Learn All Things Sea Otter at Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History ‘Pup-up’

It’s Sea Otter Awareness Week, and to spread appreciation for the smallest and fluffiest marine mammal, the Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History will host a free pop-up at Lighthouse Point. On Friday and Saturday from 10am to 2pm, visitors can watch otters through spotting scopes along West Cliff, take closer looks at the museum’s specimens and talk to experts. 

“The pop-ups are about accessibility and connecting people to nature right here in their backyard,” says Kiersten Elzy-Loving, the development and community partnerships manager at the museum. 

“As more people are spending time in the water, there’s more interaction between humans and wildlife,” she says. “We want to make sure that it’s positive interaction and respectful interaction.”

Museum staff hopes the fun facts visitors learn about otters will help them want to protect the endangered species.

Sea otters were nearly hunted to extinction in the early 1900s for their thick fur. With up to a million hairs per inch, they have the densest coats of any mammal. An international treaty halted commercial hunting in 1911, but the fuzzy marine mammals still face a long road to recovery.

Their rebound will also help kelp forests. Otters eat around a fourth of their body weight per day, and their voracious appetite for sea urchins and other kelp-grazers helps keep the ecosystem in balance.

“The most important thing that we’re hoping people will take away from it is that it sea otters are this wonderful cornerstone in our kelp forest health,” says Elzy-Loving.

At the pop-up, museum staff will teach visitors how to spot otters and “[encourage] people to get out in the water and have a respectful and safely socially-distant interaction with our furry mammals of the sea,” says Elzy-Loving. “It’s a wonderful way to learn more about where we live.”

Democrats Launch Effort to Curb Post-Trump Presidential Powers

By Charlie Savage, The New York Times

WASHINGTON — House Democrats are planning to introduce a package of proposed new limits on executive power Tuesday, beginning a post-Trump push to strengthen checks on the presidency that they hope will compare to the overhauls that followed the Watergate scandal and the Vietnam War.

Democrats have spent months negotiating with the Biden White House to refine a broad set of proposals that amount to a point-by-point rebuke of the ways that Donald Trump shattered norms over the course of his presidency. Democrats have compiled numerous bills into a package they call the Protecting Our Democracy Act.

The legislation would make it harder for presidents to offer or bestow pardons in situations that raise suspicion of corruption, refuse to respond to oversight subpoenas, spend or secretly freeze funds contrary to congressional appropriations, and fire inspectors general or retaliate against whistleblowers, among many other changes.

The legislation’s lead sponsor, Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., said he hoped it would receive a floor vote “this fall.”

While the bill would constrain President Joe Biden and his successors, its implicit rebuke of Trump’s behavior in the White House may limit how many Republicans are willing to vote for it. Under Senate rules, at least 10 Republicans would need to support it for that chamber to hold a vote on such a bill.

But supporters noted that Republican senators previously supported significant components of the bill, like requiring the Justice Department to turn over logs of contacts with White House officials and constraining a president’s ability to declare a national emergency and spend money in ways Congress did not approve.

The supporters said they expected the package would be taken up piecemeal in the Senate, with different parts attached to other bills.

“Many of the pieces of the Protecting Our Democracy Act have previously received substantial Republican support in the Senate, and we believe that they will again as part of other legislation there,” said Soren Dayton, a policy advocate with the group Protect Democracy, which consulted with lawmakers on the text of the bill and is promoting it.

For now, as proponents first try to get the measures through the House, Democrats are squarely framing it as a response to the Trump presidency.

Trump’s demonstration that a president can routinely flout previous norms of self-restraint in office “has really put our republic on a very tenuous footing,” Schiff said. “Our democracy turns out to be much more fragile than we understood, and this is an effort to put into law that which we thought was already mandatory.”

On instructions from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the bill compiles components developed by numerous lawmakers and House committees.

While many of the proposals have been floating around for years, they took on new urgency among Democrats and some Republicans amid the controversies of the Trump era.

For example, in pushing a proposal to give greater force to the Hatch Act, which prohibits federal employees from engaging in campaign politics at work, supporters of the legislation cited an episode in which a Trump White House aide, Kellyanne Conway, was cited by an independent agency for flagrant violations of that law. The Trump administration ignored the agency’s request to sanction her and she dismissed the finding as “blah, blah, blah.”

Other sections address issues that were obscure before the Trump era. One section, for instance, proposes to strengthen the Constitution’s ban on presidents taking “emoluments,” or payments, by declaring in statute that the anti-corruption prohibition extends to commercial transactions and making it easier to enforce that rule.

Trump’s refusal to divest from his hotels and resorts raised the question of whether lobbying groups and foreign governments that began paying for numerous rooms at Trump properties — and sometimes did not even use them — were trying to purchase his favor.

Another proposal would address a problem that arose in November, when a Trump appointee running the General Services Administration refused to formally “ascertain” that Biden was the president-elect. That failure to take a previously routine step prevented Biden’s transition staff from receiving briefings from agencies his new administration was about to take over, obstructing an orderly transition of power.

