensley of Friends of Oceano Dunes: “Off-roaders are the endangered species. We are becoming so backward as a society that we are closing beaches, and ending traditions, for a bird.”
  • Allene Villa, an Oceano resident: “This beach could be our recreational area, but we can’t use it safely. It’s like a freeway.”

Advertisement


CalMatters commentary

CalMatters columnist Dan Walters: Plans to remove four privately owned, obsolete power dams on the Klamath River advance with California taxpayers putting up more than half the cost.

Coachella Valley tackles housing crisis: State leaders can support housing affordability by opening doors so that stakeholders across the region can work together, argues State Treasurer Fiona Ma.

Student homelessness crisis: The number of California students experiencing homelessness could fill Dodger Stadium five times over, write Joseph Bishop of UCLA and Xilonin Cruz-Gonzalez of the California School Boards Association.

Big wins for progressive candidates: Los Angeles County provides a model for how to win high-stakes races for progressive change, argue Tim Molina of California Donor Table and Tina McKinnor of LA Voice Action.


Other things worth your time

California Sen. Dianne Feinstein to step down as top Democrat on Senate Judiciary panel. // Politico

In first for SF, district attorney charges police officer with homicide in use-of-force case. // San Francisco Chronicle

Research topics to expand as California passes stem cell measure. // CalMatters

California is still debating ethnic studies in public education. Can the state finally get it right? // Los Angeles Times

Fewer internships for California high school seniors to boost college apps. // CalMatters

Robotaxis get the green light for paid rides in California. // The Verge

Will Prop. 19 substantially increase California’s home inventory? // San Diego Union-Tribune

Seriously late California mortgages jump six-fold. // Los Angeles Daily News

Do California ag counties hold solutions to Monterey County’s farmworker housing crisis? // CalMatters


See you tomorrow.

Tips, insight or feedback? Email emily@calmatters.org.

Follow me on Twitter: @emily_hoeven

Subscribe to CalMatters newsletters here.

Follow CalMatters on Facebook and Twitter.

CalMatters is now available in Spanish on TwitterFacebook and RSS.


We want to hear from you

Want to submit a guest commentary or reaction to an article we wrote? You can find our submission guidelines here. Please contact CalMatters with any commentary questions: commentary@calmatters.org

Emily Hoeven wrote the daily WhatMatters newsletter for three years at CalMatters . Her reporting, essays, and opinion columns have been published in San Francisco Weekly, the Deseret News, the San Francisco...