Los Angeles Times - 06.04.2020

(Joyce) #1

CALIFORNIA


MONDAY, APRIL 6, 2020::L ATIMES.COM/CALIFORNIA


B


Simona Boneva knew she
wasn’t going to be able to pay
her rent this month. Her
shift as an office manager at
a media company was cut in
half, and her bartending job
went away entirely because
of the citywide shutdown
over the coronavirus out-
break.
When she went to talk to
her landlord, the company
responded with a letter out-
lining terms for it to agree to
temporary relief and a re-


SIMONA BONEVA,left, with roommate Gayle Curry, received a letter from their landlord demanding any funds from a stimulus check.


Allen J. SchabenLos Angeles Times

Tenants are feeling squeezed


Despite new eviction


protections, some


landlords are making


onerous demands.


By Liam Dillon


[SeeLandlords,B2]

ORINDA, Calif. — In
dramatic moves aimed at
slowing the rapid spread of
the coronavirus, California
judicial leaders are expected
to adopt a statewide emer-
gency order setting bail at
zero for misdemeanor and
lower-level felony offenses.
In a remote meeting
Monday, the Judicial Coun-
cil also is expected to vote to
suspend evictions and fore-
closures and to allow for the
expansion of court hearings
held by video or telephone.
The moves come as the
number of confirmed co-
ronavirus cases topped
15,000 in the state, with more
than 350 deaths. Los Ange-
les County had a particu-
larly grim weekend, record-
ing 43 deaths, with con-
firmed cases nearing 6,000.
Chief Justice Tani Cantil-
Sakauye heads the council,
the policymaking body for
California’s court system.
Gov. Gavin Newsom has giv-
en her and the council, which
is primarily made up of
judges, extraordinary tem-
porary powers to suspend
laws to deal with the health
crisis.
For criminal and juvenile
proceedings, including ar-
raignments and preliminary
examinations, the council
will direct courts to pri-
oritize the use of technology
to meet legal deadlines and
ensure that defendants and
children are not held in cus-
tody without timely hear-
ings, according to a report
prepared for Monday’s
meeting.
In criminal cases, the de-
fendant must agree before a
court hearing can be held re-
motely.
Orange County Dist.
Atty. Todd Spitzer last week
called on judicial leaders to
issue a statewide order re-
quiring preliminary hear-
ings be held remotely. Or-
ange County Public Defend-
er Sharon Petrosino count-
ered that clients had a
constitutional right to ap-
pear in person for prelimi-
nary hearings.
“During the COVID-
pandemic,” the report says,
“trial courts must protect
defendants’ constitutional
rights to have the assistance
of counsel and to be person-
ally present with counsel,
and at the same time take
steps to protect the health of
defendants, judicial officers,
court staff, counsel, and all

JUDGES


LIKELY


TO OK


CRISIS


ACTIONS


Proposals include


setting bail at zero and


suspending evictions


and foreclosures.


By Maura Dolan,
Paige St. John and
Alex Wigglesworth

[SeeCourts, B4]

Early Saturday evening
in a bright, three-story
shared-living apartment
complex in Venice, two twen-
ty-somethings, Jake Vira-
montez-Smith and Colin
Huitfeldt, sat on the couch in
aliving room watching a
movie while their house-
mate, Julia O. Test, cooked a
vegan supper in the kitchen.
The noise brought
Michael Dash out of his
room downstairs to see what
was going on. He bounded

up the steps, greeting the
trio. He was wearing blue
rubber gloves.
“I’m skeeved out by peo-
ple a little bit,” said Dash, a
45-year-old entrepreneur.
His reaction — eager for
the company but anxious
about the novel coronavirus
that they might be carrying,
even without flu-like symp-
toms — reveals the tension
of living in a shared space
right now. While public
health officials are advising
people to stay at home and
practice social distancing,

Too close for comfort


in their shared space


By Liam Dillon

JULIA O. TESTlives in a shared-living apartment
building in Venice where most of the 20 bedrooms are
occupied. It’s both unnerving and a social blessing.

Luis SincoLos Angeles Times

[SeeShared,B5]

It’s hard to
believe it took
just a few
weeks for this
pandemic to
remake this
city.
Everything
feels smaller
and quieter. Once we
roamed a sprawling metrop-
olis, and now we pace our
blocks. Our social lives now
play out on phone and lap-
top screens. Before there
were many stories in the
news, and now there’s only
one, and it’s inescapable,
menacing us from every
unwiped surface and errant
gust of wind.
But this crisis has also
gifted us with the clarity to
see our city more clearly.
And I’ve never found my
neighborhood more beauti-
ful, more heroic, more in-
spiring.
On my daily walks, I
notice the sun bursting
through old shade trees and
outlining cracked concrete
and smudged stucco in gold.
I listen for the whistle of the
neighbor’s parakeet and the
bell ringing on the ice cream
cart.


Our


time to


aid one


another


RUTILIO LOPEZ, right, wears protective gear behind a pane of bulletproof glass at Royal Liquor Mart.

Brian van der BrugLos Angeles Times

FRANK SHYONG


[SeeShyong,B5]

It’s easy for
political lead-
ers to order
people to stay
home and
cover their
faces when
they venture
out. What’s
hard is to make all those
ambitious programs work
that they’re launching.
Gov. Gavin Newsom and

Los Angeles Mayor Eric
Garcetti have earned kudos
for briefing the public al-
most daily on their latest
steps to fight the highly
contagious coronavirus.
Newsom was the first
governor in the nation to
issue a stay-at-home order
for people not engaged in
essential services, such as
providing healthcare, bag-
ging groceries or operating
gas stations. Garcetti was
the first mayor to ask people
to wear homemade masks

when out and about.
But that’s just verbal
jabber mixed with persua-
sion and cheerleading.
Making all the programs
work that they’re rolling out
—many in partnership with
private enterprise — will be
the final test of their per-
formances during this pan-
demic crisis.
For example, there’s
Newsom’s unprecedented
California Health Corps
program. It’s an effort to
build up a reserve army of

backup doctors, nurses and
other medical care special-
ists who can be called up to
replace frontline providers
when they get overwhelmed
by surging caseloads or
become sick themselves.
Newsom is leading an
effort to add 50,000 hospital
beds to the 75,000 already
existing in California, and
his Health Corps volunteers
will help staff the extra beds.
They’ll be paid.
“We need you,” Newsom

CAPITOL JOURNAL

Newsom has good ideas, but can he deliver?


GEORGE SKELTON
in sacramento

[SeeSkelton,B4]

Gun group


sues L.A.


over closures


By shutting down
firearms vendors,
the city is defying a
state order that
exempts “critical
infrastructure
sectors,” suit says. B

DIY face mask?
Keep it clean
With the Centers
for Disease Control
and Prevention and
local officials advising
using masks to limit
viral spread, here’s
what to know. B

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SPORTS INSIDE:NBA players reach out to fans with personalized cellphone videos. B

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