To prevent any recurrence, the bill says that if the head of the General Services Administration makes no decision by 10 days after the election, both campaigns can start transitions.

Schiff introduced a version of the bill in October 2020 to send a political message heading into the election. Democrats this time intend to pass the legislation and have spent months negotiating with the White House over elements that administration officials were concerned would intrude on traditional executive branch prerogatives.

House Democrats made some adjustments to the previous version in response to concerns raised by aides to Biden while leaving others in, according to people familiar with those negotiations.

The House dropped a proposal to require the White House to give Congress its internal communications with the president about pardons, which raised executive privilege concerns. But it kept another idea to which the administration is said to have objected, requiring the Justice Department to turn over its investigative files about clemency recipients.

Lawmakers also partly backed down from a proposal to make executive branch officials pay any court fines for defying subpoenas out of their own pockets. The revised bill will exclude cases in which presidents, in writing, had invoked executive privilege and instructed subordinates not to comply.

The administration is also said to have expressed concerns about a proposal to speed up court review of congressional lawsuits over subpoenas. Lawmakers added a provision requiring Congress to show a court, in such lawsuits, that it had made good-faith efforts to negotiate a compromise.

But even though the administration is also said to have raised separation-of-powers concerns about a proposal to bar presidents from firing inspectors general without a specific cause like misconduct, House Democrats kept it in the bill.

A White House spokesperson has previously said that the administration broadly supports most of the provisions “to restore guardrails” to American democracy, while pledging to work with Congress on the details.

Many components have already been the subject of committee hearings in the House or put into legislative language, and it is not clear whether Pelosi will send the bill to any committee — and if so, which one — or when she will bring it to a House floor.

In a statement, Pelosi called the legislation “a robust, transformative package of democracy reforms that will restore democratic norms and institutions and put in place essential safeguards to prevent any president, regardless of party, from abusing the public trust or desecrating our democracy.”

Democrats have also been coordinating with several government ethics groups to develop what they hope will be at least some bipartisan support. The groups include Stand Up America, which was founded after Trump’s surprise win in the 2016 election.

Its founder, Sean Eldridge, said in an interview that Stand Up America is planning to run digital ads promoting the bill, including on Facebook; to distribute explanations of the bill to the group’s members; and to ask them to write letters-to-the-editor and call lawmakers.

“Our plan is to engage our 2 million members and build a grassroots pressure campaign to help this across the finish line,” Eldridge said.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

California Is Sued Over Its Rule on Solar Power Installers

By Ivan Penn, The New York Times

Fearing that growth in California’s solar power sector could grind to a halt, the association representing the industry has sued the state over a new requirement that installers be “certified electricians.”

In the lawsuit, which was filed Friday, the California Solar and Storage Association asked the Superior Court of California in San Francisco to overturn the rule changes and allow the current training standards to remain in place for those who install increasingly popular solar panels and battery systems.

“This is devastating to California’s solar industry and the state’s ability to build a clean energy future,” Bernadette Del Chiaro, executive director of the association, said in an interview. “What they’re saying is this stuff is so dangerous that only certified electricians can do it. We don’t have any evidence, a shred of evidence, that there’s a problem.”

Del Chiaro said the new rules would affect hundreds of solar companies in the state and 35,000 workers. And with electricians already in high demand for construction projects and other services, finding enough people who meet the requirement, she said, will make it nearly impossible for solar and battery companies to deliver their products.

In two rule changes in July, the Contractors State License Board voted to require workers who install solar panels and batteries to be certified electricians to ensure the safe installation of equipment involving power. Utility companies are exempt from the requirement, which takes effect Nov. 1.

Joyia Emard, a spokesperson for the licensing board, declined to comment on the lawsuit.

California by far leads the nation in solar installations, driven in part by former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s push for solar panels to be on 1 million homes — a goal the state reached in December 2019 — and by efforts to replace fossil fuel power plants with large-scale solar farms and other clean energy resources to address the impact of climate change.

Solar panels now sit atop roofs, desert sands and agricultural fields from coast to coast, though the power source provides less than 4% of electricity production nationwide. In a report this month, the Energy Department said that solar power could help achieve President Joe Biden’s carbon-reduction goals, but that the nation would need as much as 45% of its electricity from the sun.

In California, rooftop panels make up about 50% of the state’s solar market, and the installers are almost three-quarters of the industry’s workforce, Del Chiaro said.

Rooftop solar and batteries have become increasingly popular as extreme weather events related to climate change, including wildfires and brutally high temperatures, have led to blackouts and power shut-offs.

The rooftop solar industry is also fighting with utility companies in California over the compensation that consumers receive for the electricity their systems provide to the electric grid. Utilities want to add more fees while cutting the credit that consumers receive, known as net metering, by as much as 80% from the current dollar-for-dollar benefit.

