covid-19 daily los angeles data summary...los angeles, california: 26.3 deaths per 100k (los angeles...
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Monday June 8, 2020 – Response Day 881Prepared By: City of Los Angeles, Mayor Garcetti’s Innovation Team
Daily Los AngelesCOVID-19Data Summary
● County Projections● Data Snapshot● Complete Report
○ Cases○ Deaths○ Comparative Information ○ Testing ○ Beds○ Masks○ Hotline Information
● Are People Staying Safer at Home?● Economic Indicators● Los Angeles Timeline of Actions
2
INDEX
County Projections
3
County Projections Key Takeaways As of June 5, 2020
4
● The County projection model allows for changes in transmission associated with relaxation of physical distancing requirements however, the projections are based on data through June 2nd and therefore do not consider the potential impact of protests or the full impact of Memorial Day reopenings and gatherings.
● The overall volume of hospital-based care for patients with COVID-19 appears generally stable or slightly up trending. This up trending is within the range of uncertainty of the prior predictions.
● Prior to the relaxation of physical distancing requirements, it appears the effective transmission number (“R”) was likely less than one and there was a slow decrease in cases over time.
● While it is not yet known with certainty what effect the relaxation of physical distancing requirements will have on transmission of COVID-19, R appears to be now greater than one and slightly up trending. If transmission has increased, the model predicts a continued increase in hospital patient volume over the next 2-4 weeks.
● The number of hospital beds and ventilators in Los Angeles County appears adequate to meet the projected need for the care of additional COVID-19 patients over the next 4 weeks.
● The number of ICU beds may become inadequate in 2 to 4 weeks if there are additional increases in transmission.
Effective Transmission Number “R”
5Source: Projections of Hospital-based Healthcare Demand due to COVID-19 in Los Angeles County
Hospital Patient Projections
6Source: Projections of Hospital-based Healthcare Demand due to COVID-19 in Los Angeles County
Predictions of Demand in LA County | Hospital Beds
7Source: Projections of Hospital-based Healthcare Demand due to COVID-19 in Los Angeles County
Predictions of Demand in LA County | ICU Beds
8Source: Projections of Hospital-based Healthcare Demand due to COVID-19 in Los Angeles County
Predictions of Demand in LA County | Ventilators
Source: Projections of Hospital-based Healthcare Demand due to COVID-19 in Los Angeles County 9
Predictions of Daily Mortality LA County
10Source: Projections of Hospital-based Healthcare Demand due to COVID-19 in Los Angeles County
11
Effect of Behaviors to Control Transmission
11Source: Projections of Hospital-based Healthcare Demand due to COVID-19 in Los Angeles County
Data Snapshot
12
METRICS
CURRENT TREND VS
LAST WEEK% CHANGE VS
LAST WEEK
CURRENT TREND VS BASELINE
% CHANGE VSBASELINE
New Cases (7-day avg.) -12.0% +22.5%
New Deaths (7-day avg.) +1.5% -21.8%
COVID Positive Test Rate(LA Portal sites)
+0.1%COVID+ Test Rate is
% Difference w/ last week
-3.2%COVID+ Test Rate is
% Difference w/ baseline
New Hospitalizations (7-day avg) +14.9% -58.3%
Acute Care Bed Capacity(7-day avg) -16.6% -38.0%
ICU Bed Capacity(7-day avg) -11.3% -30.9%
Crime (7-day avg)*baseline = 2019 YTD -12.8% -30.2%
Unemployment Ins. Claimsbaseline = avg 2020 Jan claims +23.9% +949%
Los Angeles Key Metrics TrendsAs of June 8, 2020
13
Upward Trend
Downward Trend
Desired Change
Undesired Change
Key Takeaways:The following metrics have seen undesirable movement over the past 7 days for which data are available: New Cases (vs baseline) , New Deaths (vs last week), Unemployment Insurance Claims, Acute Care Bed Capacity, and ICU capacity, New Hospitalizations (vs last week)
The following metrics have seen desirable movement over the past 7 day: New Cases (vs last week) New Deaths (vs baseline), COVID+ Test Rate, New Hospitalizations (vs baseline), and Crime
*Unless otherwise noted, the baseline period is the week of 4/18/20-4/24/20, our highest week in the month of April, first full month of reporting on record.Crime is based on 7-day average comparisons between time periods for 3 days prior to the current date. UI claims lag by approximately one week.
