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Newsom proposes $2.7 billion to expand COVID-19 response efforts

Woman gets nose swab test
California’s COVID-19 response would be boosted under Gov. Gavin Newsom’s new state budget proposal, officials said Saturday. New funds would be available to expand testing, like at the site on Broadway in Santa Monica.
(Carolyn Cole/Los Angeles Times)
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California would spend $2.7 billion on new efforts to respond to the surge in COVID-19 cases, including additional testing capacity and assistance to hospitals, under a budget proposal Gov. Gavin Newsom will send to state lawmakers next week.

Newsom will also ask legislators to help craft new COVID sick pay rules for Californians, modeled after the policy that expired last fall, requiring businesses with 26 or more workers to offer up to two weeks of supplemental paid sick leave for employees to care for themselves or a family member.

“Our proposed COVID-19 Emergency Response Package will support our testing capacity, accelerate vaccination and booster efforts, support frontline workers and health care systems and battle misinformation,” Newsom said in a written statement Saturday.

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Advisors to Newsom said Saturday the governor will ask the Legislature to take quick action on authorizing the first $1.4 billion of the new pandemic response package when he sends his annual state spending plan to the Legislature on Monday. Most of the early funding would go to expand testing programs, with the remaining portion spent on virus response efforts inside California prisons.

State officials hope that quick action on the funding for new testing — $418 million now out of an effort that will total $1.2 billion — will help expand hours of operation and capacity at existing testing locations, as well as speed up the distribution of rapid test kits to local health departments and schools. The Newsom administration has struggled in recent days to make good on the governor’s promise to ensure test kits would be in the hands of California families before their children returned to schools from winter break, an effort funded out of money appropriated last year by lawmakers.

On Friday, Newsom deployed members of the California National Guard to testing sites across the state, with an additional deployment scheduled next week. Guard members will assist with patient check-in and crowd control duties, as well as serving as clinical staff until permanent hires are made.

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State public health officials said more than 2,700 people were admitted to California hospitals Friday for COVID, bringing the total to more than 10,000. The strain on the state’s hospitals from COVID patients, officials said, is nearing the challenges experienced last winter, before vaccines were widely available.

California has averaged more than 65,000 new cases a day over the past week, according to data compiled by The Times.

The new state budget plan proposes $583 million to increase vaccination rates and, according to a summary provided by the Newsom administration, “combat misinformation” through partnerships with media outlets focused on the state’s communities of color. An additional $110 million would be spent on testing and vaccination of migrants who cross the Mexico border into California, as well as funds to expand contact tracing programs across the state.

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To date, most of the cost of California’s pandemic response efforts has been covered by the federal government. A November report from the state Department of Finance put the tally at more than $9.4 billion in federal dollars spent. An additional $2.3 billion in state costs through the end of September were reimbursed by the federal government. State officials believe many of the expenses in the $2.7-billion proposal will also be reimbursed by the federal government.

Newsom’s budget will earmark a sizable portion of the new coronavirus funds to boost efforts at California’s prisons, where an additional 1,275 cases have been reported in the last 14 days. The state’s mandate that prison employees get vaccinated was blocked by a federal appeals court in November.

California’s finances are well-positioned to cover COVID-19 response costs. Last fall, independent analysts projected a $31-billion state budget surplus, an estimate that will be updated in Newsom’s spending plan next week.

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