The net metering issue is under review by the California Public Utilities Commission.

With the license board rule change, Del Chiaro said California appeared to be moving in the opposite direction of the state and nation’s climate objectives.

“It is entirely unjustified,” she said.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Victorious in Recall, Newsom Refocuses on California Housing Crisis

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By MANUELA TOBIAS, Cal Matters

Gov. Gavin Newsom just signed some of the biggest housing bills in years, including a measure that allows more than one house to be built on the single-family lots that comprise the vast majority of California’s developable land.

“The housing affordability crisis is undermining the California Dream for families across the state, and threatens our long-term growth and prosperity,” Newsom said in a bill-signing statement on Sept. 16 . “Making a meaningful impact on this crisis will take bold investments, strong collaboration across sectors and political courage from our leaders and communities to do the right thing and build housing for all.”

Two days after Californians gave him a vote of confidence by rejecting the recall, Newsom chose to return to the state’s housing crisis as his first significant policy action, with 700-odd bills on his desk awaiting action.   

But what do these new laws mean for housing affordability in a state whose median home prices have already shot past $800,000?

Not as much as the governor promoted, according to Dan Dunmoyer, president and CEO of the California Building Industry Association.

“We’re not going to build, like, 500,000 homes next year. We’re still going to build 100,000, and we need 180,000 just to break even,” he told CalMatters. “So as far as production moving enormously, that’s not going to happen, because there are so many other levers.”

It’s going to take a few years to translate the legislation into ramped-up construction, but this is a meaningful start, according to David Garcia, policy director for the Terner Center for Housing Innovation at UC Berkeley.

“It signals that lawmakers are willing to take on the traditional sacred cows of housing and single-family zoning. From a political standpoint, that’s a pretty significant shift in the housing landscape,” he said.

What’s allowed under the new law?

Senate Bill 9 — introduced by Senate leader Toni Atkins, a San Diego Democrat, as the centerpiece of her affordable housing package — will allow most homeowners to build two homes or a duplex on a plot zoned for a single house, and in some cases, split their lot and build two additional homes, starting on Jan. 1. The total number of units on a single lot is limited to four.

“It shows the governor is walking the walk as it relates to this housing crisis,” said Kendra Noel Lewis, executive director of the Sacramento Housing Alliance, who has been campaigning to allow duplexes, triplexes and fourplexes throughout the city. “This takes a little pressure off at the local level.”

The criteria for eligible homes is pretty lengthy, and notably excludes those in environmentally-sensitive areas and in historic districts, as well as those that are subject to deed restrictions or rent control, or that have been occupied by a tenant in the last three years. To split a lot, neither of the parcels can be smaller than 1,200 square feet, and the homeowner must sign an affidavit they will remain in the house for the subsequent three years — designed as a guardrail against potential speculation. 

While a city could deny some projects, specifically those which pose a threat to health or safety, it would have to issue findings that meet a whole host of criteria, too, according to Moira O’Neill, a land-use law researcher.

Given current land and construction costs, the Terner Center estimates the new law could lead to about 660,000 new housing units across the state over several years — a sizable fraction of the 1.8 million to 3.5 million units that experts say California needs to meet its housing shortage.

But it would be up to eligible homeowners to decide to turn their house into a duplex or fourplex.

And despite opponents’ warnings that the law will radically remake the traditional single-family neighborhoods the state is so famous for, the same study estimates less than 5% of the state’s 7.5 million single-family lots will be changed.

Ritu Raj Sharma, a senior planner with Bay Area-based DAHLIN Group Architecture Planning, predicts mostly older homeowners will take advantage of the law.

“It will give them an opportunity to stay in the same neighborhoods without having to move out, because previously, the option was you would cash out and move to a different neighborhood or a different state,” Sharma said.

But the new law doesn’t cap the cost of the new units, leading vocal opponents to argue it will only exacerbate the state’s affordability crisis. The law’s supporters, however, argue that adding a unit affordable to a middle-class family opens up a less expensive unit for a family one step below them on the economic ladder. And keeping it illegal to build housing in most areas of the state won’t necessarily block gentrification, either.

A historic investment

In signing the bill to address the California housing crisis, Newsom also promoted the $10.3 billion for housing in his “California Comeback Plan,” which he said would produce 40,000 housing units. That plan also includes $12 billion to create more than 44,000 new housing units and treatment beds for people experiencing homelessness. 

Newsom also signed SB 10, authored by Sen. Scott Wiener, a Democrat from San Francisco. It allows a city to bypass environmental review to build as many as 10 units on a single-family parcel near a transit hub or urban infill developments. 

This new law will likely have a considerably smaller impact, Sharma predicts, because the onus to take advantage of it is on the very cities that usually oppose more dense development.

“It seems a little counterintuitive that we have this problem created by the same folks, and now we are asking them to make that change,” he said.

