Palo Alto Weekly May 8, 2020

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Palo Alto

Vol. XLI, Number 31 Q May 8, 2020

Palo Alto revives recreational offerings Page 5

Read up-to-the-minute news on PaloAltoOnline.com Q Upfront School seniors lament losing rites of passage Q Spectrum Why it’s time to try herd immunity Q Upfront Yellow fever epidemic offers lessons

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Designed to adapt. Ready for your emergency. We continue serving our community’s adults and children. As one of the most advanced trauma centers in the world, we are uniquely equipped to handle all cases at all times, even in unprecedented circumstances. No one anticipated COVID-19, but our systems have allowed us to adapt while maintaining the highest standards for safety. Our new infection control procedures include digital technology for triaging your condition, allowing for separate spaces for COVID-19 patients. Emergency teams use fresh personal protective equipment (PPE) as well as extra air filtering and cleaning methods to sterilize your exam room before and after your visit. We are ready for your emergency. stanfordhealthcare.org/emergencyready

Marc and Laura Andreessen Emergency Department 1199 Welch Road • Stanford, CA 94304

Page 2 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com

Pediatric Emergency Department 900 Quarry Road Extension • Palo Alto, CA 94304


www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 3


SMART TIPS To Prevent Food Waste

Because Food Is Too Good To Waste 26% of Palo Alto’s residential garbage is composed of food that went bad and was thrown away—let's reduce this waste! Sheltering-in-place has led most of us to eat more meals at home and reduce trips to the store. is means we are purchasing more groceries than usual. Make sure your food stays fresh and tasty for as long as possible and gets eaten, not thrown away. Here are a few tips to get you started. For more tips and videos, visit www.cityofpaloalto.org/foodwaste

MAKE THE MOST OF EACH SHOPPING TRIP:

Organize!

Label containers.

Store foods to last.

Use up what you have.

Refrigerator: Put items that will spoil first in the front, and group them together. Use an “Eat is First” sign to prompt you to use them.

Store food in clear containers if possible. Include the date and contents.

Did you know that wrapping a head of lettuce in a moist towel, and placing it in an airtight container in the refrigerator helps it last longer? For more best practices, visit savethefood.com/storage

Casseroles, frittatas, soups and smoothies are great ways to use le overs and items in your “Eat is First” area. Search for websites that provide recipes for using le over ingredients, such as Meal Hero. Freeze what you can’t eat right away.

Pantry: Grains, spices and canned foods are best kept in the same area so you can quickly see what you have. Clear containers work best.

For more food waste reduction tips, visit

www.cityofpaloalto.org/foodwaste zerowaste@cityofpaloalto.org (650) 496-5910

Page 4 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com


Upfront

Local news, information and analysis

Lagging behind, county tries to boost COVID testing Concerned local leaders push for greater coordination, problem solving by Sue Dremann and Gennady Sheyner

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ike many people who are older, Palo Alto City Councilwoman Liz Kniss wanted to get tested for COVID-19. But though she tried, she wasn’t eligible for one in Santa Clara County. She went to one of Stanford Health Care’s drive-thru

coronavirus-test sites for help. “I got fairly far. The governor said that (people like me) can get one because of my age, but they indicated that I did not have sufficient symptoms,” said Kniss, who is over 60. So on Wednesday, Kniss drove

to Alameda County — to the Hayward COVID-19 Testing Center at California State University, East Bay, which tested her because she is in a high-risk group, regardless of her county of residency. Kniss didn’t need an appointment, and the nasal swab procedure took about 20 minutes. “It was easy,” she said of the drive-up procedure. “I’ll have the test results tomorrow morning.” By 9:30 a.m. on Thursday, she

had her answer: Her test came back negative. Kniss apparently is far from alone in leaving Santa Clara County to get assessed for the coronavirus. Another Alameda County city, Fremont, began a drive-thru testing program six weeks ago, spearheaded by the fire chief. As many as 40% of the people tested in Fremont have come from Santa Clara County, according to fire Chief Curtis

Jacobson. As Los Angeles County and, this week, Sacramento County announced coronavirus testing for all of their residents, including those exhibiting no symptoms, Santa Clara County has lagged behind — to the frustration of local leaders like Kniss. The numbers show the shortfall. The county needs to be able to (continued on page 32)

CITY HALL

City budget deficit nears $40M Palo Alto prepares for massive cuts due to COVID-19 shutdown by Gennady Sheyner

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Magali Gauthier

Liza Kolbasov, a senior at Gunn High School, said she has been waiting to celebrate her final rites of passage before heading off to college ever since her freshman year. But what she misses most is not having the opportunity to say goodbye to her classmates.

EDUCATION

‘I didn’t get to say goodbye’ Graduating seniors grapple with unexpected ending to their high school careers

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iza Kolbasov has been stacking old homework assignments, tests and notes on a shelf in her closet since her freshman year in anticipation of throwing them into the air with her classmates on the last day of school, a treasured end-of-year tradition for Gunn High School seniors. But with school closed, the paper toss won’t be happening this year — nor the senior picnic, baccalaureate, awards night, yearbook signings and

by Elena Kadvany other rites of passage that students look forward to for much of their educational careers. Some local high schools have decided to postpone the most significant of those celebrations, graduation, in the hopes they will be able to mark that milestone with seniors and their families in person later this year, while other schools are planning virtual commencements. Schools and students are organizing socially distant replacements for events, including

virtual awards nights and, in Palo Alto, a “shout out” in residential front yards for seniors on what would have been graduation night for the city’s two public high schools. In interviews, Midpeninsula seniors expressed disappointment at how the coronavirus has upended their final chapter of high school and all the traditions that come with it. But the most difficult pill to swallow, they said, is the lost time with friends and classmates. They

left their campuses in March not knowing they wouldn’t return. “The things I’m the most missing right now aren’t actually the specific traditions but the fact I’m never going to see 95% of my class again,” Kolbasov said. “I didn’t get to say goodbye to them. I’m ... not getting to savor that last bit of time that we’re supposed to have.” For Paula Sias of Mountain View High School, senior year represented the final chapter of her childhood. There were a lot of tearful FaceTime sessions with friends when they found out they wouldn’t be able to celebrate that time together, in person. “Senior year is supposed to

ith the local economy in free fall, the Palo Alto City Council decided on May 4 to cut nearly $40 million from next year’s budget, a move that is expected to put a dent in City Hall’s staffing level and require the elimination of popular programs and services. Now, it is preparing to tackle a trickier question: What exactly should the city cut? That painful conversation will begin to unfold on Monday, May 11, when Administrative Services Department staff returns with possible options for achieving the expense reductions. The projected shortfall presumes that socialdistancing measures will remain for some time; that people will be reluctant to — or prohibited from — travel and from major events; and that the recovery will take many months. Staff presented the grim budget scenario to the council as the most dire of the three options, with the most optimistic scenario depicting a speedy recovery and the middle scenario projecting a $21.3 million revenue drop. But the council agreed that a speedy recovery is at this point an impossible alternative and the more moderate option is a highly unlikely one. Staff’s worstcase scenario, which includes a $38.8-million revenue drop, is actually the most likely one, the council agreed by a unanimous vote. “Everything is going to be on the cutting floor,” Mayor Adrian

(continued on page 35) (continued on page 14)

www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 5


Upfront 450 Cambridge Ave., Palo Alto, CA 94306 (650) 326-8210

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

PUBLISHER William S. Johnson (223-6505) EDITORIAL Editor Jocelyn Dong (223-6514) Associate Editor Linda Taaffe (223-6511) Sports Editor Rick Eymer (223-6516) Arts & Entertainment Editor Karla Kane (223-6517) Home & Real Estate Editor Heather Zimmerman (223-6515) Express & Digital Editor Jamey Padojino (223-6524) Staff Writers Sue Dremann (223-6518), Elena Kadvany (223-6519), Gennady Sheyner (223-6513)

It’s a moving target all of the time. Scott Boyd, associate professor of pathology at Stanford School of Medicine, on the availability of COVID-19 testing supplies. See story on page 5.

Chief Visual Journalist Magali Gauthier (223-6530) Editorial Assistant/Intern Coordinator Lloyd Lee (223-6526)

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FINDING YOUR IMMUNITY FROM DISEASE

ADVERTISING SERVICES Advertising Services Manager Kevin Legarda (223-6597) Sales & Production Coordinators Diane Martin (223-6584), Nico Navarrete (223-6582) DESIGN Design & Production Manager Kristin Brown (223-6562) Senior Designers Linda Atilano, Paul Llewellyn Designers Kevin Legnon, Amy Levine, Douglas Young BUSINESS Assistant Business Manager Gwen Fischer (223-6575) Business Associates Jennifer Lindberg (223-6542), Suzanne Ogawa (223-6543) ADMINISTRATION

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Christian Science church of Palo Alto, CA—USA invites you to a live interactive webinar with Q&A, featuring guest speaker Michelle Nanouche, CSB — a practitioner and teacher of Christian Science healing from Paris, France.

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The Palo Alto Weekly (ISSN 0199-1159) is published every Friday by Embarcadero Media, 450 Cambridge Ave., Palo Alto, CA 94306, (650) 326-8210. Periodicals postage paid at Palo Alto, CA and additional mailing offices. Adjudicated a newspaper of general circulation for Santa Clara County. The Palo Alto Weekly is delivered to homes in Palo Alto, Menlo Park, Atherton, Portola Valley, East Palo Alto, to faculty and staff households on the Stanford campus and to portions of Los Altos Hills. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Palo Alto Weekly, 450 Cambridge Ave., Palo Alto, CA 94306. ©2020 by Embarcadero Media. All rights reserved. Reproduction without permission is strictly prohibited. The Palo Alto Weekly is available on the Internet via Palo Alto Online at: www.PaloAltoOnline.com Our email addresses are: editor@paweekly.com, letters@paweekly.com, digitalads@paweekly.com, ads@paweekly.com Missed delivery or start/stop your paper? Email circulation@paweekly.com. You may also subscribe online at PaloAltoOnline.com. Subscriptions are $120/yr.

