Pelosi, Dems want a national standard for police use-of-force like California's
Sac Bee's KATE IRBY: "Congressional Democrats announced Monday that they want to raise the legal standard for when law enforcement officers can use deadly force, proposing a bill similar to a new California law that aims to reduce lethal encounters.
Gov. Gavin Newsom in August signed California’s law, which declares that police may use deadly force only when it is necessary given the totality of circumstances faced by an officer.
It’s a stricter threshold than the previous standard, which held that officers may use deadly force if the tactics are considered “reasonable” by other police. The law represented the culmination of years of work by California lawmakers following the deaths of unarmed black men during interactions with police."
READ MORE related to Police & Criminal Justice Reform: Chokeholds, rubber bullets and tear gas targeted in California police reform proposals -- Sac Bee's HANNAH WILEY/MACKENZIE HAWKINS; Protesters demand justice, answers in killing of Erik Salgado, Oakland resident shot by CHP -- The Chronicle's MATT KAWAHARA/ANNA BAUMAN
Parents of murdered daughter seek stronger 'Laura's Law'
SIGRID BATHEN in Capitol Weekly: "A bill to strengthen California’s 2002 “Laura’s Law,” which gives family members a legal tool to get treatment for their severely mentally ill relatives, appears headed for approval in the state Assembly.
But some counties are balking at a key provision that would require them to publicly explain — in writing — why they are “opting out” of participation in the program, which has had considerable success in reducing hospitalizations, homelessness and incarceration in the 20 counties where it has been adopted.
The current measure, AB 1976 by Assemblywoman Susan Eggman, D-Stockton, has been unanimously approved in recent weeks by the Assembly Health Committee (15-0) and Appropriations Committee (18-0), and is scheduled to be heard in the full Assembly as early as today. If passed, it would go to the state Senate."
Newsom's $1B medical mask deal: Company finally wins safety certification
The Chronicle's DUSTIN GARDINER: "Gov. Gavin Newsom’s medical mask deal with a Chinese manufacturer will proceed after the company succeeded in obtaining federal safety certification, following two missed deadlines.
Newsom said Monday that supplier BYD had secured safety certification for its N95 particulate-filtering respirators, clearing the way for California to receive 150 million masks. A spokeswoman for the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health confirmed that the certification was granted Sunday.
“This new supply of N95 masks, as well as the surgical masks this contract has already provided, are game-changing and play a crucial role in our state’s public safety and reopening strategy,” Newsom said in a statement."
Court fight could lead to limits on fluoridated drinking water
Fair Warning's DAN ROSS in Capitol Weekly: "A federal court trial under way in San Francisco could spell the beginning of the end of water fluoridation in America, potentially affecting drinking water for hundreds of millions of people across the U.S.
Although fluoride can occur naturally in water, many water utilities add the chemical with the goal of improving dental health. But an alliance of groups led by Food & Water Watch, a government accountability nonprofit, have sued the Environmental Protection Agency to force it to limit or ban adding fluoride altogether. They contend that the chemical presents an “unreasonable risk’’ of causing neurological damage, especially to young children and babies in the womb.”
In opening statements today, plaintiffs lawyer Michael Connett said it ”will be undisputed in this case that babies who are bottle-fed with fluoridated water receive the highest doses of fluoride of any age group.” At the time of “their greatest vulnerability, we are exposing infants, often from the poorest, most disadvantage communities, to a very high burden of fluoride,” Connett said."
Hundreds were arrested for peacefully protesting. Here are their stories
LA Times's GALE HOLLAND/RICHARD WINTON/JOE MOZINGO: "The curfew had come half an hour before, and Los Angeles police were screaming for the protesters on 1st and Spring streets to go home.
Amanda Young, 27, said she wanted to leave but realized that she couldn’t.
“Everywhere you turned you saw blue uniforms,” she said. “They sandwiched us in. They were indiscriminately pulling people out of their cars."
SF City Hall corruption probe: Second public official, 2 others, newly charged
The Chronicle's MEGAN CASSIDY/TRISHA THADANI: "Another top official at San Francisco City Hall is now charged in the public corruption scandal that already netted former Director of the Department of Public Works Mohammed Nuru this year, federal officials announced Monday.
Sandra Zuniga, San Francisco’s Fix-It director and director of the Mayor’s Office of Neighborhood Services is charged with one count of conspiracy to launder money after prosecutors said she conspired for years with Nuru to launder the proceeds of his alleged honest services wire fraud.
Zuniga is one of three additional people officials named Monday in connection to the case, months after the bombshell January arrests of Nuru and restaurateur Nick Bovis. The pair were accused of attempting to bribe an airport commissioner, as well as a number of corruption schemes involving city resources."
The coronavirus entered NorCal many times, from many places
LA Times's MELISSA HEALY: "The novel coronavirus settled in Northern California in much the same way as the rest of the world: It arrived from places near and far, flourished in fertile pockets and incubated until it either died out or moved on to newer pastures.
An international team of scientists combined old-fashioned epidemiology with newfangled genetic sleuthing to determine that the Bay Area’s outbreak was spawned by a mix of foreign and domestic arrivals. The findings were published Monday in the journal Science.
In nine Bay Area counties where the coronavirus set down roots early, visitors arriving directly from China were only one of several sources of spread within the community. Strains of the virus that had come by way of Europe were also widely evident. And a cluster of cases that put down roots in Santa Clara County sent out tendrils to neighboring San Mateo County and the more distant Solano County."