“Berkeley wants to zone for fourplexes in single-family neighborhoods, so they may use SB 10 to expedite that. But I bet you have other places that may go all the way up to 10 units in some neighborhoods and we just don’t know where they’re going to decide to do that,” Garcia said.

And the governor signed SB 8, which extends through 2030 an existing law that accelerates the approval process for housing projects and limits fee increases on housing applications at the local level. 

Dunmoyer, from the California Building Industry Association, said he believes this more technical bill might have the biggest impact by making building more predictable, “which encourages investment, which encourages production,” he said.

“It doesn’t have any of the gnashing of teeth that SB 9 or SB 10 did, but SB 8 is a positive continuation of a new approach to housing production and approval, and we think it’s starting to have some positive effect,” he added.

Medicare Expansion Clashes With Health Care for the Poor as Budget Bill Shrinks

By Jonathan Weisman and Sheryl Gay Stolberg, The New York Times

WASHINGTON — Democrats are facing tough moral and political decisions over how to pursue their century-old dream of universal health care now that their ambitious $3.5 trillion social safety net bill will almost certainly have to be trimmed back.

As they try to reduce the bill’s cost, members of the party disagree over whether to prioritize expanding coverage to more poor adults in states whose leaders have refused to do so or to give new Medicare benefits to older people across income levels.

Southern Democrats, in particular, are urging their leaders to prioritize insurance coverage for 4.4 million working poor people in the 12 states, mostly in the South, with Republican or divided leadership that have refused to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. But progressives, led by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., the former presidential candidate, are adamant about giving older Americans dental, hearing and vision coverage.

Many provisions of the delicately constructed bill are interconnected, and division over how to lower prescription drug costs and raise taxes will likely prevent the party from acting boldly on both fronts.

“I believe that health care is a human right, and if you believe it’s a human right, you don’t believe it’s a human right for 38 states,” said Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., whose push for Medicaid expansion in his state was central to his special election victory last year, and who is eager to bring such an achievement to voters when he stands for reelection next year. “People are literally dying for lack of access to any care at all.”

Health care has long been a winning issue for Democrats. It delivered them the House in 2018 and contributed to their taking the Senate in 2020, thanks largely to the runoff victories in Georgia of Warnock and Sen. Jon Ossoff.

But in raw political terms, most of the states that have refused to expand Medicaid — like Alabama, Mississippi, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee and Wyoming — are out of reach for Democrats. Older Americans, on the other hand, are consistent voters, increasingly up for grabs. Those voters would like Medicare to start paying for dental, vision and hearing care.

Some Democrats, moreover, say Congress should not reward states that refused to expand Medicaid by creating a separate insurance program, financed entirely by the federal government, for their working poor. Under the Affordable Care Act, states that expand Medicaid pay 10% of the cost. The topic came up during a recent policy luncheon for Senate Democrats.

“Some members have raised the question of, if we do a Medicaid benefit for states that didn’t expand, those that did expand are going to feel like, ‘Hold on a second,’ ” said Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., although he said that was not his view.

Party leaders envisioned four major health care components to the bill: It would close the so-called coverage gap for Medicaid, reaching poor adults who earn too much to qualify for traditional Medicaid, but too little to qualify for private, subsidized insurance under the 2010 health care law. It would, for the first time, give Medicare recipients dental, vision and hearing care. It would extend recently enacted subsidies that help middle-income people buy insurance under the Affordable Care Act.

All of that would be paid for by a provision allowing Medicare to negotiate prices with drugmakers and tying drug prices to those paid by other developed countries.

But that last provision is in danger. Last week, three Democrats sided with Republicans in the House Energy and Commerce Committee to strip it from the legislation. The House Ways and Means Committee did approve it, with one dissent, but if the prescription drug measure cannot survive a full House vote, it will mean a loss of about $500 billion in savings that Democrats hoped to spend on expanding both Medicare and Medicaid. The total cost would be about $600 billion over 10 years.

Caught between those competing imperatives are lawmakers like Rep. Lloyd Doggett, a senior Democrat on the Ways and Means Committee whose home state, Texas, has not expanded Medicaid. In a fight for scarce resources, he said, seniors who already have good coverage for most of their health needs under Medicare must take a back seat to the working poor who have no coverage at all.

“I prioritize those who have been left out entirely,” he said. “They are desperate.”

As committees in both the House and Senate work on writing their versions of the bill, Democrats across the philosophical spectrum are struggling to decide where their own priorities lie.

Rep. Charlie Crist, D-Fla., who was once his state’s Republican governor, noted that 800,000 of its residents do not have health insurance because the state leadership refuses to expand Medicaid. But Florida also has a significant older population that wants expanded coverage under Medicare.

“I think you advocate for both; that’s my position,” he said. “It’s extremely important. We’re the richest country in the world and one of the few industrialized countries that do not provide health care for all our people, and we have to.”

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said that “drug companies have the best lobbyists in town,” but that the party should not abandon clamping down on rising prescription costs to free up money for both priorities.

