California reports higher COVID-19 rates in areas with higher vaccination rates, and vice versa



New statewide data in California reportedly shows that areas with above-average vaccination rates are experiencing an uptick in coronavirus infections while areas with below-average vaccination rates are experiencing a decrease.

The perplexing trend comes as elected officials and health experts across the country aggressively encourage unvaccinated individuals to become immunized against the virus.

KOVR-TV reported Monday that "a new analysis finds several counties with above-average vaccination rates also have higher COVID case rates, while case rates are falling in counties with below-average vaccination rates." Here's more from the report:

Statewide data analyzed by the Bay Area News Group found five counties, Los Angeles, San Diego, Alameda, Contra Costa, and San Francisco, have both a higher percentage of people who are fully vaccinated than the state average and a higher average daily case rate.

Compare that to these five counties: Modoc, Glenn, Lassen, Del Norte, and San Benito, which have below-average vaccination rates and decreasing case rates.

While health experts are well aware that the news is confounding, they insist it is not proof that vaccinations are counter-productive. Rather, they suggest that population density and the contagiousness of the Delta variant may be reasons for the trend.

"There are a number of issues that contribute to transmission," Dr. Stephen Luby, an infectious diseases expert at Stanford University, said, according to Mercury News. "In high-density urban settings, for example, even with a higher level of vaccine coverage, there can still be a lot of exposure to unvaccinated folks and potentially to folks who are vaccinated but are asymptomatically shedding the Delta variant."

Higher COVID Rate Found In Counties With Higher Vaccination Rate youtu.be

Likewise, Dr. Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo, an epidemiology professor at the University of California-San Francisco, argued that although vaccines are efficient at bolstering the body's immune response, they aren't impenetrable shields.

"The best, most waterproof raincoat is protective, but not when it's storming outside or you're in the middle of a hurricane," she noted.

Her colleague, UCSF infectious disease expert Dr. Philip Norris, told KOVR that in densely populated areas, vaccinated individuals may even be unknowingly transmitting the disease to others.

Norris pointed to a Chinese study indicating that the Delta variant may have a viral load of up to 1,000 times higher than previous variants.

"If that's the case, even a little bit in somebody who's vaccinated could be a lot," he added.

Regardless of whether the explanations are plausible or not, the news out of California will all but certainly serve as a disclaimer amid the nationwide vaccination push.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti refuses offer to join Biden administration, says his daughter tested positive for coronavirus



Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said that President-elect Joe Biden offered him a position in his administration but that he turned it down.

Garcetti made the admission during a media briefing on Thursday about the spike in coronavirus cases in Los Angeles County.

"There were things on the table for me but I said to (the Biden administration) very clearly ... I need to be here now," said Garcetti, without divulging what position Biden had offered him.

There had been speculation that he might be picked to head the Department of Transportation, but the Biden transition team announced Tuesday that former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Peter Buttigieg was to be nominated for that position instead.

Others questioned the timing of his announcement given that earlier on Thursday a judge had ordered Garcetti must testify in a lawsuit against the city by a Los Angeles police officer who accused a former mayoral aide of sexual harassment.

Self-quarantine

Garcetti also said that he and his wife were in self-quarantine after their 9-year-old daughter tested positive for the coronavirus.

"On Monday while I was at work, my wife called to let us know that our beloved daughter Maya, who turned nine this weekend, wasn't feeling very well. And after she came down with a fever, we had her tested for COVID-19, and her results came back positive," said Garcetti.

He went on to say that his daughter's symptoms were mild and that he and his wife had tested negative.

Garcetti has ordered renewed lockdowns after coronavirus spiked in a second wave in recent weeks. On Thursday California state health officials announced that intensive care units in Southern California were at full capacity, in spite of the fact that Los Angeles has consistently maintained some of the harshest COVID-19 policies in the country.

Some have questioned whether studies can justify such a draconian lockdown order given the negative consequences that will come from shutting down the economy and isolating so many people.

Here's the video of the briefing:

LA mayor and wife self-quarantine after daughter tests positive for COVID-19www.youtube.com

Report: California Gov. Gavin Newsom didn't take pay cut as promised — despite cutting state workers' salaries by 10%



California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom was in hot water Thursday after it was discovered that he had not taken a pay cut as promised, despite asking state workers to take a reduced salary to aid the battle against the coronavirus pandemic.

In May, Newsom proposed a 10% pay cut for state workers to help fill the state's $54 billion budget deficit amid coronavirus shutdowns. In a show of solidarity, he voluntarily pledged to join the state's 96,000-member workforce in reducing his salary.

But, according to a report Thursday from the Sacramento Bee, that has not happened.

In July, the governor continued drawing his regular monthly salary of $17,479, as shown by pay data recorded by the State Controller's Office.

A spokesman for the governor's office called it an "oversight."

The outlet added that of the state's eight elected constitutional officers — which includes the treasurer, secretary of state and attorney general — only one, State Controller Betty Yee, took the pay cut last month.

After the Sacramento Bee began asking questions Wednesday, Newsom reportedly sent a letter to Yee asking her to reduce his pay retroactively to the beginning of July, when pay cuts kicked in for the rest of the government workforce.

Amazingly, Yvonne Walker, the president of SEIU Local 1000, the state's largest union, refrained from criticizing the governor Thursday. She essentially suggested that perhaps he and his office were too busy.

"If there's one thing we know, it's that our governor keeps his word," Walker said in an emailed statement. "We can only imagine that with all the things going on in our state ... it wouldn't be surprising if processing the necessary paperwork has taken a backseat to more pressing matters."

It is certainly not the first time that Newsom has faced scrutiny for not living under the same standards that his office has implemented since the start of the pandemic.

KOVR-TV reported in July that PlumpJack, a Northern California-based winery and hospitality company founded and part-owned by Newsom, had continued operations months after the governor ordered all essential businesses closed in March.

PlumpJack also raised eyebrows for reportedly receiving a loan worth $150,000 to $350,000 from the Paycheck Protection Program.

TheBlaze reached out to Gov. Newsom's office for further comment regarding the news but had not received a reply at time of publication.