Last Updated on August 21, 2020 by BVN

Good morning, California. It’s Thursday, August 20.

Resources stretched thin

The Skyline fire burns near Foothill Parkway and Skyline Drive in Corona on Aug. 13, 2020. Residents cheers each time a drop is made. Photo by Cindy Yamanaka, The Press-Enterprise/SCNGThe Skyline fire burns near Foothill Parkway and Skyline Drive in Corona on Aug. 13, 2020. Residents cheers each time a drop is made. Photo by Cindy Yamanaka, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG
The Skyline fire burns near Foothill Parkway and Skyline Drive in Corona on Aug. 13. Photo by Cindy Yamanaka, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG

Disasters abound in California right now. Fires raging across the state have forced thousands to evacuate, put a severe strain on firefighting crews, and contributed to poor air quality amid a scorching heat wave that led to blackouts. Oh, and there’s also the global pandemic.

Lightning struck California more than 10,849 times in the last three days, and at least 367 fires are actively burning, 23 of which are major, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Wednesday. Some — including the CZU August Lightning Complex in the Santa Cruz area, the LNU Lightning Complex near Vacaville and the Carmel Fire — remain 0% contained. (For more, check out the Los Angeles Times’ fire map.)

  • Newsom: “We are experiencing fires the likes of which we haven’t seen in many, many years. … That is a resource challenge where they are stretched in ways where we haven’t seen in the last few years.”

Cal Fire, the state firefighting agency, recently beefed up its ranks with 858 seasonal firefighters to make up for a dearth of inmate firefighters, many of whom were forced to quarantine after a training-camp coronavirus outbreak. But with crews still pushed to the breaking point, Newsom this week requested 375 fire engines and additional hand crews from other states, including Arizona, Nevada and Texas.

  • Ian Larkin, Cal Fire unit chief for San Mateo and Santa Cruz counties: “Right now we are in the position (where) we have no resources to put out on the line today, so we’ll be double-shifting all of our resources … This is a significant safety hazard for our firefighters … as well as the communities that we’re out there trying to protect.”

The state managed to avoid rolling blackouts Sunday through Tuesday nights as major consumers and residents cut back on energy use. With temperatures set to cool down today, Newsom said Wednesday would likely be the last “challenging” day for the state energy grid.

Confused about why California had rolling blackouts in the first place? CalMatters’ Julie Cart has a helpful explainer.

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The coronavirus bottom line: As of 9 p.m. Wednesday night, California had 632,667 confirmed coronavirus cases and 11,342 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.


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Other stories you should know

1. Kamala Harris accepts vice presidential nomination

Kamala Harris stands at DNC podium, smilingKamala Harris stands at DNC podium, smiling
Kamala Harris accepts the Democratic Party’s nomination for vice president on Aug. 19. Screenshot of Democratic National Convention

Kamala Harris accepted the Democratic Party’s nomination for vice president Wednesday night as the first California Democrat and first woman of color on a major party’s national ticket. In her acceptance speech, Harris traced her political values back to her California roots and the activism of her Indian mother and Jamaican father.

  • Harris: “They fell in love in that most American way — while marching together for justice in the civil rights movement of the 1960s. In the streets of Oakland and Berkeley, I got a stroller’s-eye view of people getting into what the great John Lewis called ‘good trouble.’”

But she also took on the fighting role traditionally assigned to vice-presidential candidates, leveraging her experience as a prosecutor to volley harsh words against President Donald Trump.

  • Harris: “I know a predator when I see one. … Right now, we have a president who turns our tragedies into political weapons. Joe (Biden) will be a president who turns our challenges into purpose.”

When Harris accepted the nomination, she did so with her mother — and California — in mind.

  • Harris: “I keep thinking about that 25-year-old Indian woman — all of five feet tall — who gave birth to me at Kaiser Hospital in Oakland, California. On that day, she probably could have never imagined that I would be standing before you now speaking these words: I accept your nomination for Vice President of the United States of America.”

2. California eviction solutions face major hurdles

Eugene Vang, 19, demonstrates against evictions during the COVID-19 pandemic near his hometown in Merced County.Eugene Vang, 19, demonstrates against evictions during the COVID-19 pandemic near his hometown in Merced County.
Eugene Vang, 19, demonstrates against evictions during the COVID-19 pandemic in Merced County. Photo courtesy 99Rootz Credit: Photo courtesy of 99Rootz

California’s eviction moratorium expires in less than two weeks, and lawmakers, the Newsom administration, tenant groups and landlord associations are all racing to dam a wave of evictions that could push renters onto the streets and landlords into foreclosure — but keep getting caught in a thicket of financial, legal, political and logistical complications, CalMatters’ Matt Levin reports. Much is at stake for Newsom in particular, who dedicated his entire State of the State speech to California’s homelessness crisis and said addressing it was his top priority.

Lawmakers are currently considering two eviction proposals, though both are plagued with legal and financial concerns and neither is likely to land on Newsom’s desk in its current form.

  • Option A: Permanently prohibit landlords from evicting tenants who missed a rent payment due to COVID-19. Lenders would be forced to give landlords mortgage forbearance options.
  • Option B: The state gives landlords tax credits for missed rent, which they could sell for cash. Renters would pay missed payments directly to the state.

3. Los Angeles cracks down on party houses

Image via iStock

In what appears to be the most stringent government action taken against individual Californians amid the pandemic, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti on Wednesday shut off the power at a Hollywood Hills mansion rented by TikTok stars Bryce Hall, Noah Beck and Blake Gray following a series of massive parties that garnered national attention. The news came less than two weeks after Garcetti first authorized the city to cut off utilities at houses that hold multiple large parties — many of which seem to be hosted by social media celebrities.

  • Garcetti: “Despite several warnings, this house has turned into a nightclub in the hills, hosting large gatherings in flagrant violation of our public health orders. The City has now disconnected utilities at this home to stop these parties that endanger our community.”

For their part, Hall and Gray responded with a TikTok in which they dance to the song “Electric Love.”


CalMatters events

TODAY: How the Pandemic Is Affecting Children’s Mental Health. Register | Submit Your Questions

Visit our events page for more information. Questions or comments? Email info@calmatters.org.


CalMatters commentary

CalMatters columnist Dan Walters: With Kamala Harris on the national ticket, President Donald Trump’s campaign ads will emphasize California’s foibles.

Election engagement: Targeted outreach efforts are crucial for reaching first-time, low-propensity and limited-English speaking voters, write Jonathan Mehta Stein of California Common Cause and Francisco Pedraza, a UC Riverside professor.

Drivers need a break: California should use telematics — technology that measures driving behaviors to determine auto insurance costs — to help residents save money, argue Democratic Assemblymembers Evan Low of Campbell and Autumn Burke of Marina Del Rey.


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Other things worth your time

California’s rich homeowners are buying an unproven wildfire cure. // Bloomberg

Los Angeles opened 26 new homeless shelters when the pandemic hit. Only seven are left. // Los Angeles Times

Half the detainees at Bakersfield ICE facility have tested positive for COVID-19. // KQED

Mapping landmarks lost to the pandemic across the Bay Area. // San Francisco Chronicle

What California community college students want to know about the upcoming school year. // CalMatters

Student town hall with CSU Chancellor Timothy P. White. // CalMatters

Sacramento removes city law requiring people to stand and salute during the National Anthem. // Sacramento Bee

Consumer group fears California’s recycling network is in danger of collapse. // Los Angeles Daily News


See you tomorrow.

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