“I say the choice is between the billionaires and people who don’t have health care,” she said.

Pragmatists realize that some concessions will have to be made. Kaine said it was possible that Democrats would expand both Medicare and Medicaid in more modest ways, perhaps by phasing in benefits.

The four House Democrats who have expressed opposition to the drug measures — Kurt Schrader of Oregon, Scott Peters of California, Kathleen Rice of New York and Stephanie Murphy of Florida — are enough to bring down the whole bill in the narrowly divided House. And more defections are likely from representatives with pharmaceutical interests in their districts, who have not had a chance to weigh in.

Democrats who favor Medicare expansion have largely stayed quiet, given the sensitivity of the issue. But they see a political boon in the expansion approved by House committees last week. Seniors would see immediate coverage of vision care. In 2023, hearing would be added. Dental coverage, which would have to be created from scratch, would not begin until 2028.

Medicare proponents say Congress has given the states that have not expanded Medicaid ample time and incentive to do so, and it is time to focus on other priorities. The $1.9 trillion pandemic rescue bill this year included huge new subsidies for those states if they agreed to expand Medicaid. Not one did.

States pay as much as half of traditional Medicaid costs, but under the Affordable Care Act, the federal government pays 90% of costs for the expansion population.

The two Georgia senators and Sen. Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin, which has also not expanded Medicaid, initially envisioned a Medicaid look-alike program run from Washington that would offer recalcitrant states even more federal funding if they finally joined Medicaid, relieving them of virtually any fiscal responsibility.

Two House committees — Ways and Means and Energy and Commerce — adopted a measure last week that for now would extend existing premium subsidies under the Affordable Care Act to those now too poor to qualify for them, covering 94% of their total health care costs, rising to 99% in 2023. By 2024, the Department of Health and Human Services will have stood up a Medicaid-like program along the lines of the Senate proposal for those 4.4 million people.

To some liberal Democrats, the plan seems unfair to the 38 states that have expanded Medicaid under the original terms of the health law — at a higher cost to those states.

Warnock has a ready answer for that: “I would remind my colleagues that Georgia gave us the majority.”

“We wouldn’t have the privilege of debating these priorities and a package that we’re putting forward if the people of Georgia had not stood up and sent me and Jon Ossoff to the United States Senate,” he added. “So we owe it to them to give them the coverage that they deserve.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

COVID Vaccine Prompts Protective Immune Response in Younger Children, Pfizer Says

By Apoorva Mandavilli, The New York Times

The Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine has been shown to be safe and highly effective in young children ages 5 to 11 years, the companies announced early Monday morning. The news should help ease months of anxiety among parents and teachers about when children, and their close contacts, might be shielded from the coronavirus.

The need is urgent: Children now account for more than 1 in 5 new cases, and the highly contagious delta variant has sent more children into hospitals and intensive care units in the past few weeks than at any other time in the pandemic.

Pfizer and BioNTech plan to apply to the Food and Drug Administration by the end of the month for authorization to use the vaccine in these children. If the regulatory review goes as smoothly as it did for older children and adults, millions of elementary school students could be inoculated before Halloween.

Trial results for children younger than 5 are not expected till the fourth quarter of this year at the earliest, according to Dr. Bill Gruber, a senior vice president at Pfizer and a pediatrician.

Pfizer and BioNTech announced the results in a statement that did not include detailed data from the trial. The findings have not yet been peer-reviewed nor published in a scientific journal.

But the new results dovetail with those seen in older children and in adults, experts said.

“There’s going to be a huge number of parents who are going to heave a big sigh of relief when they hear this,” said Dr. Kristin Oliver, a pediatrician and vaccine expert at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York. “We’ve been waiting for these kids to be protected.”

Children have a much lower risk of COVID-19 than adults, even when exposed to the delta variant. Still, some small number of infected children develop a life-threatening condition called multi-system inflammatory syndrome in children, or MIS-C. Still others may have lingering symptoms for months.

Nearly 30,000 children were hospitalized for COVID in August; the least vaccinated states reported the highest rates. At Seattle Children’s hospital, about half of the children who are admitted for COVID are older than 12, according to Dr. Danielle Zerr, a pediatric infectious diseases expert at the hospital.

“I’ve been dismayed at the fact that the sickest children in our hospital with acute COVID-19 or MIS-C are children who could have been vaccinated,” Zerr said.

As ideological battles over masking and vaccine mandates play out in communities, the reopening of schools has fueled the surge. In Mississippi, among the states without a mask mandate, nearly 6,000 students tested positive for the virus in one week, and more than 30,000 students, teachers and staff had to be quarantined.

One county in South Carolina — where mask mandates are banned — had to quarantine more than 2,000 students in one day. Remote learning is not an option in many districts, so the safety of some medically vulnerable children in many parts of the country has become subject to the actions of others.

