Monday, 31 May 2021

Who benefits? U.S. debates fairest way to share spare vaccine

WASHINGTON (AP) — In April, the Biden administration announced plans to share millions of COVID-19 vaccine doses with the world by the end of June. Five weeks later, nations around the globe are still waiting — with growing impatience — to learn where the vaccines will go and how they will be distributed.

To President Joe Biden, the doses represent a modern-day “arsenal of democracy,” serving as the ultimate carrot for America’s partners abroad, but also as a necessary tool for global health, capable of saving millions of lives and returning a semblance of normalcy to friends and foes alike.

The central question for Biden: What share of doses should be provided to those who need it most, and how many should be reserved for U.S. partners?

The answer, so far at least, appears to be that the administration will provide the bulk of the doses to COVAX, the U.N.-backed global vaccine sharing program meant to meet the needs of lower income countries. While the percentage is not yet finalized, it would mark a substantial — and immediate — boost to the lagging COVAX effort, which to date has shared just 76 million doses with needy countries.

The Biden administration is considering reserving about a fourth of the doses for the U.S. to dispense directly to individual nations of its choice.

The growing U.S. stockpile of COVID-19 vaccines is seen not only as a testament to American ingenuity, but also its global privilege.

More than 50% of Americans have received at least one dose of the vaccine, and more than 135 million are fully vaccinated, helping bring the rate of cases and deaths in the U.S. to the lowest level since the earliest days of the pandemic.

Scores of countries have requested doses from the United States, but to date only Mexico and Canada have received a combined 4.5 million doses. The U.S. also has announced plans to share enough shots with South Korea to vaccinate its 550,000 troops who serve alongside American service members on the peninsula.

The broader U.S. sharing plan is still being finalized, a White House official said, having been the subject of policy debate inside the White House and across the federal government, and also involving COVAX and other outside stakeholders like drug manufacturers and logistics experts.

“Our nation’s going to be the arsenal of vaccines for the rest of the world,” Biden said on May 17, when he announced the U.S. pledge to share more doses. He added that, compared to other countries like Russia and China that have sought to leverage their domestically produced doses, “we will not use our vaccines to secure favors from other countries.”

Still, the partnership with the South Korean military points to the ability of the U.S. to use its vaccine stockpile to benefit some of its better-off allies. It was not clear whether South Korea would pay for its doses from the U.S. Most of the other doses were expected to be donated.

Samantha Power, the new USAID administrator, provided the first indication of the likely allocation last week in testimony on Capitol Hill.

She told the Senate Appropriations Committee that “75% of the doses we share will likely be shared through COVAX. Twenty-five percent of whatever our excess supply is that we are donating will be reserved to be able to deploy bilaterally.”

Administration officials cautioned that Biden had not yet signed off on the precise split and that it could still change.. The White House official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal plans, said the administration would be working in coming days to synchronize its supplies with the global vaccine sharing organizations.

Biden has committed to providing other nations with all 60 million domestically produced doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine. That vaccine has yet to be authorized for use in the U.S. but is widely approved around the world. The U.S.-produced doses will be available to ship as soon as they clear a safety review by the Food and Drug Administration.

The president also has promised to share 20 million doses from existing production of Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccine stocks. Even more doses are expected to be made available to share in the months ahead.

As part of its purchase agreements with drug manufacturers, the U.S. controlled the initial production by its domestic manufacturers. Pfizer and Moderna are only now starting to export vaccines produced in the U.S. to overseas customers. The U.S. has hundreds of millions more doses on order, both of authorized and in-development vaccines.

“It’s obviously challenging because so many countries face this need right now,” Power said, calling the decision of where to send doses “an urgent question.”

The decision, she continued, hinges on some combination of “the relationship we have with the countries, the public health and epidemiological scientific trajectory of the disease, and a sense of where the vaccines can do the most good, the infrastructure and readiness of countries to receive vaccines.”

The U.S. under Biden also has pledged $4 billion to COVAX, led by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations and the World Health Organization, to help it procure and distribute vaccines. COVAX has committed to sharing the doses with more than 90 countries, including many with which the U.S. has tumultuous relations.

Leaving it to COVAX to decide how the bulk of the U.S.-provided doses are distributed is seen by the administration as the most equitable way to determine who benefits. It also could allow the U.S. to avoid any political fallout that might come from sharing the vaccine directly with adversaries.

“It’s not only a symbol of American values — it’s smart global health policy,” said Tom Hart, acting CEO of the ONE Campaign, which has pressed the Biden administration to move faster to develop its global sharing plan. “An outbreak in North Korea or Iran or somewhere else where we might have tensions, viruses travel no matter where they’re flourishing, and I don’t want a variant cooking up in some remote part of the world, anywhere in the world, which then might get around the current vaccines that we’ve got.”

Even if the bulk of the U.S.-shared doses are distributed through COVAX, Power told senators, “It will be very clear where those doses are coming from.”

“People will be very clear that these are American doses coming as a result of American ingenuity and the generosity of the American people,” she added.

Globally, more than 3.5 million people are confirmed to have died from the coronavirus. The U.S. has seen the largest confirmed loss of life from COVID-19, at more than 594,000 people.



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Police officer attacked in San Francisco's Chinatown

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) - New developments after a shocking attack on a police officer in San Francisco's Chinatown. 

The city's police union released video of the assault on Sunday. 

Authorities say the female officer approached the man after he was hurling threats out in the street Friday night.

The man then fought the officer to the ground before witnesses jumped in to help.

The president of the San Francisco Police Officers Association says this would not have happened if there was not a police officer shortage. 

Chinatown has become a hot spot for racially motivated attacks and now this attack comes on an officer trying to keep the area safe.

Witnesses say before the suspect threw the officer to the ground he was spewing racial slurs at people walking along Kearny Street.

“He was saying something about Chinese people, like Chinese don't belong here or something,” David Yee said. 

David Yee saw the man identified as 33-year-old Gerardo Contreras about an hour before the attack.

Yee says Contreras appeared to be homeless and suffering from a mental episode before an unidentified officer tried to detain him. 

Witnesses rushed to the officer's aid, striking and pulling at Contreras while the officer was pinned down.

Backup was later seen running to help and arrested Contreras.

“A little shocked. Like he was attacking a police officer and if he can attack a police officer what would stop him from attacking a civilian?” Yee said.

“This just goes to show you that police officers are not immune to random acts of violence,” Dustin Derollo said.

Leadership within San Francisco's Police Officers Association is concerned with a lack of prosecuting and a lack of staffing is creating situations like this and making the city unsafe. 