14
CITY RESPONSE HIGHLIGHTS AS OF JUNE 8, 2020
LOS ANGELES GLOBAL HOTLINE SERVICES
823 10 111,789 2,915 84 518 2.3 minsNew Cases New Deaths New Cases New Deaths COVID-related
311 callsNon-COVID related 311 calls
Average wait
64,644 2,655 7.1M 404K COVID RELATED CALL THEMES
Total Cases Total Deaths Total Cases Total Deaths
Testing and resultsReopening businesses, restrictions endingSocial distancing/mask complaintsAnimal Services – adopting and lost pets mostly on Sunday
CALIFORNIA UNITED STATES
2,291 27 23,628 734New Cases New Deaths New Cases New Deaths
131K 4,653 2M 110.8KTotal Cases Total Deaths Total Cases Total Deaths
L.A. TESTING UPDATES BEHAVIORAL MONITORING
1,927 25,000 596,729 25 GreenTests Performed Available Capacity Tests Performed
Since 3/20Total Test Sites Traffic Patterns
BEDS SHELTERS
840 710 130 1,138 58.4% 88.0% 48.5%Total Beds Acute Care ICU Beds Ventilators 22 shelters online as
of 4/28Tier 1 Housing - Emergency Hotels/Motels Countywide
Tier 2 Housing - Iso.and Quarantine Hotels/Motels Countywide
LOS ANGELES COVID-19 WEEKLY DATA SNAPSHOT As of June 8, 2020*
15
*Testing data as of 6/7, hospital capacity data as of 6/7, new hospitalization data as of 6/6
*Data range is Saturday - Friday
Complete Report
16
As of June 8, 2020 at 2:25PMCOVID-19 US Cases and Deaths
Source: New York Times, using state and local health agencies, hospitals, CDC data, COVID tracking project, Johns Hopkins University.
New York Remains the US Epicenter but the top five states,based on total cases, include:
#1: 378.8K cases in New York State (+0.7K) - 1938 per 100K24.3K deaths in New York State (+40) - 124.3 per 100K
#2: 164.5K cases in New Jersey (+0.3K) - 1846 per 100K12.2K deaths in New Jersey (+38) - 137.1 per 100K
#3: 131.0K cases in California (+2.3K) - 331 per 100K4.7K deaths in California (+27) - 11.8 per 100K
#4: 129.1K cases in Illinois (+1.4K) - 1013 per 100K6.1K deaths in Illinois (+198) - 47.9 per 100K
#5: 103.6K cases in Massachusetts (+0.2K) - 1501 per 100K7.4K deaths in Massachusetts (+37) - 106.5 per 100K
17
California ranks ...#3 in Cases#33 in Cases per 100K#7 in Deaths#29 in Deaths per 100K
COVID-19 US Cases - Per Capita County Comparison (Counties >300K ppl)
Top 5 per capita (per 100K) cases by County:Rockland, New York (NYC Metro Area): 4090 cases per 100KWestchester, New York (NYC Metro Area): 3509 cases per 100KPassaic, New Jersey (NYC Metro Area): 3278 cases per 100KNassau, New York (NYC Metro Area): 3014 cases per 100KUnion, New Jersey (NYC Metro Area): 2909 cases per 100K
Los Angeles, California: 636 cases per 100K(Los Angeles County ranks #78 out of 229 counties with 300K+)
New York City, New York: 262.0 deaths per 100KEssex, New Jersey (NYC Metro Area): 213.6 deaths per 100KRockland, New York (NYC Metro Area): 201.7 deaths per 100KUnion, New Jersey (NYC Metro Area): 197.4 deaths per 100KPassaic, New Jersey (NYC Metro Area): 193.7 deaths per 100K
Los Angeles, California: 26.3 deaths per 100K(Los Angeles County ranks #85 out of 229 counties with 300K+)
As of June 7, 2020 (one day reporting lag)
18Source: New York Times, using state and local health agencies, hospitals, CDC data,COVID tracking project, Johns Hopkins University
COVID-19 Los Angeles County Total Cases and Total Deaths, Past 7 DaysAs of June 8, 2020, Noon
Source: Los Angeles County Department of Health, COVID ActNow 19
Key Takeaways:Los Angeles County currently has a 4.1% mortality rate and an Infection Growth Rate of 1.09 (goal = btw .5 and 1)
Source: Los Angeles County Department of Health
Key Takeaways:The past seven days have seen an average daily increase of 1,278 new cases
