Tag Archives: Solano County CA

First 5 Solano offering childcare for essential workers, but only for Vallejo and Fairfield children

[Editor: Surely there are essential workers beyond Vallejo and Fairfield – in Benicia and throughout Solano County – in need of childcare.  The County’s First 5 statement (below) includes the following caveat: “If the current care settings listed above do not meet your needs, please still complete the intake form and we will explore alternatives to connect you to childcare.”  ANOTHER GOOD RESOURCE is Solano Family & Children’s Services, a private, non-profit Child Care Resource & Referral Agency, (707) 863-3950, Ext. 709.  – R.S.]


First 5 Solano – Emergency Pop-Up Childcare

The Solano County Emergency PopUp Childcare Program is currently open and supporting healthcare workers , first responders, disaster services workers, and essential employees working in Vallejo. This program is not open to the general public. Drop-in childcare is not being offered.

All childcare centers will follow social distancing, sanitation, and hygiene practices described in the March 18, 2020 COVID-19 for childcare providers, Solano County Public Health.

We currently have space available for infants through school age children in Vallejo and school age children in Fairfield. If you fall into one of the categories  above and need care, please complete the intake form.

If the current care settings listed above do not meet your needs, please still complete the intake form and we will explore alternatives to connect you to childcare.

Overview and Important Information for Parents, Guardians, and Staff
Descripción general e información importante para padres y tutores
Formulario de Admisión.

If you need care, fill out the Intake Form

Questions? Contact Parent Liaison Kwiana Algere
(707) 784-1338 kjalgere@solanocounty.com

COVID-19 testing for Vallejo homeless – agencies don’t include Solano County Public Health?

[Editor – I am impressed and heartened to read in today’s Vallejo Times-Herald that the City of Vallejo, Touro University and other local agencies are teaming up with Solano County Behavioral Health department to test and house the city’s homeless.  I have been raising alarms about the poor number of COVID-19 tests being reported daily by the Solano County Public Health department.  Why is our Public Health department missing from this report?  Surely the spread of coronavirus among the homeless isn’t simply a mental health problem.  Was Behavioral Health working with Public Health to supply and administer tests on this project?  – R.S.]

Vallejo, Touro University, others partnering to help homeless get tested for coronavirus

La Clinica administering the tests, while Avellino Labs processing results

Vallejo Times Herald, by Thomas Gase, April 30, 2020 at 11:29 a.m.
A homeless man pulls his carts in front of the Walmart Neighborhood Market on Sereno Drive. The new Project Room Key will focus on testing and recovery for homeless who possibly have COVID-19 in Vallejo. (Chris Riley—Times-Herald)

Vallejo is doing its best to make sure anyone who needs testing for COVID-19 gets it, and that includes the homeless population.

The City of Vallejo has combined with Touro University, Solano County Behavioral Health, Solano Resource Connect, Meals on Wheels and Fighting Back Partnership to help the homeless get tested as part of Project Roomkey.

Project Roomkey is a first-in-the-nation initiative to secure hotel and motel rooms to protect homeless individuals from COVID-19. The initiative has secured Federal Emergency Management Agency approval for 75 percent federal cost-share for this mission. Its initial goal is to secure up to 15,000 rooms for this purpose — with county partners moving 869 homeless individuals most vulnerable to COVID-19 off the street, out of shelters, and into isolation.

La Clinica will administer the testing, while Avellino Labs out of Menlo Park will process the results. On Tuesday the Vallejo City Council approved 3,334 tests that cost $250,000. Vallejo expects to get a reimbursement eventually from FEMA for the tests.

Housing and Community Development Division Manager Judy Shepard-Hall will be leading the cause in the city. She has had plenty of help from Homeless Services Coordinator Racheal Frederick-Vijay.

“Not long after the state announced the shelter-in-place, efforts were made to find out what we were doing with the homeless,” Vallejo assistant city manager Anne Cardwell said. “Judy and Rachael have been very busy with this and have hit the ground running. You have to give them a lot of credit for what they’ve done.”

Cardwell said that when La Clinica administers the tests they will be looking for one of three priorities.

“The first is people that test positive,” Cardwell said. “The second is people who believe that have been exposed and have symptoms and last but not least the third priority will be the vulnerable, such as people over the age of 65 with underlying health conditions.”

As early as March 16, Shepard-Hall said homeless were contacted through a database that had their last cell phone numbers. Shepard-Hall said between 700 and 800 people have replied to the calls and were in the stage of being vulnerable.

“Yes, it’s a little surprising how many homeless people still have a cell phone,” Shepard-Hall said. “But it’s more than just phone outreach. Eventually we well have to go out into the field and try to find some of the individuals, wherever they were known to be sleeping last.”

Early testing was done by La Clinica on Saturday to essential employees at the Cal Maritime Anchor Center on Georgia Street. Touro University is scheduled to begin outreach and wellness checks on Monday to those who responded by cellphone.

“The outreach teams will be deciding soon what areas to hit and as quickly as possible,” Cardwell said. “Whether the tests are administered on the site of the homeless camps or somewhere else still hasn’t been decided.”

