County makes positive strides against pandemic

San Diego Board of Supervisors Chair Nathan Fletcher held the State of the County address from the coun­ty’s Emergency Medical Operation Center on Feb. 18. Major topics of the address were the county’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic, post pan­demic recovery, racial equality and ra­cial injustice, economic injustice, and the continuation of County led projects such as Waterfront Park and the San Diego River Park and its commitment to the environment.

“From this modest warehouse, this region, massive mobilization was equipped with masks, ventilators, test­ing supplies, PPE, and now vaccines. At its heart, thousands of dedicated workers responding to the ever chang­ing incredibly challenging pandemic of the last year,” said Fletcher. “A year that has tested us and sometimes di­vided us. A year of tremendous sacri­fice and a year of tremendous loss. A year that has showed us the very best of each other, and sadly, some of the worse. But through it all we never gave up. We are still battling COVID-19, but the tide is turning. I have no doubt that the state of our county is resilient.”

Fletcher said together, the commu­nity is ready to rise, rebuild the econ­omy, education, and that the County’s commitment is comprehensive action to make life fundamentally better for all.

“Our immediate priority continues to be controlling and defeating coronavi­rus. COVID cases are down, vaccina­tions are up, and hospitalizations are stabilized. But we must continue to be resilient,” he said.

In January, the county launched the state’s first county vaccination super­station at Petco Park. There are now five superstations and more than 15 community points of distribution in the areas hit hardest by COVID, said Fletcher.

“Together with our healthcare partners, San Diego County has administered more than 684,000 vaccines,” he said. “But that is not enough. We have to do more. We stand ready to offer vaccines to those with underlying conditions and disabilities on March 15.”

Fletcher said leading the coun­ty’s public health response has been a daily choice between bad options and worse options, trying to do the least harm.

“We are delivering over $300 million in economic aid to families, small business and nonprofits, but it did not stop the pain,” he said. “It barely softened the blow. There are too many small businesses on the brink, and too many families pushed to the edge.”

Fletcher said the county will always honor its commitment to the unincorporated community. He said even with crime rates at historic lows, the priority on public safety cannot be lost.

“We have an opportunity to do more making fairness, justice and opportunity a core principle guid­ing our actions,” he said. “Our com­munity cannot rise to its full poten­tial, if so many San Diegans are prevented from ever rising at all.”

Fletcher said working with Su­pervisor Joel Anderson, they will help develop strategies to help re­build and relaunch our local econ­omy safely, and we will not leave small businesses and industries hardest hit by COVID behind.

“We will also join the call of the San Diego Regional Economic Corporation to increase county contracting with local businesses,” he said. “A 5% increase would inject $75 million more into our annual economy.”

Anderson said that his partner­ship with Chairman Fletcher on transparency, closing illegal pot shops, and park funding in District 2 has already shown results for his district and county residents.

“I look forward to working with him on developing a post COVID economic recovery plan,” said Anderson. “In the coming year I anticipate collaborating wit all of my board colleagues on the many issues we share common interest.”

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