The current case three-day average doubling rate is 39.3
Note: Daily numbers may show a discrepancy when performing basic addition. This is based on the fact that the County is performing ongoing investigation into cases and updating their daily case numbers but not updating historic case numbers
20
COVID-19 Los Angeles CountyTotal New Cases As of June 8, 2020, Noon
Protests in Los Angeles County May 28 - Present
976 of the new cases on 6/4 were from a lab backlog
Source: Los Angeles County Department of Health
COVID-19 Los Angeles County Total Case Increase As of June 8, 2020, Noon
21
Key TakeawaysYesterday saw a case increase of 1.3%
The past seven days have seen an average daily case increase of 2.1%
Protests in Los Angeles County May 28 - Present
COVID-19 Los AngelesCounty DeathsAs of June 8, 2020, Noon
Source: Los Angeles County Department of Health 22
Key Takeaways:The past seven days have seen an average daily increase of 40 new deaths
The current death three-day average doubling rate of 97.1
Protests in Los Angeles County May 28 - Present
Source: Los Angeles County Department of Health
COVID-19 Los Angeles County Total Death Increase As of June 8, 2020, Noon
23
Key Takeaways:Yesterday saw a death increase of 0.4%
The past 7 days have seen an average daily death increase of 1.6%
Protests in Los Angeles County May 28 - Present
Key Takeaways:The past seven days have seenan average daily increase of 1,278 new cases
The past seven days have seen an average daily increase of 40new deaths
Source: Los Angeles County Department of Health
COVID-19 Los Angeles County Total Cases and Total Deaths, 7 Day AverageAs of June 8, 2020, Noon
24
Protests in Los Angeles County May 28 - Present
CASE TRACKERTotal Cases and Percent Increase As of June 8, 2020, 12:00 PM
Source: Multiple sources, as listed Note: All sources update at various times throughout the day. These numbers are current based on the time of the timestamp.
COVID-19 Case Tracker
Cases New Cases % + Deaths New Deaths % + Source Timestamp
Globally 7,065,597 111,789 1.6% 404,021 2,915 0.7% JHU 6/8 11:33 AM
United States 1,951,722 23,628 1.2% 110,771 734 0.7% JHU 6/8 11:33 AM
California 131,030 2,291 1.8% 4,653 27 0.6% JHU/CA.gov 6/8 11:33 AM
Los Angeles County 64,644 823 1.3% 2,655 10 0.4% LAC DPH 6/8 11:30 AM
25
Cases: Los Angeles vs. CaliforniaAs of June 8, 2020, 12:00 PM
Source: Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering GitHub repo, LA County Department of Public Health, COVIDTracking.com, and the LA Times. Day of outbreak is identified as March 11th, with prior cases aggregated to day 1
Key Takeaways:• 2,291 new cases reported in CA since yesterday (1.8% increase)
• LA County has 49.3% of cases in CA with 823 new cases (1.3% increase)
• The City of LA has 23% of cases in CA with 409 new cases (1.4% increase)
26
Deaths: Los Angeles vs. CaliforniaAs of June 8, 2020, 1:00 PM
Source: Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering GitHub repo, and the LA Times. Day of outbreak is identified as March 11th, with prior cases aggregated to day 1. LA City death count lags several days. Today’s CA death numbers do not include LA County
Key Takeaways:• 27 new deaths reported in CA from 6/7 to 6/8 (0.6% increase)
• LA County has 57.1% of deaths in CA with 10 new deaths from 6/7 to 6/8 (0.4% increase)
• The City of LA has 28.2% of deaths in CA; 12 new deaths reported from 6/5 to 6/6 (0.9% increase)
27
Source: Los Angeles County Department of Health, COVID Tracking Project 28
COVID-19 Los Angeles County | NY State Cases per 100K Residents As of June 8, 2020, 3:00 PM