The SFPOA estimates there's around 230 vacancies within the department.

The union says because of failed policies this officer was working alone and faced a struggle for her life. They fear these problems will continue.

“It's unfortunate she didn't get additional injuries or worst case scenario death,” Derollo said.

KRON4 has learned that the officer was taken to the hospital with minor injuries. She has since been released.

At this time, Contreras remains in the San Francisco County Jail.



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Chalkboards covered in messages of support for VTA victims and their families

HAYWARD, Calif. (KRON) - As families, friends and communities continue to mourn the loss of the nine innocent victims who died in the VTA mass shooting last week, a group of people is putting chalkboards up around the Bay Area for people to write messages to show their support.

"Some people have written love, not hate, peace, we stand together, and a lot of encouraging messages about unity, too," Michael Fujimoto said.

‘Let's come together,’ ‘Stay strong,’ ‘Our hearts go out to you’ -- Just some of the messages written on a chalkboard provided by Social Expressions, an organization that raises awareness of events happening in the Bay Area.

This time, the mass shooting at the Valley Transportation Authority rail yard last week.

"Just to be able to show support to the families and just help them see that we are here for them and we do remember those victims and everything that's been happening," Paola Perez said. 

These are photos of chalkboards from the past few days.

People all over the Bay Area of all ages participated.

On Monday, a chalkboard sat just outside the Southland Mall in Hayward where positive, encouraging messages were written.

"Some of these simple things are sometimes the best," Fujimoto said.

The idea is for people to share their thoughts, pass along messages of hope and healing, and provide relief to the families of the victims, and encourage solidarity in communities across California.

"Even in the littlest ways like sending messages just showing these small ways of support can help to bring even a slight comfort to these families so I hope that wherever we pop up next many others can come to help support too," Perez said. 

Be on the lookout for a chalkboard in your city. 

Social Expressions has already been in Hayward and San Francisco and they plan to be in other Bay Area cities over the next couple of weeks.



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James Kaprielian's emotional journey to becoming Oakland A's pitcher

OAKLAND, Calif. (KRON) - Oakland A's pitcher, James Kaprilion has had a fantastic start to his season.

He's 2-0 in 3 starts and is proving that he can be a reliable arm on a team with high expectations.

And if you knew everything he's been through to get to this point -- you understand….pitching?

Well, that's the easy part…..

"The mind is something that I've learned is the strongest muscle for sure," James said.

Mental fortitude. That is what got James Kaprillion to this point, hugging his father at Fenway park after his first career start and win.

"There were times where I didn't think it was necessarily going to turn out the way I wanted to. And to me, I am very fortunate enough to have people standing in my corner to encourage me and keep me on the track I want to be on, and when I do swerve off a little they put me back on line," James said.

That game at Fenway was the culmination of a long, trying journey for James.

In 2014, while he was in the midst of a standout career at UCLA, he lost his mother Barbera, after a 14 year battle with breast cancer.

She was his biggest fan and rarely missed a game.

"He would look up at his mom and gather strength recognizing all of the trials and tribulations she's been through in her life. And it suddenly made the task in hand a little less daunting. He realized I am playing a game here," James' dad Doug K said.

James carried on with his mother's memory in his heart. He was drafted in the first round to the New York Yankees.

But then he started to experience elbow pain. He decided to get Tommy John surgery.

"It was frustrating because, one, I am a competitor and don't belong on the training table. I belong on the field with the guys and want to be able to compete," James said.

He got that chance - let's go back to Fenway - fitting for his James, it got off to a rocky start. But as always, he dug deep and fought. Pops in the stands, mom in his heart.

"I did notice that he was looking in my direction, and I think it had something to do with the fact that he was sitting in the same area that we would have been in his UCLA days or high school. Maybe that gave him some extra strength that his mom was there and he could battle through this,," Doug said.

"We got that first win, and it's a proud moment because he seen how hard those other moments were for me," James said.

James has now settled in. He's started two games since and has shown he is here to stay.

"This little stigma that was here. That's behind him now. He's moving forward. He's not looking in the rear view mirror," James said.



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Alameda County firefighters rescue baby ducks from storm drain

ALAMEDA COUNTY, Calif. (KRON) - Duck, duck, cute🐥!!!

The Alameda County Fire Department successfully rescued some baby ducks in Castro Valley on Memorial Day.

Thank you, firefighters! ❤️



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Elections officials express worry over possible early recall election

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KRON) — As some Democratic state leaders push for an earlier recall election for Gov. Gavin Newsom, some elections officials are speaking out against it.

The California Association of Clerks and Elections Officials are concerned an election that happens earlier than later this fall could leave them scrambling.

Tuesday is the deadline for county election officials to get their cost estimates in for the likely recall election. With less than a week's notice, the Department of Finance set that deadline so counties can get reimbursed for the expenses with this year's state budget. 

Some elections leaders are hoping that is the only reason for the expedited request. 

"The Department of Finance is getting out this request to us a little bit early,” said CACEO President Donna Johnston.  “We're hoping that it's for a budgetary standpoint and not for an earlier election standpoint." 

Johnston said there is still so much to do to prepare for a recall election.

"We were initially planning for something — if the recall were to go through — in November,” she explained. “Having that pushed all the way up to August would be problematic I think at this point."

She said counties are now working to coordinate vote centers and must make time to make sure translators are available, and that ballots can be printed and sent. 

"We have requirements to get ballots out to voters within certain time frames for military and overseas voters and so forth,” Johnston said. “In order for those 45-day/60-day timelines to be met, we have to have enough time to do what we need to do to get an accurate election put forward."

Elections officials have said if the recall is required to have the same COVID-19 guidelines in place, it could cost about $400 million, making it one of the most expensive elections in state history.

But as California is set to drop restrictions throughout the state in about two weeks, Johnston said the state has yet to give guidance for election protocols post-June 15. 

"This time that's the big unknown, and that's what's difficult in estimating by the counties because we don't know if we are going to be following under COVID protocols or not,” Johnston said. “That's one of the big issues. We do know this will be an all vote-by-mail election. There's too many unknowns at this point." 

Johnston said CACEO is reaching out to counties before possibly requesting an extension to Tuesday’s deadline.



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Man accused of plotting Walmart attack arrested in Texas

KERRVILLE, Texas— A man has been arrested in Texas, accused of plotting to carry out a mass shooting at a Walmart.

The Kerr County Sheriff's Office says in a news release Sunday that 28-year-old Coleman Thomas Blevins is charged with making a terroristic threat.