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Around Town LANDMARK DONATION ... Who’s the local business leader who donated 1 million face shields for health care workers this week? Few people know the donor’s identity, except for the fact that he or she is a generous executive in the region, Silicon Valley Leadership Group CEO Carl Guardino said at a May 6 press conference in Palo Alto. As of Wednesday morning, Guardino confirmed that at least 713,500 of the donated face shields will be used by hospitals in the region. The shields also will be offered to other parts of the country in need of the equipment. “These face shields further protect our front-line workers by making sure that they are completely covered as they treat their patients,” Guardino said from a podium outside of Stanford Health Care’s Pediatric Ambulatory Care Center next to a large teddy bear sporting the protective gear. “This amazing life-saving gift that we received today on behalf of our caregivers could not come at a better time,” said Stanford Children’s Health CEO Paul King. He said the equipment will be dispersed throughout Stanford Medicine. “The whole goal we have right now is to figure out how to test as many people as we can in our community and we cannot do that without these face shields,” Board of Supervisors President Cindy Chavez said. FEEDING THE HUNGRY ... The coronavirus pandemic has given birth to a new community group, Operation Contagious Generosity, which is collecting donations of groceries on a weekly basis to distribute to people in need during the health crisis. The effort began six weeks ago with one couple, parishioners at Palo Alto Vineyard Church, who gathered eight bags of groceries that they handed out to people living in cars near Mountain View’s Rengstorff Park, Susan Van Riesen, the church’s lead pastor, told the Weekly in an email. The couple invited

other members of the church to join. Less than two months later, the act of kindness has evolved into a volunteer network whose members spend their Fridays collecting more than 210 bags of groceries to give away. The group has volunteer “hub houses” where groceries are gathered before a team of volunteer drivers pick them up and prep them for distribution, Van Riesen said. The operation has connected with Reach Potential Network to handle the distributions. The partnership has led to the distribution of roughly 40 grocery bags to residents at Buena Vista Mobile Home Park on Tuesdays along with lunches for children provided by the Palo Alto Unified SchoolÊ District. SUPPORT FROM AFAR ... The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (CZI) is launching a new campaign to support local teachers “as they navigate their new normal” by providing $1.2 million to fund distance learning projects, the nonprofit announced Thursday, May 7. The grant is going to DonorsChoose, a nonprofit that connects teachers in high-need communities with donors. In a DonorsChoose survey, more than 4,000 teachers estimated that 68% of their students lack the resources they need to learn at home. Through the grant program, teachers will be able to request the supplies and equipment needed for distancelearning, such as notebooks, laptops and Wi-Fi hot spots. Teachers also can use the funds to meet students’ basic needs, such as purchasing groceries. In the Bay Area, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative is providing donations of up to $300 to teachers in Santa Clara, San Mateo, Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin and San Francisco counties who teach at schools where 50% or more of students qualify for free or reduced-price lunch, for a total of $750,000 going to local teachers. Donations will be applied to projects that cost up to $1,000 while funds last, and limited to one project per teacher. Q


Upfront COMMUNITY SERVICES

City cautiously opens recreational spaces Palo Alto also prepares to divert cars from bike boulevards to help cyclists maintain distance by Gennady Sheyner

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planned to issue guidelines on Thursday that would allow bookstores, clothing stores and other businesses that can accommodate curbside pickup of purchases to reopen as early as this Friday, subject to county approval. Palo Alto’s decision to reopen parking lots next to two major nature preserves — the Baylands, and Foothills Park — responds to both the county’s guidance and a local outcry over the closures, implemented on March 27. Critics have maintained over the past month that it is foolish to limit access to vast nature preserves where keeping a physical distance is relatively easy. Others argued that closing off parking lots limits entrance to these preserves to only the fittest residents. Michael Zent called the closures of those parking lots “absolutely ridiculous.” In Arastradero Preserve, where parking lots remain closed, it is possible to stay 50 feet away from other people, he wrote to the council Saturday. “People need to get out in nature, and the arbitrary closure of this park is totally and completely

unnecessary! What happened to common sense?” Zent wrote. Shikada and Mayor Adrian Fine both indicated on May 1 during their streamed “Table Talk” program that the parking lots near the nature areas will be open only on weekdays. Shikada also said that the city will take measures to ensure social distancing. “We want to make sure we’re providing an environment in which users can have that maintained, including one-way trails,” Shikada said. Palo Alto also is considering reopening the Baylands Golf Links, though the recently renovated course may be limited to solitary golfers pulling their own handcarts, said Kristen O’Kane, director of the Community Services Department, which is per state guidelines. She said her department is trying to determine whether, given these socialdistance restrictions, the course would be financially viable. The use of athletic courts and fields also will be restricted to ensure social distancing. Residents will only be allowed to play

Magali Gauthier.

alo Alto’s basketball, pickleball and tennis courts reopened Wednesday after a monthlong hiatus, as did parking lots near the city’s nature preserves. City Manager Ed Shikada announced the plan Monday night, one of several signs that the pandemic freeze that began in March is starting to slowly thaw. The city also planned to resume construction work this week on the California Avenue garage and the new bike bridge over the U.S. Highway 101 — projects that were briefly suspended. The city’s building inspectors also have resumed making appointments with local property owners to visit construction projects, Shikada said. The city’s moves follow the recent easing of restrictions on the county and state levels. Santa Clara County last week modified its own health order, allowing outdoor recreation facilities to reopen and letting construction projects, landscaping services and real estate showings resume. And on Monday afternoon, California Gov. Gavin Newsom said that he

Tim Lieu plays pickleball at Mitchell Park in Palo Alto on May 6. The city reopened the courts on Wednesday. with members of their specific households. In addition to reopening shuttered facilities, Palo Alto also aimed to advance later this week its plan to divert cars from three existing bike boulevards. Chief Transportation Official Philip Kamhi said Monday that the program would be limited to Bryant Street, Ross Road and Park Boulevard. Drivers won’t be banned so much as discouraged from taking these streets with signage. “We’re hoping it will end up lowering the volume and speed on those streets and they won’t be used for cut-through,” Kamhi said. The city chose these streets because they’re already part of the

bike network and, as such, have relatively low car volumes. The approach is modeled after similar efforts in Minneapolis, Denver and Oakland, which restricted cars along 74 miles of bike boulevards as part of its “slow streets” initiative to help cyclists maintain a safe distance from one another and pedestrians. Kamhi said the city will not prevent deliveries on these streets, keep residents or visitors from driving on the roadways or issue citations to drivers. “It’s really to discourage nonlocal traffic,” Kamhi said. Q Staff Writer Gennady Sheyner can be emailed at gsheyner@ paweekly.com.

WE ARE IN THIS TOGETHER Limit the Spread of Coronavirus Shelter in Place: It Will Save Lives. Stay Home If You Are Sick. If You Must Go Out, Follow Social Distancing Guidance.

Be Well Stay Connected, Check on Your Neighbors, Volunteer Support Local Businesses Parks and Open Space Preserves are Open Community Resources are Available

www.cityofpaloalto.org/coronavirus www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 7


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www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 9


Upfront BUSINESS

As businesses fight for survival, Palo Alto launches relief program Grants limited to businesses that have been in town for at least 12 months, have 50 or fewer employees

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mall businesses in Palo Alto that have been rattled by the COVID-19 shutdown could be eligible for grants of up to $10,000 from the city under a program that the City Council approved Monday night. The council voted 5-2, with council members Alison Cormack and Eric Filseth dissenting, to launch the new program with $500,000 in city funds. The grant program also will allow corporations and community members to contribute funding, much like the business-relief effort that Mountain View created in late March with Google’s support.

by Gennady Sheyner Unlike other business relief programs, including the one in Mountain View, Palo Alto’s will use a lottery to select grant recipients rather than a first-come, first-served approach. It will be restricted to businesses that have Palo Alto storefronts, are participating in the city’s business registry and employ between one and 50 workers. In approving the program, council members characterized it as a positive gesture toward the business community, which has been in free fall since the economic shutdown began on March 17. Some downtown businesses,

including Dan Gordon’s, have permanently closed, while others have reported that they’re barely hanging on. “It’s really hard to listen to what’s happening in our community,” said Councilwoman Liz Kniss, who participated in three roundtable discussions that included more than 50 business owners in the prior week. “There’s some heartbreak out there. And it’s pretty clear everything is not going to reopen. That’s one of the most difficult things that we’re hearing.” Kniss said that during these events, business owners talked

about their trouble getting funding from the federal Paycheck Protection Program and suggested that the city suspend its Residential Preferential Parking program, which limits how many employees can park in residential neighborhoods. “They are also looking for guidance, looking for support. They are also looking for some hope at this point. It was very difficult to hear this,” Kniss said. Cormack, who also has been participating in the meetings with business leaders, said some businesses have adjusted their operations to survive, with restaurants now selling items out of their pantries and dentists talking about how to provide safe space for clients. The hardest hit sector, she said, will be personal services such as physical therapists, hairdressers and nail salons. “The changes that will need to occur for these to restart are really significant,” Cormack said. The downward spiral of the retail industry is reflected in the

city’s grim budget projections, which now estimate a revenue drop of about $38.8 million in fiscal year 2021, which begins on July 1. Sales taxes are expected to plummet by 43%, going from $36.1 million in the current budget to $20.5 million next year. Revenues from hotel taxes are expected to plunge by 44%, from $26.6 million to $14.9 million. The business relief program aims to support cherished community institutions that are on the brink of closing down and stem the loss of revenues. The program will be limited to small businesses that have been in the city for at least 12 months and that have seen their revenues drop by more than 25% since the health emergency began. The city will partner with the Palo Alto Chamber of Commerce to collect contributions and distribute grants. While council members generally agreed that the program is worth launching, Filseth pointed (continued on page 13)

RECOGNIZING LOCAL HEROES LOCAL HERO

LOCAL HERO

Liz Prado When the Boys and Girls Clubs of the Peninsula (BGCP) had to cease in-person youth programming due to COVID-19, BGCP Chef Liz Prado had an idea: Use our clubhouse kitchens to feed local families. Within days, Liz trained staff members, recruited cooks, and launched the BGCP meal program, which now distributes 2,500 dinners each night. With her competence, experience and positivity, Liz provides hope for people in her hometown of East Palo Alto and beyond. Submitted by: Victoria Thorp

Valerie Campos Amid COVID-19 restrictions, Valerie Campos, director of adult services at the Vista Center for the Blind and Visually Impaired pivoted to mobility classes via telephone and talks on Zoom. As a Vista client/board member, I’m inspired by a can-do spirit that touches the most vulnerable among us. Submitted by: Joan Desmond In a pre-COVID-19 photo, Valerie Campos is shown in the foreground in the pink shirt and ponytail.