Source: Los Angeles County Department of Health, COVID tracking project 29
Rolling 7-Day Averageof COVID-19 Case Rate Increase - LA|NY|US As of June 8, 2020, 3:00 PM
HospitalizationsAs of June 6, 2020 (two day lag)
Source: Los Angeles County Department of Health
Key Takeaways:• At least 7,528 people have been hospitalized since 3/18
• 58 new hospitalizations as of 6/6 (0.8% increase)
30
6/6
Hospitalized PatientsAs of June 7, 2020 (one day lag)
Source: California Health and Human Services
Key Takeaways:• 2,530 currently hospitalized patients
• Since 6/1, there has been a -0.7% decrease in hospitalized patients
31
COVID Cases andDeath DemographicsAs of June 6, 2020 (two day lag)
32
Key Takeaways:• Data is incomplete with 30.7% of cases and 0.4% of deaths still under investigation
• People 18 and above are overrepresented in cases
• Seniors, Men, Asian Americans, and African Americans are overrepresented in deaths
• 2,484 out of 2,645 deaths had comorbidities (underlying conditions) (93.9%)
Source: Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, US Census Bureau*Department of Public Health category Under Investigation or Not Otherwise Listed filtered out of analysis. Approximations are made on Census data to accommodate county age buckets. Percentage of cases and deaths under investigation is based on the race category.
Cases and Deaths by AgeAs of June 6, 2020 (two day lag)
Source: Los Angeles County Department of Health 33
5/27
State Testing Data As of June 7, 2020 (one day lag)
CA - 39.5M residents
NY - 19.4M residents
Source: covidtracking.com/*States are not consistent with updating and reflect a data lag
Key Takeaways:• 2.4M tests conductedin CA
• +91% in total testsin CA between 5/17and 6/7
34
City of Los AngelesTests Performed As of June 7, 2020
Source: City of Los Angeles *Public test registration. It does not include registration of critical city employees, first responders, and health care providers.
Key Takeaways:• At least 596,729 tests have been performed since 3/20
• At least 1,927 tests were performed on 6/7
• 15,253 of the 348,887 results received were positive (4.37%)
35
6/7
Los Angeles Portal Testing vs Total LA County CasesAs of June 7, 2020
Source: Los Angeles County Department of Health, Los Angeles City 36
Key Takeaways:Since the Los Angeles portal testing sites opened to asymptomatic people, the overall number of tests have increased by 289%. Over the same timeframe, total COVID-19 cases have increased by about 175%
The current positive rate at City portal sites is 4.4%
The overall County positive rate is 8.2%
Hospital Bed and Equipment Capacity for LA County As of June 7, 2020
Source: County HavBed Bed Tracking and Los Angeles County Department of Health Services. This is self reported data subject to error, represents 70 designated 9‐1‐1 receiving hospitals.
Key Takeaways: 840 total beds
Since last week, there has been a:• -6.9% decrease in available acute care beds. Surge capacity is 11,482
• -38.1% decrease in available ICU beds. Surge capacity is 4,067
• -12.0% decrease in available ventilators. Surge capacity is 3,199
37
County Total Reported Bed Capacity in County: 23,318 Staffed Beds in all Categories(ICU, Rehab, Unspecified Acute, Coronary Care, NICU, Perinatal, Pediatric, Psych, Skilled Nursing)
Hospital Bed and Equipment Capacity for LA County As of June 7, 2020
38Source: County HavBed Bed Tracking and Los Angeles County Department of Health Services. This is self reported data subject to error, represents 70 designated 9‐1‐1 receiving hospitals.