Investigators say they intercepted a message from Blevins on Thursday indicating he was “preparing to proceed with a mass shooting,” and that the threat included Walmart. Blevins was arrested Friday.

Memphis mom accused of bribing teen to take the fall for a gun

Authorities searched his home and found firearms, ammunition, and more, including what officials called “radical ideology paraphernalia” such as books, flags and handwritten documents.

Jail records didn't list an attorney who could comment on Blevins' behalf.



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California eyes shuttered malls, stores for new housing

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California state lawmakers are grappling with a particularly 21st-century problem: What to do with the growing number of shopping malls and big box retail stores left empty by consumers shifting their purchases to the web.

A possible answer in crowded California cities is to build housing on these sites, which already have ample parking and are close to existing neighborhoods.

But local zoning laws often don't allow housing at these locations. Changing the zoning is such a hassle that many developers don't bother trying. And it's often not worth it for local governments to change the designations. They would prefer to find new retailers because sales taxes produce more revenue than residential property taxes.

However, with a stubborn housing shortage pushing prices to all-time highs, state lawmakers are moving to pass new laws to get around those barriers.

A bill that cleared the state Senate last week would let developers build houses on most commercial sites without changing the zoning. Another proposal would pay local governments to change the zoning to let developers build affordable housing.

This Thursday, May 27, 2021, photo shows the closed Sears in Buena Park Mall in Buena Park, Calif. California state lawmakers are grappling with a particularly 21st-century problem: What to do with the growing number of shopping malls and big-box retail stores left empty by consumers shifting their purchases to the web. A possible answer in crowded California cities is to build housing on these sites, which already have ample parking and are close to existing neighborhoods. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

“There has always been an incentive to chase retail and a disincentive to build housing,” said Sen. Anthony Portantino, a Los Angeles-area Democrat who authored the bill to pay local governments. “There is more dormant and vacant retail than ever.”

If successful, it's believed California would be the first state to allow multi-family housing on commercial sites statewide, said Eric Phillips, vice president of policy and legislation for the California chapter of the American Planning Association. Developers who use the law still would have to obey locally approved design standards. But Phillips said the law would limit local governments' ability to reject the projects.

That's why some local leaders oppose the bill, arguing it undermines their authority.

“City leaders have the requisite local knowledge to discern when and which sites are appropriate for repurposing and which are not,” wrote Mike Griffiths, member of the Torrance City Council and founder of California Cities for Local Control, a group of 427 mayors and council members.

It's a familiar battle in California. While nearly everyone agrees there is an affordable housing shortage, state and local leaders face different political pressures that often derail ambitious proposals. Last year, a bill that would have overridden local zoning laws to let developers build small apartment buildings in neighborhoods reserved for single-family homes died in the state Senate.

Sen. Anna Caballero, a Democrat from Salinas and author of this year's zoning proposal, said her bill is not a mandate. Developers could choose to use the bill or not. The Senate approved the measure 32-2, sending it to the state Assembly for consideration.

“It’s always a challenge when you’re trying to do affordable housing, because there are entrenched interests that don’t want to negotiate and compromise, and we’re working really hard to try to break through that,” she said. “I’m trying to give maximum flexibility to local government because the more that you start telling them how they have to do it, the harder it becomes for them to actually do it.”

Even before the pandemic, big-box retail stores were struggling to adapt as more people began buying things online. In 2019, after purchasing Sears and Kmart, Transformco closed 96 stores across the country — including 29 in California.

The pandemic, of course, accelerated this trend, prompting major retailers like J.C. Penney, Neiman Marcus and J. Crew to file for bankruptcy protection. An analysis by the investment firm UBS shows online shopping will grow to 25% of all retail sales by 2025. The analysis predicted that up to 100,000 stores across the country could close.

Local governments and developers in California are already trying to redevelop some retail sites. In Salinas, a city of about 150,000 people near the Monterey Peninsula, city officials are working to rezone a closed Kmart. In San Francisco, developers recently announced plans to build nearly 3,000 homes in the parking lot that surrounds Stonestown Mall — a sprawling, 40-acre site that has lost some anchor retail tenants in recent years.

Still, the idea of repurposing shopping centers has divided labor unions and affordable housing advocates, putting one of the Democratic Party's core base of supporters against backers of one of their top policy goals.

Housing advocates love the idea, but they don’t like how Democrats want to do it. Both proposals in the Legislature would require developers to use a “skilled and trained” workforce to build the housing. That means a certain percentage of workers must either be enrolled or have completed a state-approved apprenticeship program.

Developers have said while there are plenty of trained workers available in areas like San Francisco and Los Angeles, those workers are scarce in more rural parts of the state, potentially delaying projects in those areas.

California needs to build about 180,000 new housing units per year to keep up with demand, according to the state's latest housing assessment. But it’s only managed about 80,000 per year for the past decade. That’s one reason the state’s median sales price for single-family homes hit a record high $758,990 in March.

This Thursday, May 27, 2021, photo shows the closed Sears in Buena Park Mall in Buena Park, Calif. California state lawmakers are grappling with a particularly 21st-century problem: What to do with the growing number of shopping malls and big-box retail stores left empty by consumers shifting their purchases to the web. A possible answer in crowded California cities is to build housing on these sites, which already have ample parking and are close to existing neighborhoods. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

“At a time when we’re trying to increase production, we don’t believe we should be limiting who can do the work,” said Ray Pearl, executive director of the California Housing Consortium, a group that includes affordable housing developers.

Robbie Hunter, president of the State Building and Construction Trades Council of California, dismissed that argument as just greedy developers trying to maximize their profits.

He said there is no construction project in California that has been delayed because of a lack of workers, adding: “We man every job.”

“When there is a demand for workers, we rise with the demand,” Hunter said.

Labor unions appear to be winning. A bill in the state Assembly that did not initially require a “skilled and trained” workforce stalled in committee because it did not have enough support.

___

The legislation is SB 6 and SB 15.



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Birth limit: China to allow couples to have 3 children, up from 2

BEIJING (AP) — China’s ruling Communist Party said Monday it will ease birth limits to allow all couples to have three children instead of two in hopes of slowing the rapid aging of its population, which is adding to strains on the economy and society.

The ruling party has enforced birth limits since 1980 to restrain population growth but worries the number of working-age people is falling too fast while the share over age 65 is rising. That threatens to disrupt its ambitions to transform China into a prosperous consumer society and global technology leader.