Cardwell and Vallejo Public Information Officer Christina Lee said if a homeless person agreed to be tested, they would then be sheltered at Vallejo’s Hampton Inn and Rodeway Inn. Many homeless people, however, won’t leave without their belongings — something the many groups have taken into consideration.

“Occupants are allowed to bring their pets, which we’re guessing will mostly be dogs,” Cardwell said. “We have crates for them as well as food. The occupants can keep some personal belongings with them in the room, but not a huge amount. The rest of their items will be stored on site at the hotels.”

Cardwell and Lee said the testing results, done by Avellino Labs, could take five to six hours, but will likely be a once-a-day routine due to the labs being located in Menlo Park.

While occupants are at the hotel, Touro University would then get involved. Volunteer students would contribute by giving wellness checks and helping with food distribution.

“When COVID-19 started we had a lot of requests to partner with our student volunteers,” said Lisa Norton, Touro’s Dean of College of Education & Health Sciences. “Michele Bunker-Alberts, an assistant professor at Touro, is leading this team. She does a lot of street medicine projects and runs One Love, a nonprofit in Oakland.”

A meeting was then held with an oversight committee last Friday. Norton said there are approximately 200 student volunteers, but all may not want to help.

“We just posted it on campus and we’ve targeted 30, but have 12 volunteers so far,” Norton said on Monday. “The results, once we posted them, were mixed. Some of our 200 volunteers we have for a variety of issues said they preferred to work from home and in safer conditions. Some in the college of medicine are just chomping at the bit to get out there and help people. Of course, we’re also accessing for risk. If these volunteers are living with someone that is elderly and have any kind of health care concerns, we’re asking for them to stay at home.”

Norton said that the students are being promised the best Personal Protective Equipment, but most of the wellness checks would be non-touch. She said that she’s gotten a lot of community requests to help out, but this project is strictly for the nursing students.

Still, she’s proud Touro is involved.

“I’m part of Vallejo Together, and I think a lot of people who live here, want to help out,” Norton said. “Touro is all about play space and social justice and really helping out the community you’ve been placed in. A lot of people come to Touro because of their huge passion in that area and it’s incredible to see here. It really shows off our mission and what we as a faculty and staff are involved in. Personally, I think it’s the right thing to do to help out the unhoused and make sure they are doing OK.”

Shepard-Hall said the most difficult part of the process has been funding, but there are also rewarding parts of the project.

“Funding is always an issue, because we’re not San Francisco County or Los Angeles County,” Shepard-Hall said. “So we’ve had to pull together with all our resources and I think we’ve done a good job at that. The most rewarding thing is the possibility, although it hasn’t happened yet, of having the homeless go back to wherever they were living and removing fear for them and getting them healthy.”

COVID-19 Solano County update: 9 new cases, very few new tests


Thursday, April 30: 9 new cases, no new deaths, total now 263 cases, 5 deaths

Solano County Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Updates and Resources.  Check out basic information in this screenshot. IMPORTANT: The County’s interactive page has more.  On the County website, you can click on “Number of cases” and then hover over the charts for detailed information.

Previous report, Wednesday, April 29

Summary

Solano County reported 9 NEW POSITIVE CASES today – total is now 263No new deaths, total remains at 5.

BY AGE GROUP

  • No new cases of young persons under 19 years of age, total of 5 cases, just under 2% of the 263 confirmed cases.
  • 7 of today’s new cases were persons 19-64 years of age, total of 206 cases, 78%, of the total.   No new deaths, total of 2.  Note that only 29 of the 206 cases in this age group (14%) were hospitalized at one time.  (It is unclear whether the 2 deaths were ever hospitalized.)
  • 2 of today’s new cases were persons 65 or older, total of 52 cases, 20% of the total.  No new deaths, total of 3.  Note that 21 of the 52 cases in this age group (40%, nearly half) were hospitalized at one time.  (It is unclear whether the 3 deaths were ever hospitalized.)

HOSPITALIZATIONS: 51 of Solano’s 263 cases resulted in hospitalizations, same as yesterday.  Good news – no increase in hospitalizations!

ACTIVE CASES:  55 of the 263 are active cases, again same as in yesterday’s report.  Maybe the spread is leveling off, but don’t forget – there are 55 of us struggling with the virus here today, and presumably contagious.  The county does not report WHERE the active cases are.  Below you will see that only 12 are currently hospitalized, which leaves 43 of these 55 active cases out in our communities somewhere, and hopefully quarantined.

The County’s “Hospital Impact” graph (below) is virtually the same as yesterday and the day before.  12 of the 51 hospitalized cases are currently hospitalized.  And still only 12 of the 55 active cases are currently hospitalized.  The County’s count of ICU beds available and ventilator supply remains at “GOOD” at 31-100%. (No information is given on our supply of test kits, PPE and staff.)

CITY DATA

  • Vallejo added 5 of today’s 9 new cases, total of 122.
  • Fairfield added 4 of today’s 9 new cases, total of 60.
  • Vacaville remains at 35.
  • Suisun City remains at 16.
  • Benicia remains at 14.
  • Dixon, Rio Vista and “Unincorporated” are still not assigned numerical data: today all remain at <10 (less than 10).  Note that the numbers for other cities add up to 247, leaving 16 cases located somewhere among the locations in this category.  Residents and city officials have pressured County officials for city case counts.  Today’s data is welcome, but still incomplete.