Hospital Bed and Equipment Capacity for LA County As of June 7, 2020
39Source: County HavBed Bed Tracking and Los Angeles County Department of Health Services This is self reported data subject to error, represents 70 designated 9‐1‐1 receiving hospitals
N95 Mask Data (June 8, 2020)
PROJECTEDSTOCK
PROJECTED3-MONTH NEED
PROJECTED6-MONTH NEED
EstimatedCurrent Stock
TotalDonated
Totalon Order
N95 Masks
First Responders/City Family * 93,286 29,000 23,327,700 660,765 1,387,607
Medical Staff/Hospitals At cost via City’s LoVLA agreement w/Honeywell. 6,000,000 8,000,000
Surgical Masks
GroceryStores The Business Operations Center is working to determine needs and identify sources.
Public The Business Operations Center is working with local NGOs to estimate their needs and how we might support.
Source: Los Angeles EOC * Includes LAFD, LAPD, RAP/Shelter Staff, Harbor, Personnel, GSD, Street Services, GSD, LAWA, ITA, DOT, Aging. ** The burn rate for LAFD decreased due to revised standards for reuse. LAPD burn rate = 1000/day; LAFD = 1500/day; LAWA=1875/day.*** The 6-month need is more than double the 3-month need because departments estimate that their burn rate may increase with time. 40
INITIATIVE DEPTS & PARTNERS RELIEF IMPACT NOTE
Senior Meals As of May 29, 2020
• FEMA• LADOA • Everytable• Local Restaurants
• 18,857 seniors have enrolled to receive meals
• 20 restaurants are registered to deliver food so far, in addition to FEMA and Everytable
13,428 individuals continue to receive meals from the City
New enrollments to this initiative are on pause due to capacity
Angeleno CardAs of May 29, 2020
• HCID• Mayor’s Fund for Los Angeles
• 17,715 cards distributed, valued at $17,244,800
49,358 individuals served through this program (including families)
This program will resume in mid-June
Mayor’s HotlineAs of May 29, 2020
• Mayor’s Office • 67 total volunteers answering calls
• 946 volunteer shifts completed
22,023 calls answered This program has been closed
Business Ambassador VisitsAs of May 28, 2020
• Disaster Service Workers
• DSW Visited 2,812 Locations
• LAPD Visited 2,481 Applications
• 104 Complaint Applications
• 374 DWP Checks
5,293 visits made, as of 5/28 This program has been put on hold
Mayor’s Resident Support Initiatives Safety Net Programs
41
Mayor’s Help Desk/311 Calls* As of June 7, 2020, 7:00 PM
Source: Mayor’s Hotline, Angeleno Card Hotline Phone BankThe Mayor’s Hotline was closed on 5/29 42
Are People Staying Safer at Home?