A ruling party meeting led by President Xi Jinping decided to introduce “measures to actively deal with the aging population,” the official Xinhua News Agency said. It said leaders agreed ”implementing the policy of one couple can have three children and supporting measures are conducive to improving China’s population structure.”

Leaders also agreed China needs to raise its retirement age to keep more people in the workforce and improve pension and health services for the elderly, Xinhua said.

Restrictions that limited most couples to one child were eased in 2015 to allow two, but the total number of births fell further, suggesting rule changes on their own have little impact on the trend.

Couples say they are put off by high costs of raising a child, disruption to their jobs and the need to look after elderly parents.

Comments on social media Monday complained the change does nothing to help young parents with medical bills, low incomes and grueling work schedules known popularly as “996,” or 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. six days a week.

“Every stage of the problem hasn’t been solved,” said a post on the popular Sina Weibo blog service signed Tchaikovsky. “Who will raise the baby? Do you have time? I go out early and get back late. Kids don’t know what their parents look like.”

Another, signed Hyeongmok, joked bitterly: “Don’t worry about aging. Our generation won’t live long.”

China, along with Thailand and some other Asian economies, faces what economists call the challenge of whether they can get rich before they get old.

The Chinese population of 1.4 billion already was expected to peak later this decade and start to decline. Census data released May 11 suggest that is happening faster than expected, adding to burdens on underfunded pension and health systems and cutting the number of future workers available to support a growing retiree group.

The share of working-age people 15 to 59 in the population fell to 63.3% last year from 70.1% a decade earlier. The group aged 65 and older grew to 13.5% from 8.9%.

The 12 million births reported last year was down nearly one-fifth from 2019.

About 40% were second children, down from 50% in 2017, according to Ning Jizhe, a statistics official who announced the data on May 11.

Chinese researchers and the Labor Ministry say the share of working-age people might fall to half the population by 2050. That increases the “dependency ratio,” or the number of retirees who rely on each worker to generate income for pension funds and to pay taxes for health and other public services.

Leaders at Monday’s meeting agreed it is “necessary to steadily implement the gradual postponement of the legal retirement age,” Xinhua said.

It gave no details, but the government has been debating raising the official retirement ages of 60 for men, 55 for white-collar female workers and 50 for blue-collar female workers.

The potential change is politically fraught. Some female professionals welcome a chance to stay in satisfying careers, but others whose bodies are worn out from decades of manual labor resent being required to work longer.

The fertility rate, or the average number of births per mother, stood at 1.3 in 2020, well below the 2.1 that would maintain the size of the population.

China’s birth rate, paralleling trends in other Asian economies, already was falling before the one-child rule. The average number of children per Chinese mother tumbled from above six in the 1960s to below three by 1980, according to the World Bank.

Demographers say official birth limits concealed what would have been a further fall in the number of children per family without the restrictions.

The ruling party says it prevented as many as 400 million potential births, averting shortages of food and water. But demographers say if China followed trends in Thailand, parts of India and other countries, the number of additional babies might have been as low as a few million.



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Crews battle 4-acre fire burning in CZU Lightning Complex burn area

SANTA CRUZ, Calif. (KRON) - Firefighters are battling a 4-acre fire burning near a trail within the CZU Lightning Complex burn area on Monday.

Around 3 p.m., Cal Fire CZU crews responded to the area near the Hihn Hammond Truck Trail.

Just before 5 p.m., fire officials reported that the fire had burned about 4-acres off of Gazos Creek and North Escape Roads.

The fire is moving at a slow rate-of-spread, according to crews.

Check back for updates as this is developing.



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'Blame China': Sign outside New Mexico Italian restaurant stirs up controversy

DEMING, N.M. (KRQE) – A restaurant owner in southern New Mexico is being forced to temporarily close the doors because – like a lot of restaurants across the state – they're having a difficult time hiring workers.

Unlike other restaurants, however, Forghedaboutit Southwest Italian is under fire for a large sign posted in front of the establishment that reads: "Blame China!"

"We are not racist, we are not bigots," said Kimberly Yacone, the owner of the Italian eatery. "This thing came from China, it's a known fact."

The Yacones' restaurant had been open in Deming for eight years. Now, like so many restaurants in New Mexico, they're having a hard time finding staff to run the place. "When people are making more on unemployment than they are going back to work, it's hard to find help," said Yacone.

Yacone said she and her husband Robert blame the Chinese government for their inability to keep their Deming restaurant open. "When we say blame China, yeah! That's where it came from," said Yacone. "We're not blaming Chinese American people."

Since the beginning of the pandemic, there have been numerous, graphic media reports of physical and verbal assaults on Asian Americans, with the FBI warning in March of 2020 of an increase in hate crimes against Asian Americans. In multiple attacks that were caught on video, the assailants can be heard referencing China and even yelling "China virus."

Nexstar's KRQE asked her if the sign on the property instigates violence against the Asian community. "I don't think it does," Yacone replied. "That's towards the Chinese government."

However, people on social media don't agree with her. In the past few days, some bad reviews have come up on their Facebook page from people who say they refuse to support their business and call them bigots.

Yacone says she's received calls too, defending their stance. "It's just ridiculous to say that we're racist," she said.

Yacone says the sign will remain up. "It is what it is," she said.

KRQE reached out to the ACLU of New Mexico about the sign. In a statement they said:

"This sign simply replays the Trump administration's tactic of dodging blame for its failures by playing to racial antagonism toward Asian Americans. We've seen how signs like this inspire hate and violence against the Asian community. Instead of contributing to these kinds of divisions in our country, we should be pulling together to defeat the virus."

Peter Simonson, Executive Director of ACLU New Mexico


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Former drug dealer becomes attorney after judge gives him a chance to change

CHICAGO (NewsNation Now) — A convicted drug dealer was given a second chance by a Michigan judge after he challenged the man to turn his life around.

Sixteen years after Edward Martell first appeared in Judge Bruce Morrow’s courtroom, he was officially sworn in as an attorney.

Morrow said he immediately saw something special in Martell from the beginning.

“With everything that had gone wrong in his life up to that point, he had this optimism that was contagious,” said Morrow. “And for him to still be able to have a positive attitude about himself, I thought it was remarkable. I said to myself ‘This is somebody who can team me something.’”

Morrow believes there generally isn’t much of a difference between someone sitting on the bench, and someone appearing before a judge.

“It’s just that God placed us in different situations,” Morrow added.

Many don’t realize it’s possible to become an attorney with a criminal record.

