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enterprise THE DAVIS
SUNDAY, JULY 26, 2020
Yolo County to enforce coronavirus-positive quarantine BY ANNE TERNUS-BELLAMY Enterprise staff writer With only a fraction of those Yolo County residents who have tested positive for the novel coronavirus officially in isolation in recent weeks, the county has struggled to contain the spread of the virus. Isolation of those who test
positive and quarantine of those who have come into close contact with positive patients are benchmarks of public health disease control. But last Tuesday, 70 county residents were in isolation even though 357 positive tests had been reported to the county in the previous 10 days. Delays in receiving those test
results — sometimes stretching beyond the isolation period — overburdened contact tracers and county residents who are not cooperating with public-health staff are the among the reasons officials have given. Delays in test results are largely out of local officials’ hands and Yolo County has turned to the
COVID enforcement
Gym is first business to be fined
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state to seek additional contact investigators to manage the workload. But now the county has added some teeth to requirements that those who test positive for COVID-19 isolate at home
Under a mass isolation and quarantine order issued Friday by Dr. Mary Ann Limbos, the county’s interim health officer, individuals who are notified they have
SEE QUARANTINE, PAGE A4
Researcher in custody for visa fraud
Dulce Jimenez often goes to her boyfriend’s apartment during the day to study for the LSAT. Jimenez is one of a growing number of California college students appealing their financial-aid packages due to pandemic-related expenses.
BY CALEB HAMPTON Enterprise staff writer Juan Tang, 37, a Chinese national and visiting cancer researcher at UC Davis, was taken into federal custody by the U.S. Marshals Service and booked at the Sacramento County Main Jail in the early hours of Friday, July 24. Tang was charged last month with visa fraud for allegedly misrepresenting her affiliation with the Chinese military on her visa application. Tang is being held on a federal nobail hold. If convicted of visa fraud, she faces a maximum of 10 years in prison and a fine of $250,000. She
ANNE WERNIKOFF/ CALMATTERS PHOTO VIA GOOGLE HANGOUT
SEE VISA, PAGE A4
Adjusting on the fly Financial-aid appeals surge as students cope with pandemic BY VANESSA ARREDONDO CalMatters UCLA student Dulce Jimenez didn’t file a federal student aid application for the 2020-21 school year; she was set to graduate in spring, and thought the days of worrying about paying for school would be behind her. But then the coronavirus pandemic hit. Jimenez found herself dropping a class, then needing to make it up during the summer — just when her parents’ work hours had been reduced. Paying for a class out of
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and those who have come into close contact with them quarantine for two weeks.
appeals are up systemwide, with especially dramatic increases on some campuses.
pocket would add to her family’s financial stress, Jimenez said. “I am concerned about having to pay for my educational costs because things are really tight for my parents, so they would not be able to help me,” she said. So Jimenez asked UCLA to revisit her financial aid, becoming one of a growing number of University of California and California State University students appealing their aid packages as their families face economic fallout from COVID-19. Officials at both universities say financial aid
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By the end of spring quarter, UC Riverside students had filed twice as many financial aid appeals as they had the year before. At UCLA, financial aid director Ina Sotomayor said requests for additional funding for the fall are already up by 36%. Many students filing appeals are coping with unemployment. About 71% of returning college students in California say they have lost some or all of their income due to the pandemic, according to a recent survey of 76,000 students by the California Student Aid Commission. Thirty-four percent say they’ll need to work
WEATHER
more in the fall to afford educational and living expenses, while 21% think they should attend a college that is less expensive. State, federal and institutional financial aid cover tuition for most of California’s low-income students. But that money doesn’t always cover living expenses, and federal aid isn’t available to undocumented and international students. Financial aid officers at UC and CSU say they are reviewing and adjusting awards sooner than usual and digging into emergency and donor funds to try to close the gaps. “Since the start of spring
Racially charged encounter leads to apology for police response BY LAUREN KEENE Enterprise staff writer Davis Police Chief Darren Pytel issued a letter of apology last week to an Asian American man who says he was subjected to racial bias at a local apartment complex earlier this month, acknowledging deficiencies in how two of his officers responded to the incident. Pytel told Dr. Khoa Lam, whose presence at the Moore Village Apartments was questioned by a white woman, that the officers summoned there by another resident fell short in
SEE ADJUSTING, PAGE A5
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