Posts in Coronavirus
Report: Emergency Action Plan

The past month has presented the nation with a crisis, the scope of which is so immense that it has rippled out from the novel coronavirus itself, COVID-19, to create unprecedented effects on our economic system and the way we live our daily lives. At the same time, as the pandemic continues to unfold, our inherent interconnectedness—the shared vulnerability we all have at this moment—is forcing many people to reexamine the ways in which we live our lives and organize our society.

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Memo: California’s Sheriffs Must Do More to Save Their Communities from the Ravages of Coronavirus

California has quickly become one of the epicenters for the coronavirus pandemic. To date, the state has one of the highest infection rates and over 500 deaths from the coronavirus. The Center for Disease Control currently predicts that the United States will see around 200,000 deaths even if citizens practice “social distancing,” which requires that people maintain six feet of distance from others.

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Memo: California Prosecutors Must Do More to Protect Their Communities From Coronavirus: Policies & Polling

In recent weeks, the humanitarian disaster that doctors and public health experts predicted has turned into reality: coronavirus has reached prisons and jails in California and across the country, sparking outbreaks that threaten the lives of incarcerated people, staff, and surrounding communities. California’s elected prosecutors—the district attorney in each county—are uniquely positioned to address this crisis.

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Memo: Voters Support Sweeping Action to Address the Economic Fallout of the Coronavirus Pandemic

The economy is in free fall. The clearest indicator of this grim reality is the latest unemployment numbers: The United States Department of Labor registered 6.6 million initial unemployment claims for the week ending on March 28. This surpassed the previous record (3.3 million), which was set the week prior. This rapidly deteriorating situation is one that most voters are acutely aware of.

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Memo: California Voters Support Releasing People from Jails and Prisons to Protect Communities from Covid-19

Across the country and throughout the world, there has been wide recognition that reducing the number of people inside jails and prisons is critical to slowing the spread of the coronavirus—both within these facilities and in the general public. At stake is the health not only of incarcerated people, but of the correctional staff whose job requires interacting with them daily and in unavoidably close quarters.

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Memo: Fighting the Coronavirus and Protecting the Unhoused

Unhoused populations are always vulnerable to health risks and disease, a vulnerability now heightened by the coronavirus epidemic and the spread of COVID-19. People without homes more often come into contact with potentially infected surfaces and people, and those in emergency shelters must congregate in tight spaces and share facilities like showers and laundry.

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Memo: Concern Over The Coronavirus

The United States is now facing two interconnected crises. The first is the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. The outbreak is spreading rapidly. The second crisis is economic. As businesses shutter, the ranks of the unemployed are swelling. The stock market has tumbled precipitously, and GDP is projected to contract sharply. President Trump and the Republicans in Congress have done little to combat either crisis.

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Memo: Voters Support a Response to the Coronavirus that Meets the Scale of the Crisis

The Covid-19 virus is posing enormous challenges to the United States and world at large. We are suffering both an acute public-health emergency and a staggering blow to the economy. In order to save lives, protect working families, and boost our economy in sustainable and healthy ways, we need to take actions that are swift, bold, and well beyond what Congress has thus far been willing to approve.

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Memo: Fighting the Coronavirus with Decarceration: Policies & Polling

The coronavirus is a public health crisis that requires collective effort and sacrifice to slow its spread. We are no safer, or healthier, than the least protected among us. If we leave vulnerable populations exposed to the virus, we are only accelerating its spread. And that applies to people confined in jails and prisons perhaps more than anyone else.

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