Have a local hero you want to recognize? Spread the joy and support our journalism efforts by giving him/her a shout-out in the Palo Alto Weekly. Submit entries at PaloAltoOnline.com/local_hero/

Page 10 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com


MAY 6 – 12 NATIONAL NURSES WEEK • MAY 10 – 16 NATIONAL HOSPITAL WEEK

Forever Grateful Now more than ever — National Nurses and Hospital Weeks remind us to reflect on how grateful we are for our outstanding team. Every day whether at the bedside with patients and families or working behind the scenes, our employees, volunteers and doctors demonstrate their compassion and dedication to our community. We thank them for their unwavering commitment to provide the exceptional and safe care you deserve even under the most challenging of circumstances.

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www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 11


Upfront COMMUNITY

Palo Alto Weekly Holiday Fund gifts $465K to local nonprofits This year’s total surpasses donations in 2019

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he Palo Alto Weekly Holiday Fund raised a recordbreaking $465,000 in donations this year to support nonprofits serving children and families on the Midpeninsula. That amount is the most ever raised in the fund’s 27-year history.

by Palo Alto Weekly staff The donations were distributed in late April to 63 community organizations through grants ranging between $5,000 and $20,000 and through $1,000 college scholarships for eight high school students. Since launching in 1993, the fund has given away more

than $7.6 million. “We are especially pleased to have raised a record amount from the community this year since the needs are so great due to the current COVID-19 crisis,” Weekly Publisher Bill Johnson said this week. “The shelter-in-place orders came

days after our committee finished its review of grant applications, and our only disappointment was the need to cancel the traditional reception for donors and grantees. We are delighted to be able to push almost a half-million dollars to help more than 50 nonprofits at the exact time they need it the most.” The recipients were selected by the fund’s grant committee, a group of former and current Weekly employees, who reviewed applications for the fund. A $20,000 grant was awarded to Youth Community Services, which organizes and facilitates service projects for about 1,500 middle and high school students

per year in Palo Alto, East Palo Alto and Menlo Park. Along the way, they develop leadership skills and connect with peers of different backgrounds. Through exposure to a variety of students, young people walk away with “a sense of their own strength and ... formation of their own opinions and points of view,” Executive Director Leif Erickson said. The San Francisco 49ers Academy plans to utilize its $20,000 grant to continue supporting students in grades 6-12 by connecting them with caring adults as the organization transitions to its new (continued on page 14)

Mildred Mario (1939 – 2020) Mildred Martha Daume Mario, former chair of the Palo Alto Historic Resources Board and past president of the statewide California Preservation Foundation, known to everyone in town as Millie, died April 17th in Key West after a year-long battle with cancer. She was 80. Born in Brooklyn to German immigrant parents who had fled the collapsing Weimar Republic in 1930, she was educated in New York City public schools, and was awarded a scholarship to Hunter College. Her mother, who did not believe girls should go to college, insisted her youngest daughter join the workforce as her three sisters before her had done, so Millie embarked on a brief career as an executive secretary at CBS and Bristol Myers in Manhattan, jobs for which she freely admitted in later years she was not well suited. In 1961 she married Ernest Mario of Clifton, NJ, whose best friend, Bob Stier, had married Millie’s elder sister Edith a few years before. The couple relocated to Rhode Island, where Ernie earned his PhD and their sons Christopher and Gregory were born. In 1966 they moved to Rochester, NY, where Ernie began his career in the pharmaceutical industry. Their third son, Jeremy, was born in Rochester. In 1972 the family returned to Millie’s husband’s native New Jersey. In Princeton, Millie began what would become a lifelong devotion to historic preservation with the restoration of a landmark 1934 Tudor Revival house built by a founder of Princeton Hospital, long before historic preservation became fashionable. Ernie’s career took the couple to North Carolina and then London in the late 1980s and early 1990s, where Ernie was chief executive of Glaxo, then the second-largest pharmaceutical company in the world. In those days, it was customary for the wife of a British CEO to act as an ambassador for her husband’s company, a role Millie adopted with passion and skill, and for which she was paid the princely sum of one pound per year. As she later said, when she was first diagnosed with Stage IV cancer in March, 2019, “I’m a girl from Brooklyn who has traveled the world by private jet and I have been everywhere. I’ve had an amazing life.” In 1993, famed Palo Alto entrepreneur Alejandro Zaffaroni asked Millie’s husband to head Alza Corporation, then based on Page Mill Road. Looking for a place to live, Millie was convinced by her son Chris, who had attended Stanford a few years before, to look at a very large, very grand, and very dilapidated house on University Avenue. The John Adams Squire House would become Millie’s most ambitious and successful restoration project. A 1904 Classical Revival landmark once owned by the city and the subject of fierce political battles for decades, the house had avoided the wrecking ball more than twice. Millie’s award-winning transformation of the supposed white elephant into one of the city’s most beautiful private residences led to her appointment to the HRB, which she would chair for eight years. During Millie and her husband’s ownership, the Squire House hosted innumerable public and private events, from fundraisers to charity dinners to concerts to house tours that thousands – including Steve Jobs once – stood in line to see. Millie loved to tell the story of how the morning after one tour, on a Sunday at 6:30 a.m., her phone rang. “Hi Millie, this is Steve Jobs.” “Hi Steve. What can I do for you?” she responded. Jobs wanted to demolish a house next to his own in Old Palo Alto to plant an orchard. Would the HRB allow him to do so? “Can’t say for sure, Steve,” she said, “but we’ll consider it.” The orchard stands for all to see today. How he knew Millie’s phone number – in the days of land lines – remains a mystery.

Millie was an active participant in the life of the city and state as a board member of Palo Alto/Stanford Heritage, the Palo Alto Historical Association, and the Women’s Club of Palo Alto. She also joined the board of the California Preservation Foundation, a statewide historic preservation advocacy and educational organization, eventually serving as president. When her husband Ernie sold Alza to Johnson & Johnson in 2001, Palo Alto news reports identified Ernie as “husband of former HRB chair Mildred Mario,” which both Millie and Ernie found amusing, given his rather more well-known career as an international pharmaceutical executive. Ernie and Millie returned to the east coast in 2001 to be nearer to their children and grandchildren, eventually settling in Key West. But they maintained close ties to Palo Alto, owning an apartment at The Hamilton, the senior living condominium on Byron Street downtown, until just last year. At The Hamilton the couple befriended a who’s who of Palo Alto in the second half of the 20th century: Sam and Kim Webster, Leonard and Shirley Ely, Frank Roberts, Von and Pat Eshleman, and Emery and Nancy Rogers. Just prior to the millennium Millie fought tirelessly alongside a group of formidable local preservationists to pass Measure G, an initiative on the ballot in March, 2000, that would have prohibited the demolition of privately owned homes in historic districts in the city. Those fellow preservationists became treasured friends: historic experts Dennis Backlund and Steve Staiger, former mayors Karen Holman and Gail Woolley, builder Laura Ferrell, former council member Emily Renzel, and Millie’s best friend, lifelong Palo Altan Debbie Nichols. After Measure G was defeated, ironically on the votes of homeowners who did not live in historic districts, Millie gradually withdrew from Palo Alto politics. She was horrified in later years to see the destruction of so many historic homes, especially those designed by iconic Palo Alto architect Birge Clark. In addition to her active participation in the life of her beloved Palo Alto, Millie was an exceptional wife and a loving if strict German mother, who doted on her grandchildren. The bacon and French toast breakfasts she made for them is a memory those grandchildren will always treasure, and her loving daughtersin-law Lauren (Greg) and Jennifer (Jeremy) will never be able to replicate. Millie was uniquely tough, strong, wise, patient, opinionated, and kind. But as anyone who ever appeared before her at the HRB will recall, she had little time for doubletalk or subterfuge. She cut to the point at every opportunity. Millie saw the best in everyone, was generous with her affection and her time, and would have done absolutely anything for her grandchildren. She loved the beach, the daily New York Times crossword, Scrabble, the gym, her three sisters (Elisabeth Knocklein of Garner, NC; the late Edith Stier of Clifton, NJ, and Anna Daume of Ridgewood, NJ), a tasty Black Russian with lots of ice, and was absolutely insistent the entire family would be together for Christmas and the Fourth of July every year. Millie is survived by her husband, her three sons, and eight grandchildren: Christopher’s daughter Millicent, of Washington, DC; Gregory’s children Griffin, Chloe, Madeleine, and Brigitte, of Miami; and Jeremy’s children Gretchen, Reid, and Charles, of Durham, NC. Donations in honor of Millie’s life may be made to the Palo Alto Historical Association, Box 193, Palo Alto, CA 94302. A memorial is planned in Princeton this fall. PAID

Page 12 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com

OBITUARY


Upfront PUBLIC HEALTH

Mandatory masks? In Palo Alto, maybe so City Council wants to put ‘more grit’ behind Santa Clara County recommendation