READ MORE related to Pandemic: Safety measures helped avert 1.7 million cases in California, according to study -- The Chronicle's CATHERINE HO; California nursing home deaths from COVID-19 doubled last month, as state pushes more testing -- Sac Bee's MARA HOPLAMAZIAN
Capitol Weekly Podcast: Paula Treat
Capitol Weekly STAFF: "Paula Treat, the grande dame of Sacramento contract lobbyists, has had a wide range of clients including Tesla, Uber, CCPOA, the California Medical Association, the California Lottery and several Indian tribes, over her four decade career. She called in from her cabin in Truckee to do her very first podcast, and spoke with John Howard and Tim Foster about the challenges of lobbying during a pandemic, what to expect as California begins to reopen, and what it’s like to have a client as unpredictable as Elon Musk."
Forget stimulus payments, many are asking the IRS, 'Where's my refund?'
The Chronicle's KATHLEEN PENDER: "Susan Morse of San Francisco filed her 2019 taxes in late February and was due “a good-size refund,” she said. More than three months later, she’s still waiting for a check.
“Unfortunately, I filed it via paper with the request for a paper check back my way. I check the IRS Where’s My Refund website daily and keep getting the same response — ‘it’s being processed,’” she said. “There is no way to reach anyone at the IRS right now as I have tried various numbers and get the answer that no agents (are) available — go to the website. I could file again electronically and ask for a refund to be deposited into my bank account, but I don’t want the IRS to see two filings that are the same with different methods of paying the taxpayer.”
She added that she filed her California return on paper and got her refund “a while ago."
READ MORE related to Economy/Unemployment: Pandemic unemployment benefit is set to expire. Will a back-to-work bonus replace it? -- Sac Bee's DAVID LIGHTMAN
SF skirts scrutiny of toxic site developments
The Chronicle's CYNTHIA DIZIKES: "During the past five years, the San Francisco Planning Department granted or considered environmental review exemptions prohibited under state law for at least a dozen developments on old gas stations, vehicle repair shops and parking garages where toxic substances leaked into the soil and groundwater.
The 12 projects analyzed by The Chronicle involve more than 250 current and future housing units around the city, in the Mission, Sunset, Cow Hollow, Nob Hill and other neighborhoods.
Exemptions can help speed development by reducing legal hangups and costs, and city officials say that all polluted sites are cleaned up to state and regional standards, regardless of whether they are exempted.But exemptions also mean less public scrutiny of the environmental and health impacts of development, including digging up large quantities of potentially contaminated soil."
PG&E will relocate to Oakland after more than 100 years in SF
The Chronicle's JD MORRIS/ROLAND LI: "PG&E Corp. plans to sell its San Francisco headquarters and move to Oakland in the coming years, a cost-saving effort that will see California’s largest utility leave the city where it has been based for more than a century.
The company announced Monday that it will begin relocating from downtown San Francisco to 300 Lakeside Drive by Lake Merritt in 2022. PG&E said it would “launch a competitive market process” to sell its San Francisco office complex, which includes 77 Beale St. and 245 Market St., after it emerges from bankruptcy protection.
PG&E intends to ask state regulators at the California Public Utilities Commission for permission to return its net gain from the San Francisco office sale back to customers, the company said. The move is designed to help the company save money on real estate costs, though PG&E did not immediately provide an estimate on those savings."
SoCalGas ramps up use of Aliso Canyon, site of worst gas leak in US history
LA Times's SAMMY ROTH: "While campaigning for governor, Gavin Newsom said he was committed to shutting down the Aliso Canyon storage field, the site of a record-setting methane blowout that spewed heat-trapping gases into the atmosphere and sickened nearby residents.
But Southern California Gas Co.'s use of Aliso Canyon to provide natural gas to its customers has only grown during Newsom’s tenure, a new analysis finds.
The environmental group Food and Water Watch, which wants to see Aliso closed, analyzed publicly available data and found that SoCalGas withdrew 20 billion cubic feet of gas from the storage field this winter, primarily to heat homes in the Los Angeles area. That’s up from 14 billion cubic feet in the winter of 2018-19, and just 1 billion cubic feet the winter before that."
Students should expect masks, temperature checks and a lot of hand washing under California guidance
EdSource's DIANA LAMBERT: "California schools will look different when they reopen next year, according to new statewide guidance. Students should expect to wash their hands and have their temperature taken often. They will likely wear masks and only attend classes a few days a week with a small group of classmates. Signs and taped marks on the floor will tell them which direction to walk and where to stand in hallways and in the cafeteria.
A 55-page guidance document, “Stronger Together: A Guidebook for the Safe Reopening of California’s Public Schools,” released Monday morning by the California Department of Education offers sweeping recommendations about everything from keeping students and staff safe while at school to the types of instructional models that school districts should consider to maintain social distancing.
Ultimately, school district officials will decide how to reopen campuses. The guidance, the document states, “honors the varied local context of each of our local education authorities."
Santa Cruz County deputy's suspected killer posted criticism of police in hours before shooting
The Chronicle's MATTHIAS GAFNI/ALEJANDRO SERRANO: "In the 48 hours before Steven Carrillo allegedly shot a Santa Cruz County sheriff’s deputy to death in an ambush, the Air Force staff sergeant who led an elite protection unit posted a flurry of Facebook posts that were critical of police brutality and law enforcement’s responses to the Black Lives Matter protests.
“Who needs antifa to start riots when you have the police to do it for you,” Carrillo wrote Friday, sharing a post about tear gas fired at protesters in Richmond, Va.
Carrillo posted another meme before Saturday’s shootout with deputies in Ben Lomond, mocking the idea that tear gas kills the coronavirus and commenting: “Unfortunately it just kills people with asthma, RIP Sarah Grossman.” Carrillo was referring to the Ohio woman who died after getting tear gassed by police at a protest in Columbus."