43
Los Angeles TrafficNoticeable but light, particularly on the evening commute,but still lower than usual level
Monday 6/8, 8:49 AMFriday 6/5, 5:05 PM
44Source: SigAlert.com
Source: Los Angeles Department of Transportation
Los Angeles Vehicle and Bike Volume:(at sample intersections)*As of June 5, 2020
Gray bars representseven-day rolling averages
45
Los Angeles TrafficCongestion Level: GREENAs of June 8, 2020
46Source: TomTom Traffic Index Rating
Los Angeles Crime Data Remains DownAs of June 6, 2020 (two day lag)
Source: LAPD“Part I” crime includes homicide, rape, robbery, aggravated assaults, burglary, larceny, vehicle theft and arsonDomestic violence crime is defined as “Intimate Partner - Simple Assault” and “Intimate Partner - Aggravated Assault” crimes 47
2020
2019
47
Los Angeles Part I Crime - 2020 vs. 2019Los Angeles Crime - 2020 vs. 2019 Los Angeles DV Crimes - 2020 vs. 2019
19.5% reduction in overall crime(since 3/12/2020)
15.6% reduction in Part I Crime(since 3/12/2020)
10.5% reduction in reported domestic violence crime* (since 3/12/2020)
Summary of Apple Mobility Data for Los Angeles As of June 6, 2020 (two day lag)
Key Takeaways: • Driving direction requests have decreased by 7%
• Walking direction requests have increased by 4%
• Transit direction requests have decreased by 65%
Source: Apple COVID-19 Mobility Trends Report 48
Economic Indicators
49
Source: California EDD
Key Takeaways:• 41K new claims from 5/17-5/23, including Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA)
• Spiked on 3/28 with 112K new claims
• This represents an increase of over 4500% from the weekly average from Jan 1-March 7
50
New Unemployment Insurance (UI) Claims for the City of Los AngelesAs of May 23, 2020
Cumulative Insurance Claims for the City of Los AngelesAs of May 23, 2020
Source: California EDD
Key Takeaways:• April unemployment estimated at 20.7%
• 558.5M total claims for Unemployment Insurance (UI) and Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) in 2020
51
Source: LA County Department of Social ServicesCAPI is the California Assistance Program for Immigrants, IHSS is In Home Support Services
County Department of Social Services ApplicationsAs of April 2020Key Takeaways: Since February 2020:• 170% increase in CalFresh applications (coverage expanded in April 2020)• 16% increase in Medi-Cal applications • 37% increase in General Relief applications since • 106% increase in CalWORKs applications • 23% decrease in IHSS applications • 26% decrease in CAPI applications
52
Los Angeles Timeline of ActionsCity Actions to Date
53
Mayoral Directive limitspublic gatherings and closesCity Hall to public
Source: Mayor Garcetti Website
Timeline of Los Angeles COVID-19 ResponseMarch 12–19, 2020
54
12 March
LAUSD announcesclosure of schools
13 March
LA's public libraries close14 March
City orders closures of dine-in rest., gyms, theaters, perf. venues and bars without food service
15 March
LAUSD closes all schools 16 March
Mayor places temporary halton parking enforcement,reduces citations
17 March
Mayor orders moratorium on commercial evictions
18 March
Mayor announces City plansto support homeless residents
19 March
Announces economic reliefpackage for small businesses
Mayor Activates DisasterService Worker program
Add 1,600 emergency shelterbeds using recreation centers and 6,000 Red Cross beds
Partner with Council to use$20M emergency relief
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Mayor orders moratoriumon residential evictions
Mayor issues Safer At Home emergency Order
Timeline of Los Angeles COVID-19 ResponseMarch 20 – 27, 2020
20 March
Mayoral Directive tolling deadlines prescribed in the Municipal Code
21 March
Mayor confirms Safer At Home will be strictly enforced
22 March
Moratorium on Ellis Act/no fault evictions
23 March
Creation of Emergency Medical Corps
24 March
Authorized departments to streamline emergency expenditures
25 March
Launched Get Connected26 March
Mayor announcesFormation of LA Protects
27 March 5 additional emergencyshelters at recreation centers
USNS Navy hospital ship arrives
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
City launches: Help DeskHotline, COVID-19 testing portal,LA Jobs Portal
Sports and recreation closedat parks and beaches
Allow alcohol delivery Establish a moratoriumon LADWP shutoffs
Relaxed vehicle registration& DL violation enforcement
55
Relaxed parking enforcementon commercial vehicles
MFLA launches Angeleno Campaign and L.A. COVID-19 Emergency Response Fund
Source: Mayor Garcetti Website
Mayoral order protecting renters from eviction during emergency; 12 monthsafter emergency to pay back rent
Timeline of Los Angeles COVID-19 ResponseMarch 28 – April 5, 2020
56
28 March
Convention Center transformedto emergency hospital
29 March
Farmers’ Mkts closed pending plans
30 March
Mayoral order requiringconstruction sites to developCOVID plans
31 March
Mayor recommends use of masks (LA Protects)