Unvaccinated children, even if they do not become ill themselves, can spread the virus to family members, teachers and others they interact with regularly — among them grandparents or those who are vulnerable to severe disease or death.

Mask wearing and good air circulation can significantly cut down virus transmission. But children are as likely as adults to transmit the virus to others, and more likely to do so than adults older than 60, according to a recent review of the evidence by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Pfizer’s trial included 2,268 children ages 5 to 11, two-thirds of whom received two doses of the vaccine three weeks apart; the rest were injected with two doses of saltwater placebo.

Given how rarely children become severely ill, the trial was not big enough to draw meaningful conclusions about the vaccine’s ability to prevent COVID or hospitalization. Instead, the researchers relied on measurements of the youngsters’ immune response, on the assumption that the protective levels of antibodies seen in older people would be as protective in younger children.

The children who got the vaccine produced a strong immune response, comparable to the levels of antibodies seen in the earlier trials of participants aged 16 to 25 years. But children in the 5- to 11-year-old group achieved this response with 10 micrograms of the vaccine, a third of the dose given to older children and adults.

At higher doses, the researchers observed more side effects in younger children, including fever, headache and fatigue, although none were severe, Gruber said. With the 10-microgram dose, “we’re actually seeing after the second dose, less fever, less chills than we see in the 16- to 25-year-olds.”

Immune defenses weaken with age, and the side effects also become milder. This decline in potency is the reason most vaccines are meted out in childhood — and why a much lower dose is often enough for children, said Dr. Yvonne Maldonado, who led the trial at Stanford University and chairs the American Academy of Pediatrics’ infectious disease committee.

“You want to hit the sweet spot, where you’re giving the lowest dose that might elicit reactions, but also high enough to get you a good, sustainable antibody response,” she said.

In children younger than 5, just 3 micrograms — a tenth of the adult dose — is being tested in trials and seems likely to prove sufficient, she said.

The FDA’s full approval of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine in August did not include children ages 12 to 15, who are still getting the vaccine under emergency use authorization. As they did for adolescents, the companies will seek an emergency authorization for children aged 5 to 11.

Scientists at the FDA must then weigh the benefits of the vaccine against the risk of side effects. In rare cases, the vaccine has led to myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart, in young people.

But a large Israeli study, based on electronic health records of 2 million people aged 16 and older, found that COVID is far more likely to cause these heart problems.

In order to detect side effects in younger children, the FDA in July asked Pfizer-BioNtech and Moderna to expand their trials to include 3,000 children. But based on the company’s conversations with the FDA, Gruber said he believed the agency would greenlight the vaccine with the data available.

Discussions about the vaccine’s risks for children aged 6 months to 5 years are likely to be even more fraught than the vehement disagreements over immunizing healthy adults or teenagers.

“There’s some people out there who don’t really feel that there’s convincing data that under-fives need to be vaccinated,” Maldonado said.

Even though most children are spared severe illness following infection, pediatric hospitals and ICU units are overflowing, she added: “Why wouldn’t you want to prevent an infection that could potentially put your child in the ICU?”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times

Surfers Save Woman and Kids After Car Plunges Off Cliff

LIVE OAK—A woman and two children survived a dramatic plunge into the sea in their sedan Friday morning thanks to a pair of surfers who rushed to their aid.

Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office spokeswoman Ashley Keehn said a Nissan sedan shot off of the cliff at Sunny Cove (17th Avenue) in Live Oak with a woman at the wheel and her two children aboard around 9am.

A surfer in the water saw the crash and paddled over to the car that quickly sank in the surf at the base of a cliff with the trio trapped inside.

Another surfer, Joe Evans, said he saw the car smash through a guardrail and into the sea from where he stood on land.

“I was checking the waves when I heard this big crunch and I saw it go over,” he said. “I ran over there. There was another surfer out in the water. We both got there about the same time. Everyone was still in the car. The surfer helped them get out. He used his surfboard as a backboard. We got them on the beach and got them stable.”

Evans guessed that the woman was in her 30s and the kids to be “grade school” ages.

“She was pretty banged up,” he said.

The woman was taken to Dominican Hospital and was later flown by CALSTAR air ambulance to an out of county trauma center. Keehn said the children suffered minor injuries.

The California Highway Patrol, Harbor Patrol, State Park Lifeguards, Capitola Police, American Medical Response paramedics and Central Fire assisted the Sheriff’s Office.

Keehn said the cause of the crash was still under investigation.

County Supervisors Ease Rebuilding Rules for CZU Survivors

The Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday approved a plan to ease some requirements for property owners looking to rebuild from the CZU Lightning Complex fires.

Under the change, county officials will not consider Santa Cruz County Code 16.10—which requires geologic review before building and mitigation of any hazards—when reviewing building permits for people who lost their homes in the fires.

County officials say the rules were meant to protect property owners from such geologic hazards as debris flows. But residents said they were faced with hiring their own private geologists, which cost at least $6,000, a charge that did not include whatever mitigations came from the inspection. 