“It’s still surreal, you know. When people call the firm and say ‘May I speak to Edward Martell?’ It’s still just so surreal,” said Martell. “I’m very thankful, I’m very humbled, and I’m thankful God put Judge Morrow in my life.”

Martell said when he turned in his 1,200-page application there were 35 arrests, 19 convictions and two felony drug convictions since the age of 13-years-old.

Martell is licensed in state court and said he’s hoping to be licensed in federal court soon.



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Virginia teacher who won't address transgender students by preferred pronouns fights suspension

LEESBURG, Va. (AP) — A northern Virginia gym teacher is fighting his suspension after he spoke out at a school board meeting against proposed policies to address transgender students by their preferred pronouns. 

Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative Christian legal group, wrote a letter Friday to Loudoun County Public Schools on behalf of Leesburg Elementary teacher Tanner Cross. The letter demands Cross’ reinstatement.

Cross was suspended after he said at a May 25 school board meeting that he could not abide by proposed rules that would require teachers to address transgender students by their chosen gender.

The school board is reviewing its policies in conjunction with a state mandate requiring all school systems to update their policies on transgender students. The model regulations circulated by the state include a requirement that students be addressed by their preferred pronouns.

The school system did not immediately respond Monday to a request for comment.



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Study blames climate change for 37% of global heat deaths

(AP) - More than one-third of the world’s heat deaths each year are due directly to global warming, according to the latest study to calculate the human cost of climate change.

But scientists say that’s only a sliver of climate’s overall toll — even more people die from other extreme weather amplified by global warming such as storms, flooding and drought — and the heat death numbers will grow exponentially with rising temperatures. 

Dozens of researchers who looked at heat deaths in 732 cities around the globe from 1991 to 2018 calculated that 37% were caused by higher temperatures from human-caused warming, according to a study Monday in the journal Nature Climate Change

That amounts to about 9,700 people a year from just those cities, but it is much more worldwide, the study’s lead author said.

“These are deaths related to heat that actually can be prevented. It is something we directly cause,” said Ana Vicedo-Cabrera, an epidemiologist at the Institute of Social and Preventative Medicine at the University of Bern in Switzerland.

The highest percentages of heat deaths caused by climate change were in cities in South America. Vicedo-Cabrera pointed to southern Europe and southern Asia as other hot spots for climate change-related heat deaths. 

Sao Paulo, Brazil, has the most climate-related heat deaths, averaging 239 a year, researchers found.

About 35% of heat deaths in the United States can be blamed on climate change, the study found. That’s a total of more than 1,100 deaths a year in about 200 U.S. cities, topped by 141 in New York. Honolulu had the highest portion of heat deaths attributable to climate change, 82%.

Scientists used decades of mortality data in the 732 cities to plot curves detailing how each city’s death rate changes with temperature and how the heat-death curves vary from city to city. Some cities adapt to heat better than others because of air conditioning, cultural factors and environmental conditions, Vicedo-Cabrera said.

Then researchers took observed temperatures and compared them with 10 computer models simulating a world without climate change. The difference is warming humans caused. By applying that scientifically accepted technique to the individualized heat-death curves for the 732 cities, the scientists calculated extra heat deaths from climate change.

“People continue to ask for proof that climate change is already affecting our health. This attribution study directly answers that question using state-of-the-science epidemiological methods, and the amount of data the authors have amassed for analysis is impressive,” said Dr. Jonathan Patz, director of the Global Health Institute at the University of Wisconsin.

Patz, who wasn’t part of the study, said it was one of the first to detail climate change-related heat deaths now, rather than in the future.



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High levels of cancer-causing ingredients in several sunscreen brands, study says

(WJW) - An independent study claims several popular brands of sunscreen contain high levels of benzene, a known carcinogen.

Out of nearly 300 different sunscreen products, 27% contained benzene, according to Valisure

Valisure is an online pharmacy that tests medications and supplements for safety and consistency. 

Valisure says it analyzed 294 unique batches of sunscreen from 69 different companies. Fourteen batches of sunscreen contained between 2.78 and 6.26 parts per million of benzene. 

Currently, the FDA has a restriction on benzene in products set at 2 parts per million. But the agency also says "if their use is unavoidable in order to produce a drug product with a significant therapeutic advance, then their levels should be restricted"

Valisure is asking for a recall of the affected products.

"Benzene is known to cause cancer in humans according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the World Health Organization, and other regulatory agencies," Valisure says.



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KRON4 Morning Buzz: Naomi Osaka fined $15,000

PARIS (AP) — Naomi Osaka was fined $15,000 when she skipped the news conference after her first-round victory at the French Open on Sunday — and drew a stunning warning from all four Grand Slam tournaments that she could face stiffer penalties, including disqualification or even suspension, if she continues to avoid the media.

Osaka returned to Roland Garros after sitting out the tournament last year and turned in a mistake-filled 6-4, 7-6 (4) victory over 63rd-ranked Patricia Maria Tig at Court Philippe Chatrier on Day 1. She had declared Wednesday on social media she would not speak to the press and kept that promise.

Hours later, Osaka turned to her preferred method of communication these days, tweeting: “anger is a lack of understanding. change makes people uncomfortable.”



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Descendants of Tulsa Race Massacre survivors share how they discovered their direct tie to the devastating event

TULSA, Okla. (KFOR) - The Tulsa Race Massacre took place between May 31 and June 1, 1921.

It all started due to a rumored encounter in the Drexel Building elevator in downtown Tulsa between teenagers Dick Rowland, an African-American shoeshiner, and Sara Page, a white elevator operator.

Page claimed that she was assaulted, though she later recanted. A newspaper embellished the story of the alleged crime.

There was talk that Rowland would be lynched, so armed African-American men came to the jail to protect him. A larger group of armed white men met them there. Then, gunfire rang out.

A white mob then set Greenwood on fire. All 35 city blocks of the community burned, including more than 1,200 homes, 600 businesses and a number of churches on Black Wall Street.

It has been estimated that between 100 to 300 people were killed, with many others wounded.

Although it may be 100 years later, many of us are just now beginning to learn about the Tulsa Race Massacre, and for others, they're just now learning about their direct tie to the devastating event.

Photo goes with story
Kavin Ross

Growing up, Kavin Ross and Dr. Phoebe Stubblefield did not know much about the massacre. No one did, really. After the 1921 event, many people kept quiet about the atrocities they saw and experienced.

But through a twist of fate, many decades later, the two would enter each other's lives for none other than the massacre.

Today, Ross is the chairman of the Mass Graves Investigation Public Oversight Committee.