1 April
Traffic lights set to night schedule2 April
Launch of VolunteerLA3 April
USC begins 3D printing PPE4-5 April
Saturday
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday & Sunday
900+ motel/hotel rooms for homeless Angelenos
Suspending all RSO rent increases
Expanded testing sites
Shutting off power/water to non-compliant non-ess. businesses
2K tests now available daily
LAUSD mental health hotline Temp food pick-up zones
Source: Mayor Garcetti Website
Testing expanded to all with COVID symptoms
Timeline of Los Angeles COVID-19 ResponseApril 6 – 12, 2020
57
6 April
Order issuing supplementalpaid sick leave
7 April
Launch of LA CareCorps8 April
Mobile testing for nursing and assisted living facilities
9 April
Launched the LA Emergency Child Care Connection
10 April
Streets L.A. is shifting streetpaving and some street sweeping from residential streets tomajor corridors
11-12 April
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Closed parks on Sunday (4/12)
Expanding sanitation services
Safer At Home extended to 5/15
Saturday & Sunday
Essential workers to wear face coverings by 4/10
Essential businesses to prepareAnd post social distancing protocolsfor each of their facilities by 4/15
Order protecting grocery, drug retail, and food delivery workers
Source: Mayor Garcetti Website
Timeline of Los Angeles COVID-19 ResponseApril 13 – 20, 2020
58
13 April
Testing milestone: more than 50K tests performed. Same/next day test available to all with symptoms
14 April
15 April
16 April
17 April
18-19 April
20 April
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Monday
Saturday & Sunday
Launched Covid Myths webpage Release Mayor’s Data Deckof key metrics used to inform City’s COVID-19 response
Relaxed parking and vehicle registration enforcement extended to match Safer at Home order
Metro to adhere to “modified Sunday” schedule
Created the Emergency Senior Meals Response program
Launched the Global Mayor’s COVID-19 Recovery Task Force
Established new study on antibody and immunity testing
Announced relaxed timeframe for businesses inside LAX to pay rent
Launched trailer program to house homeless Angelenos who are at high risk of COVID-19
Announced new deployment of street medical teams to fight COVID-19 among Angelenos experiencing homelessness
During SOTC, announcedFurloughs for city workers
Announced partnership with Foxto provide free meals to residentswith disabilities
Source: Mayor Garcetti Website
Timeline of Los Angeles COVID-19 ResponseApril 21 – 28, 2020
59
21 April
22 April
23 April
24 April
25 -26 April
27 April
28 April
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday & Sunday
Tuesday
Monday
Source: Mayor Garcetti Website
Announced City Council to consider legislation to ensure laid off and furloughed workers can be first in line to get their jobs back
Launched LA Protects Business Ambassador Program
Testing available to all critical workers, regardless of symptoms
Free monthly testing at nursing facilities, for both workers and residents
Signed anti-price gouging measure
Emergency order requiring monthlyCOVID-19 testing for all employeesand residents at nursing facilities
Cooling centers available for heatwave, social distancing protocols to be followed
Scaled senior meals program with workers from the restaurant and taxicab industry
Neighborhood Councils nowhave resources to resume public meetings virtually beginning 5/1
COVID-19 testing expanded to asymptomatic individuals in transportation, such as delivery, rideshare, and taxi drivers
Announced partnershipwith Honeywell to purchase24 million N95 masks
Asymptomatic testing new available to construction workers
Partnership to make it easier for Angelenos to open an affordable bank or credit union account in order to receive their stimulus money more quickly
Timeline of Los Angeles COVID-19 ResponseApril 29 – May 6, 2020
60
29 April
30 April
1 May
2 & 3 May
4 May
5 May
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday and Sunday
Tuesday
Monday
COVID-19 testing available to all LA County residents, within City limits, regardless of symptoms
Signed ordinances that will ensureWorkers who have lost their jobs arefirst in line once re-hiring begins
Graduating HS seniors have access to counselors to navigate the college signing processes
Appointed Capri Maddox to serve as the Chief of COVID Response Equity
No updates
Opened two additional testing sites,adding a fourth to the Valley and a fifth to South LA; operating hours extended to 5pm
Secured large hotel in DTLA for Project Roomkey; will add 460 new rooms and bring 100 people back to work
Launched LA Represents to provide pro bono legal services to Angelenos facing hardships caused by COVID-19
6 MayWednesday
Modified SAH Order to allow some retailers to reopen for curbside pickup; reopen City hiking trails (minus Runyon) and golf courses; car dealership showrooms. Reflects new stage: Safer L.A.
