The Davis Enterprise Wednesday, November 4, 2020

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enterprise THE DAVIS

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2020

UCD will have remote winter quarter BY CALEB HAMPTON Enterprise staff writer

OWEN YANCHER/ENTERPRISE PHOTOS

Councilman Will Arnold watches returns coming in on TV with his children Reecy, 12, and Sonya, 6, Tuesday night.

Election wait Arnold, Frerichs, Chapman lead in early returns BY ANNE TERNUS-BELLAMY Enterprise staff writer Returns coming in for the first district-based City Council elections on Tuesday had two incumbents with leads in their races while a closer race was unfolding in the South Davis district. In District 2, Councilman Will Arnold had captured 53.12 percent of the early vote with 1,576 votes, while Dillan Horton stood at 25.85 percent and Colin Walsh at 21.03 percent.

A total of 2,967 votes had been counted. Over in Distrist 3, Vice Mayor Lucas Frerichs had received 2,330 votes to Larry Gunther’s 1,127 votes. Frerichs said 5,800 votes had been cast in that race as of 11 p.m. Monday, so the remaining 2,343 or so votes plus whatever was cast on Tuesday remained to be counted. In District 5, which encompasses all of South Davis, 2,885 votes had been counted by 8:15 p.m. on Tuesday. Josh Chapman had received 1,249 of those votes to former Councilmember Rochelle Swanson’s 936. Trailing Chapman and Swanson were Connor Gorman with 435 votes and Kelsey Fortune with 265.

District 5 City Council candidate Josh Chapman checks his phone along with Dan Olmos. In other early returns on Tuesday, Measure D had a commanding lead, ahead 84 percent to 16 percent. Measure D will renew the citizen’s right to vote on development projects on the city’s periphery. First passed as

Measure renewed sure R, appears renewal.

J 20 years ago, then 10 years ago as Meathat right to vote headed for easy

BY ANNE TERNUS-BELLAMY Enterprise staff writer

VOL. 123 NO. 134

SEE REMOTE, PAGE A3

SEE ELECTION, PAGE A6

Yolo County could return to purple tier Yolo County could find itself back in the purple tier next week as new cases of the novel coronavirus continue to rise. When the state Department of Public Health updates county data on Wednesday (a day later than usual because of the election), Yolo County’s adjusted new daily case rate will have risen to 7.3 per 100,000 residents, according to the county’s new health officer, Dr. Aimee Sisson. That exceeds the metric for the red tier, where the county has been since late September and which allowed multiple businesses to reopen indoors with limited capacity. The state blueprint features four tiers based on the risk of COVID-19 transmission, with purple as the top tier where virus transmission is most widespread and business activities most restricted. Yolo County spent multiple weeks in the purple tier

A majority of winter quarter classes at UC Davis will be held remotely due to the coronavirus pandemic, Chancellor Gary S. May announced Friday. The announcement, which promised further details about the quarter will be released this week, came as no surprise. UC Davis largely shifted to remote learning in March. Since then, the United States has failed to contain the spread of COVID-19. The number of new cases nationwide reached record levels in recent days and public health experts are predicting the coming months to be the deadliest of the pandemic. So far, more than 230,000 people in the U.S. have died from complications related to COVID-19. Local cases and hospitalizations are also rising. On Saturday, Yolo County reported 28 new cases, the highest one-day total in six weeks, and the county’s test positivity rate continued to climb. As of Tuesday, 61 county residents had died of COVID19. Through this week, remote instruction and other public health precautions taken by UC Davis had been effective at limiting the virus’ spread in the campus community, according to testing data published on the UC Davis COVID-19 dashboard. From Oct. 24 through 31, the most recent week with results

Seven more COVID deaths reported at convalescent hospital in Woodland BY ANNE TERNUS-BELLAMY Enterprise staff writer

YOLO COUNTY/COURTESY PHOTO

before moving to red on Sept. 29. “While Yolo’s metrics land in the purple tier at this time,” Sisson told county supervisors on Tuesday, “we will remain in the red tier for the coming week. “Next week, if our metrics once again fall in

INDEX

Business Focus B6 Forum . . . . . . . .B2 Obituaries . . . .B4 Classifieds . . . .B3 Readers Choice A4 Wineaux . . . . . . A3 The Hub . . . . . .B1 Per Capita . . . .B6 Weather . . . . . .B5

the purple tier, we may have to move backward into the purple tier.” However, she said, the state last week changed its process for moving counties into more restrictive tiers. Previously, if a county’s metrics fell within a more restrictive tier for two weeks in a row, it would be

WEATHER Th Thursday: Sunny aand warm.

moved to that tier. Now, Sisson said, before moving the county, the state will look at the most recent 10 days of data and if there are “objective signs of improvement,” that county would enter an observation period and would remain

SEE PURPLE, PAGE A3

Seven new COVID 19-related deaths were reported at the Alderson Convalescent Hospital in Woodland this week and another five deaths at the facility are suspected to be COVID-related, according to Yolo County’s new public health officer. “To date, 57 residents of this facility have tested positive along with 13 staff members,” Dr. Aimee Sisson told the Yolo County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday. One resident died last month. “Given the large number of resident cases, we expect more COVIDrelated deaths in this facility in the coming weeks,” Sisson said. This is the second COVID-19 outbreak at Alderson since the pandemic began. The first outbreak in

July at the family-owned skilled-nursing facility on Walnut Street affected 27 residents and employees and took three lives. This second outbreak began in early October. The good news, Sisson said, is the current outbreak appears to be slowing with just three residents testing positive last week. However, she said, that’s largely because “there aren’t that many vulnerable residents who haven’t already been infected ... they’ve essentially reached herd immunity within the facility, unfortunately.” Combined, the two outbreaks at Alderson have involved more cases than the deadly outbreak at the Stollwood Convalescent Hospital in Woodland during the spring, when 66 people contracted the virus and 17 died.

SEE DEATHS, PAGE A3

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