C

oncerned that Santa Clara County hasn’t gone far enough in mandating face coverings for people venturing outside during the pandemic, Palo Alto is considering adopting its own law to make coverings a requirement. The City Council is preparing to consider the new rule on Monday, May 11. If adopted, the requirement for face coverings would apply to anyone visiting an essential business or engaging in most activities outside of the home. In proposing the new rule, council members said they were inspired by the example of Cupertino, which issued an order on April 24 requiring face coverings in most situations in which people leave their homes, including when they are taking public transportation, receiving health care or working on “essential infrastructure.” The county order has “strongly urged” people to wear face coverings but stops short of legally requiring them. This is in contrast

Business (continued from page 10)

contact tracing,” Tanaka said. Councilwoman Liz Kniss, a retired nurse, also strongly favored requiring masks, even if the requirement won’t be strictly enforced. There’s no question, Kniss said, that masks should be used by people who are going to restaurants, picking up coffee or visiting businesses. The city, she said, needs to “put some more grit behind that requirement.” Even if police officers don’t cite residents without masks, the order can be enforced “politically,” she said. “What I notice now is that people don’t hesitate to tell somebody else that they ought to have a face mask on,” Kniss said. “I think we’re far more comfortable when we have face masks on. So if we can require this as a city, which is pretty much what the county is doing, people will be more comfortable.” The issue of whether or not to require face coverings is a rare point of disagreement among Bay

selection here.” Recipients of the city’s grants also will have broad discretion on how to spend the money. Unlike in other cities, which restrict the use of grant funding to payroll or lease payments, Palo Alto plans to let business owners spend the money however they deem necessary to remain in operation. This could mean spending it on operating expenses to sustain the businesses and reopen after the stay-at-home order ends, according to Shikada’s report. The council also agreed to set the maximum grant amount at

$10,000, reasoning that this is roughly what will be required to support expenses for a small business for two months. While Mayor Adrian Fine said he’d prefer to see more grant recipients, even if it means issuing smaller grants, he voted with the council majority to support the proposal. “Although this is limited and certainly not enough, I think it’s the right thing to do — to support some of our businesses,” Fine said. Q Staff Writer Gennady Sheyner can be emailed at gsheyner@ paweekly.com.

Courtesy Eric Spector

to the city’s budget crisis and the council’s imperative to cut $38.8 million in expenses — a painful exercise that the council will begin on May 11. “We’re going to be turning down worthy programs right and left going forward. That’s what I’m struggling with,” Filseth said. “On the one hand, it’s a worthy program. On the other hand, it’s going to make our problem 1% worse.” Cormack voted against the proposal because it explicitly excluded nonprofit groups. Her colleagues, however, concluded that including nonprofits would complicate the program and make it more difficult to administer. The council also agreed that a lottery is the best way to determine who gets the funds. A report from Shikada notes that the firstcome, first-served method used by Mountain View and by the federal Small Business Administration for loans may be easier to administer but it favors those businesses who are more sophisticated in completing financial applications. A lottery system in which an applicant receives a number and then the city randomly selects numbers will eliminate that advantage. “Giving money away, I think, is not easy because the person who gets the money is delighted and the person who didn’t get the money is not only not delighted but sometimes angry and very puzzled as to why they weren’t selected,” Kniss said. “That’s why I’m so glad to see the lottery

by Gennady Sheyner to other municipalities, including San Mateo County, where coverings are required. These orders, as well as Cupertino’s, exclude from the requirement people who are engaged in outdoor recreation such as walking, hiking, bicycling or running, but those individuals are still encouraged to maintain 6 feet of separation from other people and to carry a covering that they can put on in situations where it’s difficult to maintain the required social distance. Councilman Greg Tanaka, whose company provides consulting services to retailers, said he was inspired by both Cupertino and by Shenzhen, China, which was able to reopen after the pandemic and which required everyone to wear face masks when going outside. Shenzhen, Tanaka said, is now “90% open.” “If you look at other cities that have started to reopen their economy, they’ve been able to do so safely by having face masks, having excessive random testing and

Springtime in solitude How are you spending your springtime? At a time when we’re all missing human interaction, we want to see how Weekly readers are filling their days while staying close to home. Eric Spector sent in this photo of beautiful blooms, remarking, “The cacti in Palo Alto are greeting spring too.” If you post a picture on social media of how you’re passing the time, we’ll print some of our favorites in the newspaper and on PaloAltoOnline.com. Tag Palo Alto Online on Twitter (@ paloaltoweekly), Facebook (@paloaltoonline) or Instagram (@ paloaltoonline) and use the hashtag #springtimeinsolitude.

Area public health officials, which have been otherwise operating in virtual lockstep in issuing — and, more recently, relaxing — public health orders. Dr. Sara Cody, Santa Clara County’s health officer, has strongly recommended that people wear face coverings but stopped short of requiring them. In a Q&A sponsored by nonprofit news outlet San Jose Spotlight on April 24, Cody said she didn’t want to order people to wear face coverings because doing so would take enforcement resources away from other important priorities. She also said that she didn’t believe law enforcement officers would go into grocery stores

and issue citations for people not wearing face coverings. Cody said that she hopes wearing a face covering in public will become a “social norm” so that when people go outside without the covering it should “feel funny.” “It shouldn’t feel right,” Cody said. “It should feel OK when you’re in your home, with your household, but when you’re not at your home and out and about, you should feel like something is missing. It’s like not having your glasses on.” Q Staff Writer Gennady Sheyner can be emailed at gsheyner@ paweekly.com.

John Joseph Prendergast May 4, 1937 – April 21, 2020 John Joseph Prendergast quietly passed away Tuesday afternoon at his Palo Alto home. A resident of Palo Alto for over 50 years, Dr. Prendergast was a renowned endocrinologist known for his supportive and gentle manner with patients. Dr. Joe believed that medicine was best practiced when patients understood they had the power to make changes in their lives to improve their health, and regularly told his patients “it is your time.” He was unmistakably charismatic, compassionate, encouraging, and successful. Born May 4th, 1937 to Francis Elizabeth Whitehead and John Joseph Prendergast II, Joe grew up on a farm in Michigan. He was proud to have attended Cranbrook High School, where he formed lifelong friendships and captained the football and baseball teams. He attended Williams College in Massachusetts and went on to study medicine at both Wayne State in Detroit and UCSF in San Francisco. It was while working on his undergraduate degree that Joe met Marlene Hinze, the Florida high school student who would become his future wife. Undeterred by the distance between them, Joe, an accomplished pilot, would simply fly himself down to Florida in order to court her. They were married in 1961 on July 1st. An extremely dedicated and hard-working physician, Joe practiced medicine in Redwood City and Palo Alto, retiring in 2014. Joe and his wife Marlene were active in Palo Alto and Northern California (Marlene was President and CEO of the Palo Alto Housing Corporation). He loved the entrepreneurial culture in the Bay Area and was excited to use technological progress in order to reach and help more patients. He was an early advocate of telemedicine for diabetic care and founded a start-up, DiabetesWell, in the 1990’s to serve those whose access to medical care was insufficient. His diagnostic skill was well known, and his colleagues respected him as a doctor with true enthusiasm and a keen drive to improve the medical profession, chronic disease research, and the lives of all people. He enjoyed travel and time with his family, sport of all kinds, and especially cheering on his children from the sidelines. He enjoyed trying new things and it was his rule that you could never return home the same way you left. He was a lifelong bird enthusiast, and duck hunter in the Central Valley, which was a way to connect with the seasons, especially the Autumn harvest of his farming youth. Joe is survived by Marlene, his wife of 58 years; by his children Patrick (Colette) living in Seattle and his daughter Peggy (Roy) living in San Carlos; by his grandchild Owen; by his sister Mary; and by his brother Robert. He will be greatly missed. Memorial donations may be made to the American Diabetes Association. Link: https://www.diabetes.org/donate/donate-memorial PAID

OBITUARY

www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 13


Upfront

Budget (continued from page 5)

Fine told his colleagues during Monday’s discussion. “I hope you’re ready for that.” Councilwoman Liz Kniss said the list of potential cuts will include library programs, recreation offerings, public safety services, planning efforts and other things “that we really prize.” “When we start hearing from police and fire about the protection we provide in the city, that’s going to be tough,” Kniss said. “But that which involves kids and outdoor activities — that’s going to be even harder.” Budget discussions will begin

on May 11, when City Manager Ed Shikada presents options for reducing expenses, and end on June 22, when the council officially adopts the budget. Unlike in prior years, when the council’s Finance Committee reviewed the budgets of each department, the task will fall to the full council. Given the deep level of uncertainty about the pandemic, Chief Financial Officer Kiely Nose said numbers will almost certainly change in the months ahead. “We continue to not know the length or depth of this emergency and how it will ripple through our social lives as well as our economic drivers,” Nose said. She noted, however, that almost half of the city’s revenues come

