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First Vaccine Clinic for Kids 5 to 11 Expected Nov. 8: Santa Cruz County

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Jondi Gumz, Willa Reed, Todd Hoffman, Richard Stockton, Ana Schaffer, Susan O’Connor Fraser, Risa D’Angeles, Lakia Queen, Jasmine Najera, Bruce McPherson

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First Vaccine Clinic for Kids 5 to 11 Expected Nov. 8

Santa Cruz County Reports Four COVID Deaths As New Cases Slow

By Jondi Gumz

Dr. Faris Sabbah, Santa Cruz County superintendent of schools, anticipates the first vaccine clinics for kids age 5 to 11 will be Nov. 8.

A Town Hall updating parents is posted on the SantaCruzCOE YouTube channel.

On Oct. 29, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued emergency use authorization for Pfizer’s Covid-19 vaccine for children 5 to 11, giving parents who want their younger children vaccinated a sense of relief even as new cases in Santa Cruz County are down 31 percent.

The federal Centers for Disease Control’s advisers are meeting Nov. 2 to discuss whether to recommend the vaccine for younger kids.

Dr. Rochelle Walensky, CDC director, makes the final decision.

Locally the Delta variant claimed four more lives in Santa Cruz County – all with underlying conditions — bringing the number of deaths to 220 — and hospitalizations have been up and down, from four to seven, then five, with one in intensive care.

The county reports 324 active cases, 20,210 cases since the pandemic began and 610 requiring hospitalization.

“COVID Update” page 15

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“Elana McGrew” from page 1

Her grandmother lives nearby, and she’s played the course 20 times before.

Familiarity is no guarantee — ask Rory McIlroy or Jordan Spieth, at one tournament, you play your best, but at another, you don’t. That’s golf.

The Scotts Valley High varsity girls won the League championship in golf this year but the League won’t send a team to CSS because two high schools, Harbor and Santa Cruz, did not field full teams.

“If we had six teams, we could send a team to CCS,” Elana said.

She’s the youngest of three children of Monte McGrew, an electrical engineer, and Diane McGrew, a doctor.

She’s 5-8 and plays two sports, golf and basketball.

She started playing golf in sixth grade. Her dad golfs, she said.

In middle school, she only played golf during the season.

As a Falcon, she’s out on the golf course all the time — in the summer, every day.

She played with Candus Shi, a year ahead of her, who won the League championships three years in a row, with Elana second best on team.

Candus, who is 5-5, became fascinated with golf with her father took her to the driving range at age 6.

One thing Elana learned from Candus: “She’s very focused.”

How much time does a golf match take?

“Ideally four hours and 10 minutes,” Elana said.

She’s been in junior tournaments lasting five to five and a half hours, not to mention the warm-up time beforehand.

The better golfers play first, she said, recalling an occasion when her group finished in four-and-a-half hours.

“I hit ball further,” she said. “That helps a lot to get onto the greens.”

Pasatiempo Sponsorship

Elana is sponsored by Pasatiempo, a storied course that opened in 1929 in Santa Cruz. She frequently plays there, saying it’s probably her favorite.

Her freshman-year coach, Steve Woodruff, told her about the sponsorship and she wrote a letter to club pro Ken Woods to get it.

The toughest hole at Pasatiempo? No. 11, she said, because “it’s uphill and you have to hit over a ravine. I play from the middle.”

She also plays at DeLaveaga, which she said “has more people my age.”

Summers, she’s played with a collegiate golfer who has a full-ride scholarship to San Diego State University, which has her thinking about playing golf in college.

Favors Math

Academics at Scotts Valley High are rigorous because of the International Baccalaureate college-prep courses for juniors and seniors.

Elana is taking IB Math HL (higher level), IB Biology HL and IB Chemistry HL.

“Those are really tough,” she said.

Her favorite subject? Probably math, she said.

That may be genetics, given the professions her parents chose and her older brother who scored 800 on the SAT math test and is now at UC Santa Cruz.

Elana also tutors at Mathnasium — one week, she worked 15 hours.

As a youngster, she found reading a struggle — until in third grade, she got glasses.

How doe she juggle it all?

“I have a Google calendar,” she said. “That helps… I study as much as I can.

I try to keep focused.”

Members of the 2021-22 team freshmen Cassie Mendivil, Maisey Chard, Taylor Suomela and Chloe Woelfel, sophomores Lola Challenor, Melina Sinclair and Hannah Mckibben and junior Elana McGrew. n

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