These requirements stymied many residents and were especially hard on those who are underinsured and facing a difficult time in making their rebuilding pencil out.

The new rule applies to permitted structures that existed previously on the properties. The new structure must be “in-kind,” meaning that they must be fundamentally the same shape and occupy the same footprint.

The fire, which began Aug. 16, 2020, destroyed 1,490 structures and left homeowners to struggle with mountains of red tape and baffling county codes as they sought to rebuild.

One of these was Julia Luchia, who lost her home in the Fallen Leaf neighborhood.

“Three hundred and ninety days, and not one of them has gone by without this sick feeling in my stomach that we may not be able to go home,” she told the board. “(My 4-year-old daughter) doesn’t understand why we can’t go home, and frankly, neither can I.”

The board will return later this month to discuss further modifications to the county code and to its general plan that would further streamline similar rebuilding efforts. 

They will also discuss a clause in the new rule—which property owners must agree to—that indemnifies the county from any damages resulting from the exemption of geologic review and mitigation.

Several residents told the board that the clause affects their property values and unfairly penalizes them for something beyond their control.

Santa Cruz County Counsel Jason Heath said that clause is meant to protect the county, and taxpayers, from future financial risk, if any future damage leads to litigation.

“This is a choice that fire victims are making to not comply with certain county code,” Heath said. “We have to be ensured that that financial risk isn’t going to come back on the entire community.”

The changes apply narrowly to geologic issues. Septic systems fall under different rules, and any state-mandated requirements still stand.

FDA Panel Recommends Against Approving Pfizer-BioNTech Booster

By Noah Weiland and Sharon LaFraniere, The New York Times

WASHINGTON — A scientific advisory committee to the Food and Drug Administration on Friday overwhelmingly recommended against approving a booster shot of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine for people 16 and older.

The committee voted 16-3 after holding an intense daylong public discussion on whether booster shots are necessary and, if so, for whom. The Biden administration has been hoping the FDA would approve a third shot of the Pfizer vaccine in time to begin rolling out boosters for Pfizer recipients next week.

The vote came after a sharp debate in which many of the panel’s independent experts, including infectious disease doctors and statisticians, challenged whether the data justified a broad rollout of extra shots when the vaccines appear to still offer robust protection against severe COVID-19 disease and hospitalization, at least in the United States.

“It’s unclear that everyone needs to be boosted, other than a subset of the population that clearly would be at high risk for serious disease,” said Dr. Michael Kurilla, a committee member and official at the National Institutes of Health.

It was not immediately clear whether a second vote, on whether booster shots should be approved for older people, who are more vulnerable to severe COVID-19, would follow the first.

The recommendation was the latest in a series of setbacks for President Joe Biden’s booster plan since he first announced it a month ago. Biden said at the time that he wanted most adults who had gotten a second Pfizer or Moderna vaccine at least eight months ago to start receiving booster shots the week of Sept. 20.

But two weeks after his announcement, leaders of the FDA and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told the White House that it would be impossible to authorize booster shots for recipients of the Moderna vaccine that soon. It is now unclear whether extra injections will be offered to Pfizer recipients and, if so, to how many. Although the FDA is not obliged to follow its advisory committee’s recommendations, it typically does.The agency will likely make a decision by early next week.

In a remarkable public display of internal dissension, two FDA scientists co-authored a medical journal article earlier this week arguing that there was no credible evidence yet in support of booster shots for the general population. Those officials, who are leaving the agency this fall, joined outside experts and other federal health officials who cast doubt at the meeting on whether Pfizer’s request should be approved.

On the other hand, Dr. Peter Marks, their superior and the official who oversees the FDA’s vaccine division, noted that many well-known vaccines require booster shots and urged the committee to consider the importance of not just preventing severe disease but of curbing the spread of infection.

After the FDA rules on Pfizer’s request, an advisory committee to the CDC will meet to recommend how exactly the extra doses should be used. Earlier public discussions suggest the CDC committee may be leaning toward tailoring booster shots toward the elderly and others particularly vulnerable to worse outcomes from COVID-19, instead of to all those who received their second injection eight months earlier.

The FDA committee’s vote followed hours of presentations by officials from Pfizer, the CDC, the Israeli government and independent experts on the complex array of data they have collected up until now about the waning effectiveness of Pfizer and other vaccines over time.

Dr. Sara Oliver of the CDC presented data showing that vaccines continue to strongly protect against severe forms of COVID-19 in the United States, even in people 75 and older.

Jonathan Sterne, a professor of medical statistics and public health research in the United Kingdom, said he had analyzed 76 different studies on the vaccines’ real-world effectiveness and found that multiple factors can skew the results, including how many unvaccinated people in a study have natural immunity from prior COVID-19 disease. He also warned against drawing conclusions from short-term results from booster shots; data from Israel, for example, shows only that a booster can enhance protection for a few weeks in older adults.