His pride and joys are the E. W. Woods Memorial, which he had a part in, as well as Dr. John Hope Franklin Boulevard, also courtesy of Ross.

Photo goes with story
Kavin Ross at the E.W. Woods Memorial.

Throughout his adult life, learning about and educating others on the Tulsa Race Massacre has been a top priority, but it wasn't until recently that he discovered his direct tie.

"I only found out about being a descendant, and friends of the family just recently made me... About the last five years," said Ross. "My great-grandfather, Isaac Evitt, had a Zulu lounge."

The Zulu lounge used to sit where the I-244 Freeway crosses Greenwood in Tulsa. It was lost in the massacre in 1921.

"He was not able to rebuild," said Ross. "It was a lot of problems in the aftermath of the riot because the city did not want the black folk to rebuild on these grounds."

Photo goes with story
Dr. Phoebe Stubblefield

In the 1990s, Dr. Stubblefield was invited to be a scientific consultant on the Tulsa Race Riot Commission Report. She was not from Tulsa, but had relatives that lived there. She never could have known the experience would change her life and open her eyes to her ancestry.

"I mentioned it to my parents and said, 'hey, doing this,' and they said, 'Yeah. Yeah, your Aunt Anna lost her house.' And my question was, 'who's Aunt Anna?'" said Dr. Stubblefield.

Aunt Anna, being the wife of Ellis Walker Woods, or E. W. Woods.

Photo goes with story
E.W. Woods Memorial

"So basically, yeah, it was a surprise, but it was a surprise that lead to more research... and [I'm a] scientist, so I'd normally go that route anyway," said Stubblefield.

The years passed and their work continued, eventually making their way to Tulsa's Oaklawn Cemetery in 2020, where a mass burial site is believed to be.

On June 1 the crew will finish what they started.

"I've seen cranial elements from someone that is most likely male in association with some of the plain casket area," said Dr. Stubblefield. "And that was just a little bit of evidence, because we didn't exhume the individual, we just, we were on our way towards excavating the whole trench. So it's looking highly likely."



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Solo Kayaker embarks on journey from San Francisco to Hawaii

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) Early before the sunrise, Cyril Derreumaux hopped into his kayak in the San Francisco Bay in front of a crowd of supports, setting on his 70-day journey to Hawaii.

Just him, his kayak (which he named Valentine), and over 2,000 miles of ocean water.

Derreumaux, 44, said it took three years to prepare for this solo expedition. Plus, "a lot of passion, a lot of thoughts - many, many thoughts."

There's plenty of dangers and challenges that come to mind that would keep most people from trying this type of adventure - but for the French-born kayaker, he's most concerned about being totally alone.

Cyril Derreumaux (Yoli Aceves/KRON)

"I'm an extrovert person, I love people, so maybe the biggest challenge for me to manage my time with myself," he laughs.

It's not the first time he's crossed the Pacific from California to Hawaii -- but it is his first time taking the trip by himself.

In 2016, he and his teammates got first place in the Great Pacific Race, an Ocean Rowing race from Monterey, California to Oahu, Hawaii. They set a Guinness World Record and did it in fewer than 40 days.

And even though there's just one seat on this boat, he says he had a long list of people who helped prepare him for his dream.



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What happens to your social media when you die?

CHARLESTON, W.V. (WOWK) — Many people plan for the day when they leave this earth, whether it's making a will or even making their own funeral arrangements.

It's a grim subject.

But what about your social media pages? What happens to those? Social media platforms keep us connected, but they can also be a reminder of our loss.

Current estimates show that more than 80% of all Americans, young and old alike, have some type of social networking profile — from Facebook and Twitter to Instagram and Tik Tok.

However, “when you’re gone, your social media is still there," said Bill Gardner, assistant professor at Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia.

“I still get birthday notifications of those who have passed years ago," he added.

But do you want reminders of birthdays and anniversaries going out to people after you've passed on? 

“We all have wills. We have plans for what happens to our stuff when we pass on, but we don’t always think about social media,” Gardner said.

There are ways to address your “digital death." Facebook, for example, has a setting that allows you to assign a "legacy contact" who gains control of your page (or removes it entirely) after you pass.

Of course, not everyone would take that last step. “When we lose a loved one, we really do try to maintain some attachment to them," said Dr. Jason Newsome, a counselor.

Although connecting with our loved ones who have passed via social media can be a good thing, Newsome offers a word of caution.

“I think it could also impede our ability to go through the grief process. It can cause us to become overly attached to a memory and overly attached to an identity that no longer exists anymore," Newsome said.

Gardner said there’s another risk.

"People with bad intentions can then take them over and send spam or phishing or other sorts of messages,” he said.

So it's important to leave your your digital assets with the right people.

According to 2019 Oxford University research, by 2100, there could be nearly 5 billion Facebook accounts of people no longer living.

“I guess you live forever on the internet if nothing else. When you pass, you’re there. You’re a digital ghost,” said Gardner.



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Memorial Day is the hottest day of the year: Fire danger and illness warning

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) -- Memorial Day is by far the hottest day of 2021 for the Bay Area.

Temperatures in some places are expected to get into the triple digits, breaking records for high heat.

The North and East Bays will feel the warmest weather as the day goes on, the National Weather Service said.

With the blazing sun comes danger for fire and heat-related illnesses. A Heat Advisory will be in place from noon to 9 p.m. on Monday.

People planning to make use of their day off from work should avoid strenuous outdoor activity during the hottest time of the day - maybe keep the hiking and picnics to shady, tree-lined areas.

Try to stay in air-conditioned areas and drink plenty of water throughout the day.

Keep in mind that the pavement could be unbearably hot for dogs while taking them for a walk.

NWS also wants people who try to cool off at the coast to watch out for dangerous rip currents.



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Community remembers VTA shooting victims

SAN JOSE, Calif. (KRON) -- VTA suspended all rail service until further notice and Younger Ave is still closed off with yellow tape on Monday morning.

The Santa Clara County Sheriff's Office has been at the mass shooting scene at the Guadalupe Railyard and the San Jose Police Department has been assisting over at the gunman's home about eight miles away.

At Samuel Cassidy's home they found 12 firearms, 22,000 rounds of ammunition, multiple cans of gasoline and suspected molotov cocktails.

This is on top of the three semi-automatic handguns and ammunition found on the Cassidy after he shot and killed nine coworkers and then himself.

Cassidy is also suspected of starting a fire at his own home that same Wednesday morning.

Investigators have been busy while the community has been working on healing from this and honoring the lives of the nine men killed at the rail yard.

