Gov. Gavin Newsom launched a statewide hotline this week to help the state’s 5.3 million residents older than 65 connect with state and local services during the coronavirus outbreak.
The state is establishing the hotline, (833) 544-2374, in partnership with organizations like AARP, the Alzheimer’s Association, the American Heart Association and the American Lung Association to assuage the loneliness and anxiety that the state’s older residents may feel during the pandemic as they are self-isolating.
“I don’t want to be hearing stories that someone finally knocked on a door and no one answered, only to find out when they opened that door that someone had passed away because we didn’t meet the moment,” Newsom said.
The hotline is intended to help residents go further than delivering food or medicine to their older family members by connecting them with potentially vital services and programs.
The state is also partnering with local 211 hotline programs to provide similar support to seniors and other vulnerable demographics at a more granular level.
Newsom said it was fitting to launch the hotline on March 31, Cesar Chavez Day, in the spirit of service and “meeting this moment.”
“It is incumbent upon us to check in on the greatest generation,” Newsom said. “People have brought us the world’s most vibrant middle class and obviously have done so much for all of us, we have a unique obligation to
do more for them.”
Newsom also said the state would release specific guidelines on public use of protective masks in the next 24 hours. Medical workers throughout the state and the country have lamented a lack of personal protective equipment like N95 masks as coronavirus cases continue to surge.
While the state has distributed roughly 32.4 million N95 masks to hospitals throughout California, Newsom said the state will need more than 100 million masks to meet the health care system’s demand.
“We want to be guided by science and I’ll just say this, respectfully, science is a bit incomplete in this space,” Newsom said of healthy members of the public wearing protective masks to avoid getting sick.
“A lot of people are promoting face coverings and masks, others caution that it is not a substitute for physical distancing, which it is not, and that it could create a sense that it is,” he said.
I am so thankful I live in California. Let’s stop criticizing our officials! Support them and be united as a community. Help each other by staying home. Please. Change the negative words.
I cannot support someone who destroyed San Francisco and is now in the process of destroying the state.
I wish every governor acted quickly as Gavin Newsom. I too, am grateful to be living in the great state of California.
He is destroying California and he just let 14 murderers out of prison back into your communities.
Yeah, quite a guy!
Dawg – If people cannot put aside differences and come together during a pandemic, is there any hope for humanity?
How about a bit of information and history as to where loyalties may be.
Member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors,
January 8, 1997 – January 8, 2004
Mayor of San Francisco
January 8, 2004 – January 10, 2011
You would think given all those years SF would be in better shape.
As to possible priorities, this from the LA Times,
https://www.latimes.com/projects/la-pol-ca-gavin-newsom-san-francisco-money/
@Bobfished, no he didn’t. Stop lying to people …
Seriously, there is NO reason to open any schools throughout the rest of this school year. Why stir things up by sending out this LONG, unnecessary statement?
Ooops… my comment was supposed to be on the MDUSD superintendent’s latest post.
Leave me alone. I can take care of myself. Thank you!