All LADOT riders now requiredto wear face coverings
All travelers at LAX now required to wear face coverings
Source: Mayor Garcetti Website
Timeline of Los Angeles COVID-19 ResponseMay 7 – May 18, 2020
61
7 May
8 May
9–12 May
13 May
Thursday
Friday
Saturday – Tuesday
Wednesday
Source: Mayor Garcetti Website
LADWP will not shut off service fornon-payment for the rest of the year
Law signed that would prohibit landlordsfrom using coercion, intimidation or fraudto get their renters’ stimulus checks
Metro will require all riders to wear face coverings beginning 5/11
Launched working groups in key industries to monitor progress and offer recommendations on how to safely expand services
Partnering with 15 underutilizedrestaurants to provide meals to seniors
No updates
All Angelenos, except small children and those with disabilities, are required towear face coverings when in public
Beaches are reopened for active use only; additional facilities, such as tennis courts and community gardens, will reopen this weekend
Announced that the City will begin its Slow Streets program this weekend
Announced the expansion of the City’s Emergency Child Care Connection programto support our emergency workforce
Thursday – Monday
14–18 May No updates
Timeline of Los Angeles COVID-19 ResponseMay 19 – May 25, 2020
62
19 May
20 May
21 May
22 May
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Source: Mayor Garcetti Website
In the City of L.A., retail and mobile pet grooming and training are allowed to operate. All car washes are now reopened
Project Roomkey updates: a second hotel in DTLA, adding 150 rooms, and a hotel in Mid-City, adding 100 rooms, are now participating in the program. Total available rooms across the county is now more than 3,500
City of L.A. made it easier for companies to receive funding through its microloan program. EWDD will prioritize loans that were previously denied and reassess them based on the new standards for eligibility
City of L.A. opened its parking lots at Cabrillo and Venice Beach, including bike paths
23–25 MaySaturday-Monday
No updates
The Slow Streets program expanded to include a site in Eagle Rock and another in Mid-City
No updates
Announced a new testing site at Dodger Stadium that will open on 5/26 and be able to test up to 6,000 people per day
Two recreation zones were opened along the L.A. River
Timeline of Los Angeles COVID-19 ResponseMay 26 – June 5, 2020
63
26 May
27-28 May
Tuesday
Wednesday-Thursday
Source: Mayor Garcetti Website
29 MayFriday
Announced that all retail establishments may reopen for in-person shopping, provided they adhere to new safety measures
30 May- 4 JuneSaturday-Thursday
No updates
Runyon Canyon reopened with several new safety measures
Announced that houses of worship are permitted to reopen with restrictions on maximum capacity
The testing site at Dodger Stadium opened to the public
Announced that restaurants, barbershops, and hair salons may reopen
5 JuneFriday
Signed a City Council ordinance that temporarily caps the fees charged by delivery app companies to no more than 15% of the cost of the order
Announced that office-based businesses may reopen, but only if telework is not possible
Launched L.A. Al Fresco—a new program to encourage outdoor seating at restaurants
No updates pertaining to COVID-19
Timeline of Los Angeles COVID-19 ResponseJune 6– June 12, 2020
64
6-7 June
8 June
Saturday-Sunday
Source: Mayor Garcetti Website
9 June
Monday
No updates pertaining to COVID-19
11 JuneThursday
Today
12 JuneFriday
Tuesday
10 JuneWednesday
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