Coronavirus: Gov. Newsom issues statewide 'stay at home' order in effort to slow COVID-19

ByJory Rand, Marc Cota-Robles, and ABC7.com staff KABC logo
Friday, March 20, 2020
SoCal residents come to grips with Gov. Newsom's 'Stay at Home' order
Southern California residents were finding ways to adjust to Gov. Gavin Newsom's "Stay at Home" order issued on Thursday to help prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

LOS ANGELES -- In an urgent effort to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus, California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced on Thursday a statewide directive for all Californians to stay home.



The announcement comes after similar orders were issued in Los Angeles County and city, Palms Springs and multiple counties in the Bay Area.



Many businesses in Southern California were closed on Friday as residents took heed of Gov. Gavin Newsom's 'Stay at Home' order.


"People will self-regulate their behavior and they'll begin to adjust and adapt as they have been like significantly. We will have social pressure to encourage people to do the right thing," Newsom said at a Thursday press conference.



Gov. Newsom also mentioned "bending the curve" multiple times, in reference to keeping the surge of cases in California as low as possible over the coming weeks.



The order, which goes into effect on March 19 until further notice, shuts down all non-essential businesses. Essential services such as gas stations, pharmacies, grocery stores and banks will remain open.



California health officials predict that about 56% of the state's population -- 25.5 million people -- will be infected with the novel coronavirus within the next eight weeks, Gov. Gavin Newsom said in a letter to President Donald Trump.



The letter, dated March 18, echoes a phone conversation with Trump on Tuesday in which Newsom formally requested that the Navy's USNS Mercy, the largest hospital ship in the world, be deployed to California.



Newsom's new order followed his previous decision to largely allow local government to set their own rules.



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The governor initially set statewide guidance to keep crowds under 250 people, then on Monday night restricted all unnecessary gatherings and ordered restaurants to close to dine-in patrons and gyms and movie theaters to shutter.



Local government leaders in Los Angeles and the Bay Area had already taken such steps, or even more aggressive ones. Before Tuesday, he never mandated school closures statewide, though almost every district shut down independently.

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