Malcolm MacLeod November 20, 1933 – April 20, 2020 We are heart-broken to announce that Malcolm MacLeod, born November 20, 1933, age 86, died on April 20, 2020, in Palo Alto, California, after a long battle with prostate cancer. Malcolm fought with determination, fortitude, and good grace. Born in Los Angeles and raised in Inglewood, California to Scottish immigrant parents, Annie MacAulay MacLeod and Duncan MacLeod, Malcolm was a first generation American. Malcolm was a gifted athlete who excelled in sports at Inglewood High School. His senior year he was the starting quarterback on the football team and led his team to a 9-1 record. As a senior, he was elected Class President. Upon graduation, Malcolm attended Stanford University on a football scholarship as a quarterback. Unfortunately, he was only able to play football his freshman year. He had to stop playing afterward because of a bleeding ulcer. At Stanford, Malcolm was a member of the Zeta Psi fraternity. He loved everything about Stanford and was a lifelong ardent Stanford sports fan and athletic booster. After graduation from Stanford as part of the Class of ’55 with a B.S in Civil Engineering, Malcolm worked for a variety of construction firms before starting his own construction business in Palo Alto. He worked as a general contractor building remodels, additions, and custom homes until his retirement late in life. Malcolm’s greatest legacy in life was overcoming an addiction to alcohol that started in his teenage years and continued for the better part of three decades. At age 46 years old, he hit rock bottom and checked himself into a one-month alcohol rehab program at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City, CA. Malcolm became a lifelong participant in the Alcohol Anonymous program, attending multiple meetings every week of his life. On February 10, 2020, Malcolm received his 40-year medallion for 40 years of sobriety. He was a friend, mentor, and inspiration to countless participants in the AA program. Malcolm is survived by his 3 children and their spouses, son Ian MacLeod (Beatrice), daughter Wendy MacLeod Stokes (Kevin), and daughter Alexandra MacLeod Olsen (Jonas), his 5 grandchildren, his brother and wife Ian and Marilyn MacLeod and their 3 daughters, his first wife Nancy Anderson, and second wife Lois MacLeod. Malcolm adored his grandchildren and was a big part of their lives. He was a good grandfather and will be deeply missed by his grandchildren. Malcolm lived for the last couple of years at the Sunrise Senior Residence in Palo Alto. Our family owes a huge debt of gratitude to the Sunrise staff and to the staff of Mission Hospice Care for looking after Malcolm in his final weeks and for making his passage as easy and peaceful as possible. The Sunrise staff and residents cared deeply for Malcolm, saying he was beloved in their community and calling him a ‘gem’ of a resident. Because Malcolm loved animals and pets, the family asks that any charitable donations in honor of Malcolm’s life be directed to the Palo Alto branch of Pets in Need. www.petsinneed.org/ donate A celebration of Malcolm’s life will occur at a later date. PAID

OBITUARY

Page 14 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com

from sources that are “extraordinarily impacted by the COVID-19 situation,” including sales- and hotel-tax revenues. Tarun Narayan, the city’s manager of treasury, debt and investment, said 11 of the hotels in Palo Alto, representing about 30% of total rooms within the city, are completely closed. The rest are either at 5% occupancy or are heading toward that level, he said, citing information from the San Mateo County/Silicon Valley Convention & Visitors Bureau. Even though the state and Santa Clara County are now easing some of the shelter-at-home restrictions that have been in effect since March, the council agreed that the devastating effects of the pandemic will linger for many months even after businesses are allowed to reopen. Some businesses will close down, Councilman Greg Tanaka said. Others will have restricted capacity

because of physical-distancing rules or find themselves hurting for customers because of the economic downturn, Tanaka said. He noted that one of the city’s major revenue generators is Stanford Shopping Center, an upscale mall. “Who’s going to go out and spend $5,000 on a handbag?” Tanaka asked. “It’s probably not going to happen.” The biggest challenge, he said, will be the persistence of social distancing. Councilman Eric Filseth called the projections in the most drastic scenario “appalling” — but also realistic. Given the precipitous decline of hotel revenues, it’s realistic to see a major drop in transient-occupancy taxes throughout the next year, particularly if traveling doesn’t return to pre-pandemic levels. To deal with the massive shortfall, Vice Mayor Tom DuBois said

CityView A round-up

of Palo Alto government action this week

City Council (May 4)

Budget: The council directed staff to base the fiscal year 2021 budget on a financial scenario that assumes a revenue decline of $38.8 million. Yes: Unanimous Business relief: The council approved a $500,000 business-relief program for local businesses with between one and 50 employees. Yes: DuBois, Fine, Kniss, Kou, Tanaka No: Cormack, Filseth

Council Finance Committee (May 5)

Retire health care: The council committee discussed and recommended approving the 2019 actuarial valuation of the city’s retiree health care plan and the use of a 6.25% discount rate in calculating actuarial defined contributions. Yes: Unanimous CDBG: The committee recommended allocations of $850,271 in funds from the Community Development Block Grant program. Yes: Unanimous Electricity: The committee recommended that staff adopt a “0% increase” option in the Electric Financial Fund. Yes: Kniss, Tanaka No: DuBois Gas: The committee recommended a 3% increase option in the Gas Financial Fund. Yes: DuBois, Kniss No: Tanaka

Architectural Review Board (May 7)

Newell Road Bridge: The board recommended approving the demolition and replacement of Newell Road bridge. Yes: Unanimous

Stephen Cushing Kronick October 10, 1953 – April 24, 2020 Stephen C. Kronick died April 24, 2020 in Tucson, Arizona at age 66. Steve was born in Los Angeles, California in 1953, the first son of Professor Bernard L. Kronick (Santa Clara University) and Roseana Murphy Kronick. Raised in Palo Alto, California with a younger brother Geoffrey, Steve graduated from Palo Alto Senior High School in 1972, thereafter attending Foothill Jr. College and San Jose State University. Steve later lived in Portland, Oregon and Seattle, Washington before settling in Tucson about a decade ago. Happy to find a place to live that was warmer than the often rainy Pacific Northwest, Steve enjoyed his life in Tucson, target shooting, and working for his condominium association. Steve had a lifelong fascination with cars of all types. Steve is survived by his brother Geoffrey of Portland, Oregon. Remembrances can be made in Steve’s name to the Neptune Society of Tucson, Arizona. PAID

OBITUARY

the city will need to take a deep look at its management structure at City Hall, including the ratio of employees per manager. A major portion of the $38.8-million reduction will have to come through staffing cuts. “The public needs to understand that it’s likely going to be across the board — it’s going to be management, it’s going to be unionized staff,” DuBois said. Fine suggested that Palo Alto’s land use policies have contributed to the financial pains that the city is now feeling, with its top sources of revenues on a sharp decline. He compared the city’s plight with Redwood City’s and Mountain View’s, which have been more enthusiastic about approving new development. “One of the reasons those cities aren’t facing such serious budget cuts is because they’ve been building commercial and residential space over the past few years and they’ve been expanding their property tax bases. That’s the situation we’re in in Palo Alto, where we haven’t done that,” he said. The city is gathering public feedback on its budget priorities through an online survey, which can be found at opentownhall. com/portals/5/Issue_8742. Q

Holiday Fund (continued from page 12)

home base: Ravenswood Middle School in East Palo Alto. Executive Director Michele Sharkey considers the one-onone relationships students develop with a trusted adult to be the program’s “secret sauce” in helping youth adapt from a smaller environment in middle school to the larger, diverse community. With its $15,000 grant, Heart and Home Collaborative hopes to open the doors of its seasonal shelter for unhoused women, ages 15-19, a month earlier and possibly extend its operations for a month longer until May. The shelter rotates among Palo Alto religious congregations for 45 days at a time and provides the residents shower facilities, meals, laundry service and a place to sleep overnight, among other amenities. The Holiday Fund campaign launched in October at the annual Palo Alto Weekly Moonlight Run & Walk at the Baylands, which raised $89,181 with help from the event’s corporate sponsors. Major Holiday Fund donors include the Peery and Arrillaga foundations, which each gave $10,000, and the Hewlett and David and Lucile Packard foundations, which each donated $25,000. Nearly 400 business organizations and community members also made contributions to the campaign, which wrapped up in January. The Silicon Valley Community Foundation, a longtime partner of the Holiday Fund, handled the community donations and distributed the funds to the beneficiaries. For more information about the Holiday Fund, go to PaloAltoOnline. com/holiday_fund. Q


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Page 16 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com


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(650) 969-8555www.PaloAltoOnline.com 2460 W El Camino Real, Mountain View 94040 • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 19


Show some local love LOCAL BUSINESSES NEED YOUR SUPPORT AV

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Page 20 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com

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www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 21


S. Brown L. Smith N. Martin K. Villannueva C. Melamed S. Jacobs J. Northway J. Elkind N. Anderson D. Schwartz I. Levy P. Lai P. Fink S. Erhart B. Raskin A. Albuquerque J. Kriewall N. Jones S. Dinwiddie E. Vanderwilt A. Seid S. Kilner J. Beer V. Wolk N. Ng L. Sanford L. Avocet J. Reynolds S. Buddie S. Pelosi K. Logan W. Courington J. Jenkins S. Joshi S. Miller E. Salzer M. Brown C. Van Wey M. Cohen D. Lowe M. Forster L. Carroll J. Hale R. Foley J. Hancock E. Fike M. Chowning-Dray B. Fitch B. Holland T. Moran K. Flynn E. Santana R. Georgia S. Dinwiddie J. Dawes K. Kane L. Braun B. Bicknell H. Weiler S. Gartner B. Carlitz J. Wasserman J. Paulson D. Lusk B. Kiviat J. Ramberg V. Weber A. Gregory H. Schwenk L. & J. Schemel A. Karp E. Jacobsen C. Pierce A. Austin S. Griswold B. Katz J. Majeti J. Faltz S. Cranna E. Jensen D. Cookerly M. McCall A. Meyer J. & R. Wheeler F. Kurland S. Srinivasan C. Drake T. Gadda P. Page M. Lewis C. Chen T. Lovercheck M. Eager D. Graff-Loeb A. Tse L. Levy J. Kershner L. Laurent K. Shoven E. Nimmo C. Scholz L. Parker B. Tisdale A. & B. Delaney H. Stein E. Hogan D. Debs E. Marshall R. Kennedy S. Hansen C. Iannuccilli J. Klein L. Shore M. Allen L. Klein M. Tan E. Kriegh C. Dillon J. Podell J. Schaeer K. Price G. Lee L. Beattie S. Henderson B. Sourkes L. Fresco G. Bers K. Sweidy S. Mellberg P. Schaffer T. Deser R. Rosner S. Levine G. Johnson P. Colevas H. Benson B. Klein K. Matice S. Jefferson B. Drazovich R. Schwartz P. Noyer P. Marriott A. Koontz D. Rose N. Yamada D. Ito J. Gilmore B. Barton A. Schmitt N. Moss M. Richardson R. Martinez J. Einfalt G. Hughes S. Robinson P. Einfalt G. Schwettman M. Vincenti W. Bowmer L. Reider E. Wolf C. Gibbs D. Blayney K. Ma J. Sack L. Pinto C. Chong N. Stern P. Ellson B. Pitkin K. Klein M. Norton D. Hancock C. Pistorino N. Thomas G. Poore A. Zulch W. Yeager J. Frick B. Burwell L. Gill M. Odell K. Storm R. Lancefield C. Thorson C. Sigman M. Anderson J. Snyder P. Carter D. Knopper J. Fenwick B. Bruce E. Kastner M. Williams M. Levin J. Cornett P. Podell L. Tokes A. Holloway R. Maydan D. Lin A. Chin J. Wise R. Degan S. Gualdoni M. Christopherson D. Ziegler S. Kemp A. Cooper M. Brooks L. Roche L. Fowkes L. Lenoir S. Holland C. Murphy A. Seeger J. Zhang J. Steinhart E. Moore K. Spear J. Shorin E. Fagan J. Carey K. Arnold B. Nute J. DiBrienza P. Schwartz L. Wolfe C. Mitchell D. Newhouse H. Welstein S. Olgado M. Stevens J. Noice A. Illich D. Staiger L. Gass S. Abramson W. Dellenbach B. Gardner M. Ashley R. Waters K. Dugan M. Zimmerman B. Martin J. Foster J. Moran J. Guislin H. Fischgrund M. Bridges B. Klausner G. Crider K. Larsen B. Crocker E. Miller N. Razon J. Ting L. Carey R. Swent S. Colton J. Poppy R. Bender V. Akkaraju W. Cavanaugh J. Seyfarth E. Reese K. Anderson A. Waldfogel L. Deghetaldi V. Leighton S. Narang J. Schachter W. Shilstone C. Wotipka Page 22 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com

