 | | A man walking in the Haight-Ashbury district in San Francisco on April 18.Jeff Chiu/Associated Press |
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Was the Saturday night announcement of a “reset” of California’s unemployment insurance system an attempt to obscure evidence of a catastrophic failure by a government agency that has been dogged by problems for months? |
Or was it an urgently needed measure that will ultimately help hundreds of thousands of Californians unemployed because of the pandemic to get their money faster? |
It depends on whom you ask. |
CalMatters reported that the report was already late and it included some alarming statistics, like the state’s backlog of almost 1.6 million unresolved unemployment claims, which won’t be cleared until late January. And the backlog is growing by thousands each day. |
On Monday, Gov. Gavin Newsom scrambled to address those criticisms, saying that officials started the “reset” over the weekend because he didn’t want to wait any longer to begin the work of casting its decades-old computer systems into the “waste bin of history.” |
“We’re not paving over the old cow path,” he said. |
When it’s reborn on Oct. 5, the system will have a tool for automatically verifying an applicant’s identity using a selfie. That will keep applicants from getting funneled into a queue for a manual identity verification. |
Yolanda Richardson, secretary of California’s government operations agency and co-chair of the “strike team” that made the recommendations, said on Monday that was a major source of the backlog at the Employment Development Department. |
“We believe if the E.D.D. embraces our recommendations they’ll be well on their way to creating a first-class experience,” she said. |
Of course, California isn’t the only state grappling with outdated information technology. |
And as businesses and schools tentatively restart in-person operations and life returns to “normal,” the difficulties of making sure people get the help they need and are entitled to will most likely be widespread. |
As of Monday, the state’s average positivity rate over the past two weeks dipped to 3.1 percent. Over the week, that number was below 3 percent for the first time. |
On average over the past two weeks, more than 108,000 tests were administered each day, a number that Mr. Newsom has said may be depressed because of the wildfires burning across the state. |
He hinted that more counties would be able to move ahead in their phased reopenings. |
“Real progress,” he said. |
Mr. Newsom said that a planned doubling of testing capacity, coupled with much faster turnarounds of those tests will allow the state and counties to better gauge when to reopen schools and lift restrictions on other types of businesses. |
Still, he cautioned that Californians shouldn’t get complacent; it’s still unclear whether there will be a spike in cases stemming from increased travel over Labor Day weekend. Furthermore, flu season is on the way. |
 | | After a set of marathon negotiations in late August, the Cajon Valley Union School District announced a hybrid plan with a mix of in-person and at-home instruction.Sandy Huffaker for The New York Times |
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- Cajon Valley Union School District near San Diego has managed to do something most low-income districts have put off: Bring kids into the classroom. Here’s how. [The New York Times]
- The virus and wildfires interrupted ACT testing over the weekend. And the SATs are next. [The New York Times]
- Women working in retail jobs are struggling as they are forced to choose between keeping their jobs and making sure their kids are keeping up with remote learning. [The New York Times]
- “We’re talking about a full-blown humanitarian crisis, a Depression-level situation for this work force.” Housekeepers are facing a disaster generations in the making. [The New York Times]
- Hollywood unions and major studios have reached a deal to resume filming. [The New York Times]
- Six months into the pandemic, here’s how 10 residents of the Coachella Valley say their lives have changed. [The Desert Sun]
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A brief update on the wildfires |
 | | A deer looks for food in the burn area of the Bobcat Fire in Pearblossom. Kyle Grillot/EPA, via Shutterstock |
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So far this year, 3.6 million acres, an area roughly the size of Connecticut, have burned just in California. That’s about 23 times the acreage that burned in the state last year — although it was a wet year, unlike this one. |
But officials emphasized again on Monday that it’s September and more could be ahead. |
Some 19,000 firefighters are still battling 27 major fires, including the Bobcat Fire, which exploded northeast of Los Angeles over the weekend. More than 23,000 people are still evacuated from their homes across the state. |
“We continue to do our best,” the governor said. |
- Climate change has turned California from a marvel of infrastructure ingenuity into ground zero for disasters. [The New York Times]
- A firefighter died last week battling the El Dorado Fire, which the authorities say was sparked by a gender-reveal party pyrotechnic stunt. [The New York Times]
- Some Californians moved to Oregon to find cheaper housing. Wildfires there have left them homeless. [The Los Angeles Times]
- Autumn has arrived on the North Coast, bringing hot, dry winds; fire danger; and low reservoirs. [The Press Democrat]
- Fish in Teichert Ponds, a wildlife refuge in Chico, have been found dead. Experts say it’s because they lacked oxygen and air quality was poor. [Chico Enterprise-Record]
- Air in the Bay Area is expected to be clear this week, but the respite from wildfire smoke might be brief. [The San Francisco Chronicle]
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 | | Alicia Bitondo, a senior aquarist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, fed a salmon snailfish named O.G., which has lived in the space since June 2019.Tyler Schiffman |
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There is a deep, dark part of the ocean, beyond that which has been known to man (except a few scientists and well-financed explorers, including James Cameron). It is vast, but it isn’t timeless. It’s outside the reach of sunlight. |
And as Annie Roth reported for our Science desk, the Monterey Bay Aquarium is leading an effort to bring life in that zone, 3,300 to 13,000 feet under the sea, to the surface. |
What’s challenging is that organisms at that depth are hard to catch and hard to keep alive. But millions of dollars and technological advances can go a long way. |
But it won’t just be for tourists to ogle the wild, unknown creatures. |
“If people come away from this exhibit thinking that they’ve just seen an ‘other’ place then I think we haven’t done our job,” said Kyle Van Houtan, the aquarium’s chief scientist. “Our job is to get them to see themselves in this place.” |
Jill Cowan grew up in Orange County, went to school at U.C. Berkeley and has reported all over the state, including the Bay Area, Bakersfield and Los Angeles — but she always wants to see more. Follow along here or on Twitter, @jillcowan. |
California Today is edited by Julie Bloom, who grew up in Los Angeles and graduated from U.C. Berkeley. |
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