NAMED NATIONAL FOUR-YEAR DAILY NEWSPAPER OF THE YEAR FOR 2020-21 IN THE COLLEGE MEDIA ASSOCIATIONâS PINNACLE AWARDS
Wednesday, Feb. 23, 2022
Volume 158 No. 12
COVID-19
California enters âendemicâ phase By Hailey Fargo STAFF WRITER
Gov. Gavin Newsom announced a plan Thursday making California the first state to move toward an âendemicâ approach to the coronavirus pandemic. This approach concentrates on making the COVID-19 vir us m an a g e a b l e for communities to live with as more people become fully vaccinated. Almost 83% of California residents are vaccinated as of Tuesday, according to the California government tracking COVID-19 webpage. âWe are moving past the crisis phase into a phase where we will work to live with this virus,â Newsom said in a Thursday news conference. Shahbaz Mansahia, San Jose State international student and software engineering graduate student, said he approves of the stateâs endemic approach. âIâm kind of glad that itâs happening because itâs a symbol for a return to normalcy to a certain extent and looking at the vaccination rates within,â he said. âI donât know about California, but at least in the Bay Area . . . weâre moving to a world after the pandemic to a certain extent.â Newsomâs administration developed a name representative of key elements in the endemic approach: SMARTER. The acronym stands for shots, masks, awareness, readiness, testing, education, and Rx, which refers to the improvement of COVID-19 treatments, according to a Thursday
Gov. Newsomâs âSMARTERâ outbreak response In the event of a coronavirus outbreak under the new California endemic phase of the pandemic, Newsom aims to establish infrastructure that includes:
500,000 tests
75 million masks
up to 200,000 vaccinations
INFOGRAPHIC BY CHRISTINA CASILLAS; SOURCE: THURSDAY ABC NEWS ARTICLE
ABC news article. The plan outlines specific goals including supplying 75 million masks, providing up to 200,000 vaccinations and 500,000 tests daily in the event of a COVID-19 outbreak, according to the ABC article.
added to areas experiencing a COVID-19 surge within three weeks, according to the same article. $1.9 million has been approved to increase hospital staffing and increase COVID-19 vaccination and testing
laboratory testing capacity, data collection, and investigations regarding outbreaks according to the same article. California lifted its mask mandate on Feb. 16, however Santa Clara County did not lift its local indoor masking
Thereâs been a drive on most university campuses to get people either vaccinated or to get regularly tested if they are unvaccinated. For now, it doesnât change much besides the fact that you can see a return to normalcy on the horizon for the university. Shahbaz Mansahia SJSU software engineering graduate student
In accordance with distribution. Another requirements, according to Newsomâs plan, 3,000 $1.7 billion included in the a county press release. medical workers will be plan will be used to improve Kenneth Mashinchi,
SJSU senior director of strategic communications and media relations, said the university will continue to comply with state and county public health guidelines, including the indoor mask mandate. âAs we transition into an endemic approach to COVID-19, it is imperative we continue to follow safety measures, like washing our hands and staying home when we feel sick, and get vaccinated with the booster shot,â Mashinchi said. Shahbaz Mansahia said he feels the stateâs endemic approach doesnât change the universityâs approach to COVID-19 protocols after classes returned to in-person instruction on Feb. 14. âI donât think it means much for this semester
at least because we are following the masking protocols, if youâre going to class wearing masks and stuff,â Mansahia said. âThereâs been a drive on most university campuses to get people either vaccinated or to get regularly tested if they are unvaccinated. For now, it doesnât change much besides the fact that you can see a return to normalcy on the horizon for the university.â
Follow Hailey on Twitter @haileyfargo
CAMPUS IMAGES
PHOTOS BY EVAN REINHARDT
Left: data analytics graduate student Dhruv Jain serves up a volleyball during the International House Lawn Games Tuesday on Tower Lawn. Jain, an international student from India, said he played volleyball in the past and had to join in when he saw a social media post about the gathering. âWeâre from outside the country so this helps us get to know the culture,â he said. Above: Economics junior Juan Donato (center) and Jain (right) leap into the air to hit a volleyball over the net. The International House hosts its Lawn Games gathering once a month.