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This is a partial list of our current subscribing members. You can also subscribe for one year by mailing a check for $120 ($60 for seniors and students) to us at 450 Cambridgewww.PaloAltoOnline.com Ave., Palo Alto 94306. • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 23


Answers to this week’s puzzles, which can be found on page 43.

Pulse A weekly compendium of vital statistics

POLICE CALLS

Vandalism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Warrant/other agency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

Palo Alto April 30-May 6 Violence related Attempted suicide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Child abuse. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Domestic violence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Elder abuse. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Theft related Attempted commercial burglary . . . . . . 1 Commercial burglaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Forgery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Identity theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Petty theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Shoplifting. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Vehicle related Auto theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Bicycle theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Hit and run . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Theft from auto . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Vehicle accident/minor injury . . . . . . . . 1 Alcohol or drug related Driving under influence . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Miscellaneous Lost property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Missing person . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Psychiatric subject . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Trespassing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

Menlo Park April 29-May5 Theft related Burglary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Fraud . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Grand theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Petty theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Vehicle related Auto theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Bicycle theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Theft from auto . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Vehicle tow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Alcohol or drug related Drunk in public . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Possession of drugs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Possession of paraphernalia . . . . . . . . 1 Miscellaneous Coroner case . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Domestic disturbance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Found property. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Located missing person . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Missing person . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Property for destruction . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Vandalism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Warrant arrest. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

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VIOLENT CRIMES Palo Alto San Antonio Road, 2/27, 12:10 p.m.; elder abuse/physical. Ben Lomond Drive, 4/13, 7:52 p.m.; child abuse/physical. Everett Avenue, 4/29, 12:05 p.m.; domestic violence. Cowper Street, 5/4, 5:30 p.m.; elder abuse/physical. Alma Street, 5/5, 4:30 p.m.; attempted adult suicide.

OBITUARIES Malcolm MacLeod, John Joseph Prendergast A list of local residents who died recently: Malcolm MacLeod, 86, a resident of Palo Alto, died on April 20. John Joseph Prendergast, 83, an endocrinologist and resident of Palo Alto for more than 50 years, died on April 21. To read full obituaries, leave remembrances and post photos, go to Lasting Memories at PaloAltoOnline.com/ obituaries. Q

Avenidas Still Supporting Seniors Although Avenidas has temporarily closed its three facilities to help contain and mitigate the COVID-19 virus, seniors and their families can still turn to Avenidas for information, resources, support, or just a friendly voice! • Call the Avenidas …. Friendship Line: (650) 289-5400 • Email us at … info@avenidas.org • Visit our website ... www.avenidas.org

Page 24 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com


www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 25


G U I D E TO 2020 SU M M E R C A M P S FO R K I DS • V I S I T PALOALTO O N LI N E .CO M/C A M P_CO N N E C T I O N

n n o e C c t p i on m a C Please check directly with camps for updates and remote offerings. For more information about these camps visit paloaltoonline.com/camp_connection. To advertise in this weekly directory, call (650) 326-8210.

ACADEMICS

ARTS, CULTURE, OTHER CAMPS

Early Learning Institute

Palo Alto Pleasanton

Improve your student’s writing skills this summer at Emerson School of Palo Alto and Hacienda School of Pleasanton. Courses this year are Expository Writing, Creative Writing and Presentation Skills.

headsup.org

Emerson: (650) 424-1267 Hacienda: (925) 485-5750

Harker Summer Programs

San Jose

The Harker School’s summer programs for children K - grade 12 offer the perfect balance of learning and fun! Programs are led by dedicated faculty and staff who are experts at combining summer fun and learning. Strong academics and inspiring enrichment programs are offered in full day, partial and morning only sessions.

harker.org/summer

(408) 553-5737

i2 Camp at Castilleja School

Palo Alto

i2 Camp offers week-long immersion programs that engage middle school girls in the fields of science, technology, engineering and math (STEM). The fun and intimate hands-on activities of the courses strive to excite and inspire participants about STEM, creating enthusiasm that will hopefully spill over to their

Palo Alto

(650) 470-7833

STANFORD EXPLORE: A Lecture Series on Biomedical Research

Stanford

EXPLORE biomedical science at Stanford. Stanford EXPLORE offers high school students the unique opportunity to learn from Stanford professors and graduate students about diverse topics in biomedical science, including bioengineering, neurobiology, immunology and many others.

Fun and specialized Junior Camps for Mini (3-5), Beginner,

castilleja.org/summercamp

in Monterey Bay. SO MUCH FUN!

(650) 470-7833

Community School of Music

Mountain View

Community School of Music and Arts (CSMA) Mountain View 50+ creative camps for grades K-12! Drawing, Painting, Ceramics, Sculpture, Musical Theater, Summer Music Workshops and more! One and two-week sessions; full and half-day enrollment. Extended care from 8:30am-5:30pm. Financial aid offered.

arts4all.org

Intermediate, Advanced, High Performance and Elite tennis levels. Weekly programs designed by Kim Grant to improve player technique, fitness, agility, mental toughness and all around game. Weekly camps in Palo Alto and Sleep-Away Camps

KimGrantTennis.com

Text: (650) 690-0678 Call: (650) 752-8061

Nike Tennis Camps

Stanford University

Junior Overnight and Day Camps for boys & girls, ages 9-18 offered throughout June, July and August. Adult Weekend Clinics (June & Aug). Camps directed by Head Men’s Coach, Paul Goldstein, Head

(650) 917-6800 ext. 0

Women’s Coach, Lele Forood, and Associate Men’s and Women’s

Palo Alto

Coaches, Brandon Coupe and Frankie Brennan. Come join the fun

Let’s Go Crafting

Let’s Go Crafting’s Studio is where your child will have fun while learning many different fiber related arts. We teach sewing, knitting, crochet, weaving and jewelry making to children ages 8 to 15 years. AM or PM camps $275/week. Full day camps $550/ week. 5 student minimum for all sessions; 10 student maximum.

and get better this summer!

letsgocrafting.org

Run for Fun’s mission is to provide creative and engaging play for

(650) 814-4183

Oshman Family JCC Camps

ussportscamps.com

(800) NIKE-CAMP (800) 645-3226

Run for Fun Camps

Bay Area

Palo Alto

around outdoor fun! We pride ourselves on hiring an enthusiastic,

Camps at the OFJCC introduce your child to new experiences while creating friendships in a fun and safe environment. We work to build confidence, stretch imaginations and teach new skills.

highly trained staff who love what they do. Summer 2020 features

paloaltojcc.org/Camps

Camp Jones Gulch, Capitola Beach, Foothills Park, Shoreline Lake

Palo Alto Community Child Care (PACCC)

(650) 223-8622

Palo Alto

students collaborate to tackle real-world problems by utilizing

paccc.org

explore-series@stanford.edu

Summer@Stratford

Palo Alto/Bay Area

Stratford infuses its STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Math) curriculum into an innovative and enriching summer camp experience. Younger campers learn, explore, and

(650) 493-2361

ATHLETICS

the Middle School level, individual subject-based enrichment

Dance Connection Palo Alto

stratfordschools.com/summer pa@stratfordschools.com

Share the joy of dance with us! Our studio is an extended family and a “home away from home” for our community of children and teens. At Dance Connection, we value the positive energy and atmosphere that we continuously strive to provide. Summer Dance Camps include all styles of dance for ages 4 and up and features our new “This is Me!” Empowerment Camp along with Teen Jazz and Hip Hop Camps. A Summer Session for ages 3 to adults will be offered from June 8 – July 31.

Palo Alto

Art, cooking, tinkering, yoga and mindfulness. We celebrate multiple perspectives and recognize the many ways for our children to interpret their world. Summer Unplugged! is appropriate for ages 6-11 years. Located at Walter Hays School.