There was a vigil at the San Jose City Hall Sunday where there are candles, flowers and pictures of the victims.

If you are in need of any help and services, the district attorney's office has set up a number to call.



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For Biden, a deeply personal Memorial Day weekend observance

NEW CASTLE, Del. (NewsNation Now) — President Joe Biden will continue his first Memorial Day weekend as commander in chief by laying a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier Monday morning. It comes after a deeply personal tribute Sunday to those lost while remembering his late son Beau, a veteran who died six years ago to the day.

President Biden will lay a wreath at 10 a.m. ET. You can watch the event, and hear his remarks, in the player above.

As a cold rain fell, Biden made his annual appearance at the commemoration in New Castle, not far from his Wilmington home, a day before he planned to do the same at Arlington National Cemetery on the official observance.

The death of his son from brain cancer at age 46 is ever-present for the elder Biden, with the loss defining so much of his worldview, dotting his speeches and stirring his empathy for others in pain.

The Memorial Day weekend, long an important moment for Biden, took on added poignancy this year as the president spoke frequently and emotionally of his own loss while expressing the gratitude of a nation for the sacrifices of others.

“I can’t thank you enough for the continued service for the country,” said Biden, addressing a crowd of Gold Star military families and other veterans in a ceremony at War Memorial Plaza in the shadow of the Delaware Memorial Bridge. “I know how much the loss hurts.”

“They’re the guardians of us and we’re the guardians of their legacy,” Biden said of those who served in the armed forces. “Despite all the pain, I know the pride you feel in the loved one you have lost.”

Though a tent was overhead, the cold wind whipped the rain onto the guests as they watched a lone military trumpeter play taps at a memorial to Delaware’s fallen troops. Biden appeared to pay the chill no mind, remaining for the entirety of the 75-minute ceremony and mouthing the words to the closing rendition of “God Bless America.” When it was time, he snapped a salute to the wreath laid at the memorial.

Biden had attended the ceremony nearly every year for decades, and it was at last year’s event when he emerged for the first time since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, spotted with a mask while laying a wreath.

Hours before Sunday's ceremony, the president, first lady Jill Biden and other family members attended a memorial Mass for Beau Biden at their local church. After the service, the Bidens greeted well-wishers outside the church and, for the first time in more than a year, were able to receive warm hugs and handshakes at their home parish.

The Bidens walked to Beau’s grave, which is on the property of St. Joseph's on the Brandywine, and left flowers amid several American flags that had been placed on the well-manicured lawn next to the marker.

Beau Biden served two terms as Delaware's attorney general before declaring a run for governor, and many saw in him the same aspirations that brought his father to the White House. Beau Biden also served in Delaware’s National Guard and, when sent to Iraq, received permission to wear a uniform emblazoned with a different last name so as not to receive special treatment.

That story, which Biden told Friday at a Virginia air force base, was one of the many moments in which Biden’s son defined the Memorial Day weekend. After beginning with an emotional remembrance of his late son, Biden acknowledged the unheralded sacrifices made by the service members and their families.

“You are the very best of what America has to offer,” Biden said then.

Biden also underscored his recent decision to pull troops out of Afghanistan later this year, expressing gratitude to service members who took multiple tours of duty in America’s longest war.

He largely avoided the particulars of international affairs on Sunday, though he pledged to press Russia’s Vladimir Putin on human rights during their summit in Geneva next month and said that the moment was right to show the world, and namely China, that the United States was ready to lead again after four years of a largely inward-looking foreign policy under President Donald Trump.

“It’s time to remind everybody who we are,” he said.



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Texas Dems walkout on restrictive voting bill, blocking passage

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Texas Democrats pulled off a dramatic, last-ditch walkout in the state House of Representatives on Sunday night to block passage of one of the most restrictive voting bills in the U.S., leaving Republicans with no choice but to abandon a midnight deadline and declare the legislative session essentially over.

The revolt is one of Democrats' biggest protests to date against GOP efforts nationwide to impose stricter election laws, and they used the spotlight to urge President Joe Biden to act on voting rights.

But the victory may be fleeting: Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, who had declared new voting laws a priority in Texas, quickly announced he would order a special session to finish the job. He called the failure of the bill “deeply disappointing” but did not say when he would drag lawmakers back to work.

“We’ve said for so many years that we want more people to participate in our democracy. And it just seems that’s not the case,” Democratic state Rep. Carl Sherman said.

One by one, Democrats left the House chamber until there was no longer the 100-member quorum needed to pass Senate Bill 7, which would have reduced polling hours, empowered poll watchers and scaled back ways to vote in Texas, which already has some of the nation’s strictest voting laws.

They gathered later outside a Black church, driving home their anger over a last-minute change to the Texas bill that would have prohibited Sunday voting before 1 p.m., when many Black worshippers go to the polls. Democrats said they did not go into the House vote intending to break quorum, but instead became fed-up after Republicans repeatedly refused to take their questions while racing to pass the bill.

It was a stunning turnabout from just 24 hours earlier, when the bill seemed all but guaranteed to reach Abbott's desk. The Texas Senate had signed off before sunrise earlier Sunday after Republicans, who hold an 18-13 majority in the chamber, used a bare-knuckle procedural move to suspend the rules and take up the measure in the middle of the night.

But as the day wore on in the House, the GOP's chances wobbled. State Rep. Chris Turner, the Democratic House leader, said he sent a text message to members of his caucus at 10:35 p.m. telling them to leave the chamber. But by that point, the exodus was already well underway.

“We knew today, with the eyes of the nation watching actions in Austin, that we needed to send a message, and that message is very, very clear: Mr. President, we need a national response to federal voting rights,” Democratic state Rep. Trey Martinez Fischer said.

Republicans showed restraint in criticizing Democrats for the move.

“I am disappointed that some members decided to break quorum,” said Republican state Rep. Briscoe Cain, who carried the bill in the House. “We all know what that meant. I understand why they were doing it, but we all took an oath to Texans that we would be here to do our jobs.”

Texas is the last big battleground in Republicans’ campaign to tighten voting laws, driven by former President Donald Trump’s false claims that the 2020 election was stolen from him. Georgia and Florida have also passed new voting restrictions, and Biden on Saturday had unfavorably compared Texas’ bill to election changes in those states as “an assault on democracy.”

Under revisions during closed-door negotiations, Republicans added language to the 67-page measure that could have made it easier for a judge to overturn an election. The bill would have also eliminated drive-thru voting and 24-hour polling centers, both of which Harris County introduced last year. Houston is in Harris County, the state’s largest Democratic stronghold.