TESTING

The County reports that 3,713 residents have been tested as of today.  This is an increase of only 37 individuals since yesterday’s total of 3,676.  So today we added only 37 and yesterday only 106, after days when the County reported 505 and 438 new tests.  Why the significant drop?  Testing should be on the increase!  We have a long way to go: only 8 tenths of 1% of Solano County’s 447,643 residents (2019) have been tested.

Solano’s upward curve in cumulative cases – as of April 30

The chart above shows the infection’s trajectory in Solano County.  It’s too soon to tell, but we may be seeing a flattening of the curve!

Still incredibly important – everyone stay home and be safe!

Risky opening: Cal Maritime Academy in Vallejo to begin face-to-face classes on May 10

[Editor: This is way too soon, even with various restrictions and accommodations.  Solano County is still at risk, not to mention Vallejo’s current cluster outbreaks and the active spread of the virus in some of the many locations from which students are returning to Vallejo.  I hate to think that Cal Maritime students, faculty and staff might be guinea pigs in California’s staged re-opening.  Is it too late for Gov. Newsom to reverse this decision?  – R.S.]

Coronavirus: Cal Maritime Academy approved to resume in-person classes beginning in May

ABC7 News, By Liz Kreutz, April 27, 2020

VALLEJO, Calif. (KGO) — As California weighs extending its shelter-in-place order, there are signs some restrictions are beginning to ease.

California State University Maritime Academy in Vallejo says it has received approval from the state to begin face-to-face classes in their spring semester.

“I am pleased to report that as a result of the hard work and good planning of our COVID-19 task force and the academic leadership team, Cal Maritime received approval from Governor Newsom’s office for a limited reopening of our campus to resume face-to-face instruction for the completion of our spring 2020 semester as planned,” Cal Maritime president Thomas Cropper said in a letter to students on Friday.

Cropper said the decision was run through the Chancellor’s Office and various internal entities of the Governor’s Office, including the State Department of Public Health, who provided additional guidance on reopening.

Sarah Sanders’ son Noah is a freshman at Cal Maritime and currently taking virtual classes as he shelters in place with his family at their home in Marin County. Sanders said she was shocked and concerned when she heard classes would be resuming so soon.

“It’s weird, all my friends who have college age students have their kids for the summer and can keep them home, and that’s not our case, which is good and bad,” Sanders said. “I guess they’re kind of a trial case. We’ll see how it goes.”

Bob Art, the Vice President for University Advancement at Cal Maritime, told ABC7 that the school is taking extreme safety precautions, and that when students return to campus it won’t look like it did before. An email from the president to students tells students to “please be prepared for a different campus experience.”

According to Art, cadets who plan to return to campus will be surveyed with a health questionnaire while at home and then given a health screening upon their arrival on campus.

Art said that each cadet will be housed individually in a residence hall room without roommates, and that meals will be grab-and-go or delivered straight to a students door. Everyone will also be health screened daily, including a temperature check, and need to wear a face covering when they are outside their room or office.

“Social distancing will continue in every aspect of campus life- so it will be quite different,” Cropper said in the email.

In that email, Cropper said the initial plan was for students to return to campus on May 10. Face-to-face instructions would tentatively begin on May 13. And a planned ocean voyage would also continue and tentatively begin on June 10.

Art says that since Solano County, where the academy is located, has just updated the shelter in place order to May 17, the new tentative start date for classes is May 20- but that the date could still change.

Cal Maritime is a small, isolated school with just under 1,000 students. Many classes are hands on and cannot be taught virtually. For these reasons, Art believes they are in a unique position to try a partial reopening. He said roughly 500 students are expected to return to classes this Spring.

Although Sanders had concerns, she realizes the school might be a good blueprint for others.

“I can tell you, if it doesn’t work we’ll really know it will be hard for these bigger schools,” she said. “If it does work, I’ll be excited.”

Cal Maritime is part of the Cal State University system. Still, an official for the chancellor’s office told ABC7 News that the reopening of Cal Maritime is unique and separate from the other universities, and that at this point it’s “too early” to say when the other schools will reopen.

Jesse Melgar, a spokesperson for Governor Newsom, released the following statement regarding the partial reopening of Cal Maritime:

“The CSU Maritime Academy trains merchant marines and the maritime workforce is required for shipping and logistics. This specialized maritime workforce is essential to the California economy, as 90% of U.S. trade moves by sea. Nearly $500 billion of trade moves through the Los Angeles and Long Beach port complex alone – the largest on the U.S. Pacific coast – supporting roughly 200,000 jobs. The Administration has provided conditions that must be met for the Academy to resume limited in-person instruction for 513 merchant marine officer cadets after May 10, including strict, unique health and safety guidelines.”

“This includes screening each cadet and instructor every morning, maintaining physical distancing, offering grab-and-go meals, using PPE and providing hand sanitizing stations. This is the only academy of its kind in the state and does not serve as a precedent for other colleges or universities in California.”