(650) 269-0423

day filled with sports, crafts and nature, including explorations to

of traditional overnight camp mixed with challenge-by-choice activities, campfires, friendships and lots of laughter.

runforfuncamps.com/summer-camps-and-schoolholiday-camps/camp-overview (650) 823-5167

Spartans Sports Camp

Mountain View

Spartans Sports Camp offers a wide variety of sports, performing arts, and academic enrichment camps for kids entering grades 1-9. Experienced staff ensures everyone has fun. Daily on-site swimming is offered for all camps. Camps begin June 8th and run is run by MVHS coaches and student-athletes and all proceeds

classes are offered and tailored for each grade level.

ARTS, CULTURE, OTHER CAMPS

Camp High Five. Adventure Day Camp is a new discovery every

weekly through July 31st at Mountain View High School. The camp

academic principles and concepts in a fun and engaging way. At

(650) 493-1141

four weeks of Adventure Day Camp and two weeks of Overnight

and Great America. Camp High Five is six days and five nights

engage in hands-on learning projects, while Elementary-age

explore.stanford.edu

artandsoulpa.com

Palo Alto Monterey Bay

Castilleja Summer Camp for Girls Palo Alto Casti Camp offers girls entering grades 2-6 a range of age-appropriate activities including athletics, art, science, computers, writing, crafts, cooking, drama and music classes each day along with weekly field trips. Leadership program available for girls entering grades 7-9.

PACCC summer camps offer campers, grades 1st to 6th, a wide variety of engaging opportunities. We are excited to announce all of your returning favorites: Leaders in Training (L.I.T.), Camp YOUnique, F.A.M.E. (Fine Arts, Music and Entertainment), J.V. Sports, Operation: Chef and Chef Jr.! Periodic field trips, special visitors and many engaging camp activities, songs and skits round out the variety of offerings at PACCC Summer Camps. Open to campers from all communities. Register online.

Art and Soul Camp

Kim Grant Tennis Summer Camps

all youth by getting kids active in an inclusive community centered

schoolwork and school choices in future years.

castilleja.org/i2camp

Castilleja Summer Camp for Girls Palo Alto

ATHLETICS

Palo Alto

danceconnectionpaloalto.com/dance-connectionevent-calendar/summer-dance-camps (650) 852-0418 or (650) 322-7032

Page 26 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com

benefit the MVHS Athletic Department. Lunch and extended care are available for your convenience. Flexible cancellation policies.

spartanssportscamp.com

(650) 479-5906

YMCA of Silicon Valley Summer Camps

Silicon Valley

At the Y, children and teens of all abilities acquire new skills, make friends, and feel that they belong. With hundreds of Summer Day Camps plus Overnight Camps, you will find a camp that’s right for your family. Sign up today, camps are filling up! Financial assistance is available.

ymcasv.org/summercamp

(408) 351-6473


Spectrum Editorials, letters and opinions

Guest Opinion

This week on Town Square

We need COVID-19 herd immunity by Andy Robin

S

ome say we need to keep sheltering in place until there’s a vaccine or a cure. Some say we need to restart everybody’s life, period. I’m describing a much more sensible, logical and focused middle path t hat get s people back to their l ives a nd avoids overwhelming health care resources. For COVID-19 to become history (even in just the U.S.), herd immunity has to be reached, or extensive testing (several million tests a day) and a potent antiviral medicine have to become available, or a vaccine has to become available to hundreds of millions. I’ve excluded tracking systems that enable targeted quarantines, as I believe American civil liberties and our culture of individuality will not allow those to exist broadly. Thousands of antivirals have gone through clinical trials over the years, yet only a few dozen have ever been found safe and effective and approved to go to market (most of those target HIV, the result of decades of research and development). Getting huge volumes of a safe and effective antiviral targeting COVID-19 won’t happen soon. Vaccines are even harder to get to market. They have to be proven both effective and supersafe. If they aren’t, the vaccine and the company that developed it are cooked, and more people will balk and become antivaxxers, which leads to horrible health outcomes, mostly for our children. The best-case timeline for a vaccine is the second half of 2021. Herd immunity arrives when 60-70% of people have had the virus — whether asymptomatically or with mild to deadly symptoms. I believe that the federal government and state unemployment funding of people sheltering in place will soon be fatigued. Also, if shelter-inplace is allowed to continue for more months, layoffs will continue accelerating, and before long, many more companies

will join those that have already gone defunct, their jobs not to return. Since neither a potent antiviral nor testing nor a vaccine are going to appear in huge volume soon, and since the financial downsides of further months of sheltering are untenable, we need a way to get to herd immunity ASAP. A recent Stanford University study showed that only around 4% of Santa Clara County’s 2 million residents have had COVID-19. Other scientists believe the study was done poorly and is wrong. Some think that perhaps 20% or higher is a better number. But with the shelter-in-place and only a few dozen new cases a day being logged by the county Public Health Department, it will be a looong time before we reach herd immunity — waaay too long to be tolerable. That said, if a lot more people are to get the virus to achieve herd immunity, we need to be sure that a lot more people don’t die from the virus. If you looked at Santa Clara County’s website on April 27, you’d see that 86% of deaths were people who had “comorbidities,” i.e., hypertension, heart disease, COPD, obesity, diabetes, etc. You also see that 63% of deaths were people over 70. Every year’s deaths from flu are concentrated in much the same population. We take a key step toward normalcy by strongly suggesting to people with comorbidities (especially those over 70) that they continue to shelter in place or be majorly cautious when going out. And we have everyone else rejoin their lives. The very vulnerable will need to exercise this level of self-care or likely end up in the hospital or dead. And everybody else can take modest precautions as they see fit. This will result in lots of people getting the virus. But most importantly, it will restart people’s lives and income streams. It’s really the most vulnerable populations who would likely overwhelm health care capacity if they were to exit shelter-inplace. The county does a great job monitoring health care capacity, and models exist that can help the county tell a few weeks ahead of time if there’s going to be a crunch — and to reinstall a higher level of shelter-in-place

for a few weeks if necessary (but we’d still be on the way to herd immunity apace). Moreover, a lot of the vulnerable older people are retired, so having to shelter in place isn’t different for them economically. And restarting the economy will certainly help vulnerable older people’s investments. When kids of all ages go back to school and the workforce goes back to work, it will be a boon for almost everyone for obvious reasons. Yes, it’s true that some of these people will get a bad case of the virus and be sick for weeks, some even hospitalized. And a small number will die, just as they have year in and year out from the flu — but we don’t lock down the country for the annual flu season. Still, it’d be best to avoid large gatherings, just so we don’t overfill doctors’ offices with cases spreading as happens in a bad flu season. A really useful way to move forward is with pilot implementation. Santa Clara County is the perfect place for this. First of all, because of shelter-in-place, 86% of ventilator capacity and 44% of ICU capacity are available (18% of ICU beds are used by COVID-19 patients and 38% by typical ICU patients). Second, now we know who is most vulnerable and we can avoid a demand surge on hospitals going forward. Third, the county has excellent communication systems to reach residents (by phone, text and/or email). If there’s an unforeseen need to restart shelterin-place, the county can communicate quickly. The steps for other geographies: free up hospital capacity (through sheltering); safeguard the vulnerable; let others rejoin life and be able to communicate changes quickly. Even if scientists conclude that there’s no herd immunity to be had for COVID-19, the above is still the best course of action until a safe and effective pharmaceutical solution arrives. I urge Gov. Gavin Newsom and county Health Officer Dr. Sarah Cody to get this going — and soon. Thanks! Q Palo Alto resident Andy Robin likes facts. He can be emailed at werdna39@aol.com.

Town Square is an online discussion forum at PaloAltoOnline.com/square In response to ‘Pandemic offers transportation planners a chance to rethink commuting’ Posted April 29 at 12:27 p.m. by John Guislin, a resident of Crescent Park: “The pandemic has forced many businesses to embrace telecommuting like never before. It took a life-threatening disease to get us here, and we should not ignore what we have learned. Let’s require businesses where teleworking has proven to work to maintain a significant percent of employees in teleworking positions. Obviously, this cannot work for every business, but many medium and large companies now know they can implement it with the right push. It would be a win for all of us.”

In response to ‘Local domestic violence experts say pandemic creates conditions ripe for abuse’ Posted April 23 at 12:32 p.m. by Jon Keeling, a resident of Community Center: “Another resource for emotional support is Crisis Text Line. Text ‘HELLO’ to 741741 to start your confidential conversation with a trained crisis counselor. In addition to spousal abuse, I am quite certain that child abuse has increased recently as well, unfortunately.”

WHAT DO YOU THINK? The Palo Alto Weekly encourages comments on our coverage or on issues of local interest.

Will you wait until there’s a coronavirus vaccine before you resume your normal life? Submit letters to the editor of up to 300 words to letters@paweekly.com. Submit guest opinions of 1,000 words to editor@paweekly.com. Include your name, address and daytime phone number so we can reach you. We reserve the right to edit contributions for length, objectionable content, libel and factual errors known to us. Anonymous letters will generally not be accepted. Submitting a letter to the editor or guest opinion constitutes a granting of permission to the Palo Alto Weekly and Embarcadero Media to also publish it online, including in our online archives and as a post on Town Square. For more information, contact Editorial Assistant Lloyd Lee at llee@paweekly. com or 650-223-6526 or Editor Jocelyn Dong at editor@paweekly.com.

www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 27


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DO YOU WANT TO

L OCAL HERO

SAM

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RECOGNIZE A LOCAL HERO?

W

hether they're grocery shopping for a neighbor or volunteering for a nonproďŹ t, you can spread the joy and support our journalism efforts by giving them a shoutout in the Palo Alto Weekly. For $199, we'll design a quarter-page announcement featuring your Local Hero. Just visit the Google form at the address below and include a 50-word description and an optional photo. And a huge "thank you" to all the good neighbors in Palo Alto doing their best to shelter in place.