Major corporations joined the backlash, including Texas-based American Airlines and Dell, warning that the efforts could harm democracy and the economic climate. But Republicans shrugged off their objections, and in some cases, ripped business leaders for speaking out. By the time the Texas bill was poised to pass over the Memorial Day weekend, the opposition from businesses had grown faint.

Since Trump’s defeat, at least 14 states have enacted more restrictive voting laws, according to the New York-based Brennan Center for Justice. It has counted nearly 400 bills filed this year nationwide that would restrict voting.

It was not the first time Texas Democrats — who have been out of power in the state Capitol for decades — have been able to block contentious legislation despite being outnumbered.

They twice broke quorum in 2003 to stop Republican efforts to redraw voting maps, at one point leaving the state for Oklahoma. A decade later, former state Sen. Wendy Davis ran out the clock on a sweeping anti-abortion bill with a filibuster that lasted more than 11 hours, propelling her to a failed run for governor.

But in each instance, Republicans ultimately prevailed.

“We may have won the war tonight but the battle is not over,” Democratic state Rep. Nicole Collier said. “We will continue to fight and speak out against those measures that attempt to silence our voices.”

___

Associated Press writer Jim Vertuno contributed to this report.



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Santa Rosa police chase ends in gun charges

SANTA ROSA (BCN) -- A 28-year-old Santa Rosa man was arrested and booked on gun charges after allegedly leading police on a brief chase Sunday night through Santa Rosa.

An officer in the area of Maple Avenue and South E Street saw a vehicle that was driving recklessly at about 6:50 p.m. Sunday and attempted to stop the vehicle, police said.

The suspect didn't stop, and instead fled west on Highway 12 in his vehicle as police pursued him, police said.

The pursuit ended after officers lost sight of the vehicle around Stony Point Road and Glenbrook Drive, police said. But when police inspected the neighborhood around Glenwood Drive and Fernwood Court, a resident directed the officer to the end of Fernwood, where the suspect had stopped.

Police arrested the suspect without incident, and a search of the vehicle revealed an unregistered, loaded 9mm semi-automatic pistol, police said.

The suspect, identified as Brandon Gomez, 28, of Santa Rosa, was booked at the Sonoma County Jail on suspicion of several offenses, including evading a peace officer, possession of a loaded unregistered firearm and possession of an unregistered gun.

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'Olfactory training' can help COVID patients regain smell, studies say

(NEXSTAR) – Over a year into the coronavirus pandemic, COVID-19 “long-haulers” may be feeling a sense of urgency about their sense of smell.

Recent studies estimate that about 10% of COVID-19 patients experience lingering, persistent symptoms, including respiratory issues, fatigue, headaches or even brain fog. But another one of the most common side effects — loss of smell — may be just as upsetting.

“If you had to choose a sense to lose, most people would probably pick smell loss,” said Dr. Toby O. Steele, of UC Davis Health. “But when it’s gone, you’re not enjoying food, you’re losing weight. You can’t detect whether the milk is spoiled. … It’s a huge driver of quality of life.”

Steele is an assistant professor in the Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, where he specializes in sinonasal and skull-base disorders. He also works with patients from UC Davis Health's new post-COVID-19 specialty clinic, which specifically aims to study and treat patients with symptoms that seem to persist for months, and often even longer.

“I still have patients who still have persistent smell or taste disfunction a year out,” Steele said.

Based on studies, Steele says UC Davis Health estimates that smell loss, or anosmia, affects between 5% and 10% of all COVID patients — and not just the “long-haulers” with persistent symptoms. Some simply suffer from a reduced ability to smell, known as hyposmia or microsmia, while others experience even stranger symptoms, such as smelling an odor that isn’t there or having a smell be “distorted” by the brain.

“Many people are finding an alteration in their sense of smell,” Steele said. “They don’t enjoy their frosted flakes anymore, or the scents that they loved, they can no longer stand the smell of. That’s important for people to know, because it can be alarming.”

Loss of smell, however, isn’t a symptom that only COVID patients experience. “Post-viral olfactory loss” can present in flu patients or those with especially severe respiratory infections, Steele said. But after the COVID-19 pandemic brought the issue to light, there’s more interest in treating it.

“It’s the silver lining in the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Steele. “Smell and taste disorders, prior to the pandemic, took more of a backseat. Now, we have more time, more money from the federal government to research identifying mechanisms … or potentially therapeutic or treatment options.”

To that end, Steele has been working with fellow faculty members, including UC Davis professor Qizhi Gong, Ph.D, among others, to identify treatments for those experiencing loss of smell. So far, Steele has observed favorable results with an approach that treats two different mechanisms by which a patient can lose their sense of smell: the conductive pathway and the neural pathway. Issues that affect the former generally tend to inhibit olfactory receptors in the nasal cavity, while issues that affect the latter inhibit the brain’s ability to recognize the signals from those receptors.

“This is where olfactory training may help,” said Steele, who recommends a two-pronged approach. First, he suggests buying four different essential oils — lemon, rose, clove and eucalyptus — and smelling each for 10 seconds twice a day.

“You’re looking at the odor, you’re telling your brain, 'This is rose,' and you’re trying to reestablish that neural connection,” he said, citing studies that show between 30% and 40% of patients who practice this method recover some sense of smell within three to six months.

Steele pairs this treatment with a nasal rinse containing Budesonide, a prescription anti-inflammatory.

“That part doesn’t make a ton of sense," he admits. "We don’t think COVID affects the conductive pathway. But what the medicated rinse is doing setting up an environment in which those smell nerves are going to succeed."

Together, these two methods result in “significantly better” recovery, with research showing “40% or 50%” of patients showing improvement three to six months, Steele said.

Of course, patients can also hope for “spontaneous recovery,” or essentially doing nothing and waiting for their sense of smell to return. Steele said there’s a “good chance” this may work, seeing as about two-thirds of patients who suffer from anosmia after recovering from other respiratory viruses regain their smell within a year.

“But with COVID, we don’t know,” he said.

The best course of action, Steele said, is to talk to a primary care doctor about possible treatments or make an appointment to see an ear, nose and throat specialist to discuss anti-inflammatory rinses. But he’s equally as passionate about olfactory training and urges those with smell loss to head to the store, buy some essential oils and give it a shot.

“You may have some level of control over this outcome, and I think that is a motivating factor,” he said. “And don’t give up. If you’re not seeing results right away, don’t give up. Because it can take time.”



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