Israeli experts made a different argument, telling the committee that they believed third Pfizer shots helped dampen a fourth wave of transmission as the delta variant swept the nation this summer. The Israeli government, which has relied almost entirely on the Pfizer vaccine, began offering booster shots in late July, starting with the elderly.

Dr. Sharon Alroy-Preis, Israel’s head of public health services, said the summer’s rise in the number of hospitalized patients who had been fully vaccinated with Pfizer’s vaccine was “scary.” She said 60% of severely or critically ill patients and 45% of those who died during what she called the fourth surge had received two injections of Pfizer’s vaccine.

After offering boosters to the general population, she said, Israel is now averaging about half as many severe or critically ill patients as anticipated. She said boosters not only helped curb the spread of infection but also “actually saved lives.”

Another Israeli scientist walked the panel through a new study of health records of more than 1.1. million people older than 60. It found that at least 12 days after the booster, the rates of severe disease were nearly twentyfold lower among those who received a third Pfizer shot compared to those who did not.

Dr. William Gruber, a Pfizer senior vice president in charge of vaccine development, suggested that if the United States does not follow Israel’s lead, it could potentially face more than 5 million more infections a year among people who received their second dose 10 months earlier, compared to those who got the second shot five months earlier.

“Israel could portend the U.S. COVID-19 future and soon,” he said.

He said Pfizer’s data shows a third shot elicits a robust antibody immune response that equals or greatly exceeds the response after the second dose. Data also show, he argued, that breakthrough infections among vaccinated Americans are linked more to the ebbing power of the vaccine over time than to the delta variant.

But committee members, including some government officials, appeared deeply skeptical of the Pfizer data and Israel’s analyses. Dr. Philip Krause, one of the FDA vaccine experts who authored the medical journal review, criticized Pfizer’s presentation of data that had not been peer-reviewed or evaluated by the FDA, arguing that possible problems in the modeling within could understate the vaccine’s efficacy.

Oliver, the CDC official, questioned attempts to draw a parallel between the United States and Israel, noting that Israel has only 9 million residents and is less heterogenous than the United States. Notably, she also said that Israel defines a severe case of COVID-19 more broadly than the United States does, which might help explain why Israel reports more serious breakthrough infections among its vaccinated.

Another CDC official, Dr. Amanda Cohn, asked Israeli officials why the spread of the virus there had recently intensified, despite a broad rollout of boosters. Alroy-Preis said that the Jewish holidays, together with the start of the school year, had contributed to what she suggested would be a temporary surge in cases.

Committee members also said they were concerned about a paucity of safety data in younger recipients of a booster dose, since studies have shown a higher risk of the heart condition myocarditis in young men who received Pfizer-BioNTech’s vaccine. Several of them asked whether it would be better to wait for a booster vaccine designed specifically to fend off the delta variant of the virus.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

County Supervisors Ban ‘Discriminatory Reports’ to Law Enforcement

SANTA CRUZ COUNTY—The Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday unanimously approved an ordinance that prohibits so-called “discriminatory reports” to law enforcement, and allows victims to seek financial compensation when it happens to them.

Discriminatory reporting was brought to public light in 2020, when a white woman walking her dog in New York City’s Central Park called the police on a Black man who was birdwatching after he asked her to leash her dog.

The woman was shown on video telling police in a phone call that she felt threatened, despite there being no obvious threat to her. She was dubbed the “Central Park Karen” by people commenting on the viral video.

The term “Karen” has been used pejoratively to describe white women who complain about trivial things and who use their skin color to gain certain advantages.

The new County ordinance makes it unlawful to call police on someone solely based on the person’s race, ethnicity, religious affiliation, gender, sexual orientation or gender identity. It also provides an avenue to seek financial restitution up to $1,000 plus attorney fees.

Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office Chief Deputy Chris Clark said that it is already illegal to file a false police report. The ordinance, he said, “bridges the gap” between that law and both discrimination and hate crimes.

Making such a call, Clark said, drains law enforcement resources and can cause problems for the public.

“That creates real harm,” he said. “It creates harm to the person being contacted by law enforcement, it creates harm and erodes our community policing mission to have one of us have to speak with someone for no apparent reason.”

The ordinance gives the investigating deputy the discretion to determine whether such calls meet the elements of the ordinance. 

“It gives the person the mechanism to seek justice in that situation that doesn’t currently exist,” Clark said.

The ordinance was created by Santa Cruz County Sheriff Jim Hart.

“Community members should be able to go about their daily lives without the risk of someone calling law enforcement in an attempt to harass them simply because of the color of their skin,” he said. “We are urging the Board of Supervisors to put this ordinance into place to show we have absolutely no tolerance for racially motivated 911 calls.”

The cities of San Francisco and Grand Rapids, Mich. have adopted similar ordinances. In 2020, the city and county of San Francisco adopted the “Caution Against Racial and Exploitative Non-Emergency Act,” or the CAREN Act.

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