Two meetings set Monday in Orange County on coronavirus

Orange County supervisors held an emergency meeting Monday morning to discuss a plan to train first responders and medical providers on how to handle coronavirus patients.

In the afternoon, a federal judge will continue a hearing for a temporary restraining order to block plans to house patients of the virus, known as COVID-19, at Fairview Developmental Center in Costa Mesa, which may be moot since federal authorities on Friday said they have dropped the plans.

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"I think the fact that we succeeded in pushing back on Fairview being a repository of COVID-19 patients doesn't mean we're in the clear as a county," Orange County Supervisor Andrew Do said. "We have been given warning by the CDC and World Health Organization today that this pandemic may be severe, so it is time for us to look internally and make sure we have an adequate plan in place. ... We need a game plan and playbook in place so we don't make mistakes."

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Costa Mesa Mayor Katrina Foley said, "I think that's an excellent idea," and noted that city officials were also in the process of assembling a plan for confronting the virus if there is a local outbreak.

Costa Mesa and county officials are still geared up for the TRO hearing in federal court Monday, despite what federal authorities said in court papers.

"We're still going to court on Monday because they have not been willing to confirm with us that this site won't be considered in the future, so we want to nail that down," Foley told City News Service on Friday.

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The federal government's announcement in court papers filed on Friday followed a 3 1/2-hour meeting held Thursday among state, federal and local officials on the plan that U.S. District Judge Josephine Staton put on hold Monday.

According to a Friday court filing, federal authorities have "determined, as it informed the state today ...,  that it now does not need to use the Fairview Developmental Center site to maintain a federal quarantine of passengers from the Diamond Princess cruise ship. This development reflects the imminent end of the quarantine period for those passengers, as well as the unexpectedly small number of passengers who have tested positive for COVID- 19."

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Initially, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated that "as many as 50% of the passengers (from the cruise ship that was quarantined while docked in Japan) could test positive within the quarantine period; in fact, actual results have been much, much lower," according to the court document.

Federal authorities said, however, the restraining order "deprived public health officials of a secure quarantine facility at a time when such a facility was badly needed, and has occupied key hospital resources in other counties at a time when those resources were needed for other patients. This litigation has also consumed myriad other state and federal resources, including the attention of key public health officials, at a time when the state is working to marshal every available resource to protect the public. Because the situation has evolved, and because state public health officials have found new ways to confront that evolving situation, this case is now moot."

Orange County Supervisor Andrew Do, the vice chairman of the board, said, "I am glad the federal and state governments are doing the right thing after our conference yesterday (Thursday). It was clear there was insufficient information to support Fairview being the right and appropriate location for COVID-19 patients."

Do said there was "the lack of an operational plan and all of the information pertinent to the course of treatment, the handling of the patients and personnel that would be serving those patients."