Hereâs a look at the top stories of the last week, including Newsom's reopening plans and California's cautious coronavirus optimism.
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[Los Angeles Times]
Essential California
May 2, 2020
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Good morning, and welcome to the [Essential California newsletter](. It is Saturday, May 2.
Hereâs a look at the top stories of the last week:
A reopening plan. Gov. Gavin Newsom introduced [the clearest plan yet]( of how California might lift restrictions in four stages. Some businesses [could reopen within weeks](.
What does life after a pandemic look like, anyway? Itâs a question without clear answers, and Californiaâs businesses and industries are trying to chart a path forward.
- Hotel staff will be happy to see you, but maybe [without buffets, free cookies and happy hours](.
- Hollywood considers [digital releases and documentary techniques](.
- Building dense cities was supposed to be Californiaâs cure for the housing crisis. [Then came coronavirus](.
Hand sanitizer legends. Legend has it that a Latina nurse in Bakersfield invented hand sanitizer, the liquid gold of the coronavirus era. And legend has it mostly wrong. But that hasnât stopped people from [embracing the story as positive folklore](.
Promising treatment. Government researchers say a drug developed by a California company to treat Ebola could aid the fight against the coronavirus. Early results in a clinical trial found remdesivir [helped patients with advanced cases recover faster](.
Cautious messaging. But despite the enthusiasm, California officials [still have a lot to do]( before they can meet the technological benchmarks that Newsom set to reopen the economy and lift restrictions on daily life. And they know [lockdown fatigue is a growing problem](.
Pressure to reopen. Some local officials are taking reopening into their own hands. Six San Francisco Bay Area counties will allow all construction projects, real estate transactions and certain outdoor businesses [to resume operations](. Rural Modoc County was letting [all businesses, schools and churches to reopen](.
The beach beckons. Newsom directed the temporary [âhard closeâ of state and local beaches]( in Orange County after thousands of Californians flocked to the shoreline there last weekend in defiance of a statewide stay-at-home order.
Backlash. For some, it was a step too far. To surfers and cooped-up people who just want to dip their toes in the sand after six weeks of stay-at-home orders, the closure touched a nerve in a state where a day at the beach [is akin to a birthright](.
Students sue. The University of California and California State University systems are being sued by students [demanding refunds of some mandatory fees]( as campuses shutter classrooms and move to online learning.
Coronavirus behind bars. Most of the inmates at the federal prison at Terminal Island in San Pedro have tested positive for the coronavirus in what has become the nationâs [worst outbreak in a federal penitentiary](.
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This weekâs most popular stories in Essential California
1. Hereâs when stay-at-home orders are expiring in each of Californiaâs 58 counties. [Los Angeles Times](
2. Films that were set for SXSW will appear exclusively on Amazon Prime Video. [Los Angeles Times](
3. A seaside Irish village adopts Matt Damon. [New York Times](
4. âThe Windowâ by Raymond Carver. [The Writerâs Almanac](
5. Three Cane Corso dogs were saved after roaming Angeles National Forest for weeks. [Los Angeles Times](
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ICYMI, here are this weekâs great reads
The COVID-19 pandemic is unleashing a wave of labor unrest across California and the nation. As workers flex their muscles, ratcheting up demands on employers, will they usher in a new era of collective bargaining? [Los Angeles Times](
âHow Anthony Fauci became Americaâs doctor.â This in-depth profile of the countryâs leading expert on infectious disease came out a few weeks ago, but itâs deeply fascinating reading for anyone who missed it the first time around. [New Yorker](
They came to make art in isolation; the pandemic forced them to stay. How canceled residencies across the U.S. endanger an artistic ecosystem. [Los Angeles Times](
Why the coronavirus is so confusing: If you arenât reading science writer Ed Yongâs work at The Atlantic right now, you should be. Heâs consistently delivering some of the most thoughtful and cogent work on the topic that Iâve seen anywhere. Hereâs his âguide to making sense of a problem that is now too big for any one person to fully comprehend.â [The Atlantic](
Poem of the week: âWaiting for the Barbariansâ by C.P. Cavafy. [Poetry Foundation](
Please let us know what we can do to make this newsletter more useful to you. Send comments, complaints, ideas and unrelated book recommendations to [Julia Wick.](mailto:julia.wick@latimes.com) Follow her on Twitter [@Sherlyholmes](. (And a giant thanks to the legendary [Laura Blasey]( for all her help on the Saturday edition.)
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