Submit entries at PaloAltoOnline.com/local_hero/

Karen Ambrose Hickey Karen shares her love of photography. Due to COVID-19, Paly spring athletic teams didn’t have photos for the yearbook. Therefore, Karen created team photos using head shots taken at a safe distance and from past seasons. We thank Karen for volunteering her time to create lifetime memories! Submitted by: Parents of Paly Athletes

Page 28 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com


Feature Story HISTORY

A lesson from history: How the yellow fever epidemic changed society Stanford professor looks at parallels between 19th-century outbreaks and COVID-19

A

‘I’m scared. I worry that with COVID-19, we will radically increase racism.’ – Kathryn Olivarius, assistant history professor

“Once you see it, every single source is covered with references to yellow fever. I could not discard it as background noise. This is really important stuff in the background of this place,” she said. “It put me down the path of thinking about yellow fever — and not just death — but about life and how it fundamentally shaped institutions.” She was writing a book, “Necropolis: Disease, Power and Capitalism in the Cotton Kingdom,” due out next year, when the coronavirus epidemic broke out. Now she’s seeing parallels between what happened in the South and her own experiences with the coronavirus pandemic. The earlier viral disease shaped society and the economy, just as COVID-19 is shaping our own, she said. The experience of yellow fever, much like COVID-19, permeated everything. New Orleans in the early 19th century was a hub of the cotton, sugar and slave trades, yet it was constantly besieged by yellow fever. Outbreaks roiled the city about every three years, shaping social status, slavery, government and jobs, she said. If the coronavirus continues to infect populations for months or years, present-day society and

government will be faced with dilemmas similar to those that confronted New Orleans. “It’s possible we can’t find a vaccine. How are we going to live with this disease?” she asked. What the world is experiencing now as a crisis is something people lived with perpetually in the 19th century, she said. Without antibiotics, antiviral drugs or even knowledge of the underlying cause of yellow fever, staying healthy was a major concern. “You had to reconcile yourself to this precarity in the past,” she said. Yellow fever was fearsome, killing 50% of its victims. The disease started with a fever, aches and pains, a severe headache, weakness, fatigue, nausea and vomiting. Recovery took weeks or months. After a week and a short remission of a few hours or a day, one in seven people developed severe liver disease with bleeding and jaundice. Shock, organ failure and death could ensue. Although rare in the U.S. today due to vaccinations and mosquito control, there’s still no cure and no treatment for yellow fever. Between 30% and 60% of people with severe symptoms still die, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Beyond the danger of the viral infection, yellow fever revealed the disparities between rich and poor that existed in the antebellum South, Olivarius said. New Orleans became a stratified society of those who were thought to be “acclimated” to yellow fever and those who were “unacclimated,” meaning they either had or did not have immunity. Old, white Louisiana families considered themselves “acclimated” to the disease, either having survived it — or able to avoid getting it. They had advantages that others did not, however, with respect to the latter. “The rich in any city have a tendency to separate themselves from poor people,” she said. “We know places such as docks, levees and tenement houses were breeding grounds. They knew this too. They had the ability to distance themselves from the most dangerous spaces.” When a newspaper story announced a case of yellow fever, wealthy residents fled to a hotel in the country, moved to plantation homes out of the area or traveled overseas to escape, Olivarius said. Not so for the middle class, poorer newcomers and slaves, who would see their city transformed

Magali Gauthier

sked how she was fairing during the shelter-inplace, Stanford University historian Kathryn Olivarius reflected on being a researcher who studies early American epidemics during the COVID-19 crisis. “I write about yellow fever by day and worry about COVID-19 at night,” she said. Olivarius, an assistant professor of history, was working on her doctoral dissertation on slavery around the time of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 when she discovered voluminous documents on recurrent epidemics of yellow fever in New Orleans. The letters, advertisements and news articles changed her work in profound ways. Yellow fever killed more than 150,000 people in New Orleans between the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 and the Civil War in 1861, according to Olivarius.

by Sue Dremann

Kathryn Olivarius, assistant professor of history at Stanford University who has studied the social impacts of yellow fever in antebellum New Orleans, looks at the similarities of the COVID-19 pandemic in today’s society. overnight by a mass exodus. During fever season, from July through November, they heard the constant ringing of church bells for the dead. Loud booms carried throughout the city as officials fired cannons to try to drive away the miasma, Olivarius said.

An immunocapitalist society

A

s a result of its culture and its inability to tackle or even understand the nature of the disease — people didn’t know it was mosquitoborne — New Orleans decided it would not fight yellow fever. The city was at the base of the Mississippi River and was a major export hub for the cotton industry. It couldn’t just move, Olivarius said. Instead, people decided they would have to live with the disease and focused on maintaining New Orleans’ economic engine. A new economic model emerged as a result of the recurring yellow fever epidemics: immunocapitalism, which found many ways to insert privilege and division into the social structure. Newcomers were not considered acclimated and had limited opportunities for advancement, Olivarius said. People with immunity had more value because they wouldn’t get the disease again and wouldn’t disrupt the economy. Being “acclimated” meant access to jobs, credit, housing and improved social status. To be unacclimated meant lower status and

stagnation. Merchants wouldn’t enter into contracts with someone who couldn’t prove acclimation, she said. Immunity conferred privileges. “In job ads at the time, the first thing you list is ‘I’m acclimated.’ It was a sign that someone is permanent,” she said. “People stayed behind on purpose to get the disease. If you get sick and you survive, you go up the ladder of society,” Olivarius said. Immunity granted other advantages. Wealthy people rarely purchased life insurance on themselves, but they did take out insurance on their slaves as property. Insurance companies targeted middle-class men for policies on themselves as a “smart move” to protect their families if the head of the household died. These policies charged “climate premiums” based on immunity to yellow fever, however, Olivarius said. “If you were unacclimated, you could be flatly not approved for a policy or charged a very high premium,” she said. Proving one had yellow fever was another matter. Many of its symptoms, including fever, delirium and nausea, were vague and similar to other diseases found in the region — unless a patient vomited blood, a telltale symptom. “Yellow fever doesn’t leave visual scars. You have to perform your immunity to this disease,” she said. Affidavits from physicians

and letters from witnesses and business associates to insurance agents attested to the policy applicant’s acclimation: “I cared for him in 1833” or “I’ve never known him to be sick in 12 years” were ways to prove immunity, Olivarius said. Survival and immunity also conferred a certain sense of moral superiority. It was part of the genesis stories of much of the city’s political and economic elite. Triumph over yellow fever was God’s will, manliness, morality, sobriety and honor. Those who died were judged dissipated or alcoholic, getting what they deserved, she said. Olivarius acknowledges there are limits to comparing the COVID-19 pandemic to yellow fever epidemics in 19th-century New Orleans. For one thing, theirs was a culture of mass mortality, a highly destructive society that was exacerbated by risk-taking and gambling, with betting on the future and on the next cotton price. The city also had a nearly non-existent public health policy to begin with, she said. Where antebellum New Orleans had a high mortality rate and no medical way to treat the disease, COVID-19 is far less lethal, at about 2% mortality or less. “We can make decisions that can slow the infection from COVID-19 (to prevent) the worst epidemiological effects of this disease,” she said. Still, Olivarius has some (continued on page 30)

www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 29


Feature Story

History

century, “We don’t have to make those choices� under COVID-19.

(continued from page 29)

concerns about the push to reignite the economy too soon by lifting the sequester-at-home orders. “You can see a mercenary attitude. It has icy echoes of the past about the greater good. There’s rhetorical talk about public health versus economic crisis as separate, but they aren’t,� she said. People in the past also thought “we can’t let the cure be worse than the disease,� she added. She thinks that while yellow fever was a persistent and inescapable part of life in the 19th

The haves and the have-nots

O

livarius finds disturbing certain parallels between attitudes toward yellow fever and those emerging toward COVID-19: ideas about building herd immunity and valuing certain lives over others. A March 25 article in the conservative online magazine The Federalist titled “How Medical ‘Chickenpox Parties’ Could Turn The Tide Of The Wuhan Virus� touted the idea of “controlled

SEQUOIA UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT MEASURE A CITIZENS BOND OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE 2019 REPORT TO COMMUNITY *VU[HJ[ 7LYZVU! 4H[[OL^ AP[V *OPLM -HJPSP[PLZ 6ɉJLY The Citizens Bond Oversight Committee has issued its report for calendar year 2019 on the $265,000,000 Measure A bond approved by the voters on June 3, 2014. Members of the Citizens Bond Oversight Committee are pleased to report to the community the bond funds are being spent in accordance with the bond language approved by ]V[LYZ *VTWSL[L Ă„UHUJPHS PUMVYTH[PVU PZ H]HPSHISL VU [OL +PZ[YPJ[ website at www.seq.org. :LX\VPH <UPVU /PNO :JOVVS +PZ[YPJ[ JVU[YHJ[LK ^P[O *OH]HU HUK Associates to perform the required Proposition 39/Measure A audit YLWVY[ ;OL H\KP[ JV]LYLK Ă„ZJHS `LHY LUKPUN 1\UL HUK submitted and reviewed by the Citizens Bond Oversight Committee. ;OL H\KP[ L_HTPULK PU[LYUHS JVU[YVS V]LY Ă„UHUJPHS YLWVY[PUN HUK V[OLY matters to include verifying that the bond proceeds were deposited PU [OL +PZ[YPJ[ÂťZ UHTL [OH[ [OL` ^LYL PU]LZ[LK PU HJJVYKHUJL ^P[O applicable legal requirements, and tested approximately 69% of the calendar year 2018-2019 expenditures to ensure they were valid, HSSV^HISL HUK HJJ\YH[L ;OL H\KP[ KL[LYTPULK [OH[ [OL +PZ[YPJ[ complied, in all material respects, with the compliance requirements [OH[ JV\SK OH]L H KPYLJ[ HUK TH[LYPHS LɈLJ[ VU [OL 7YVWVZP[PVU 4LHZ\YL ( IVUK WYVNYHT MVY [OL Ă„ZJHS `LHY LUKPUN 1\UL :PNUPĂ„JHU[ *VUZ[Y\J[PVU HUK 9LUV]H[PVU WYVQLJ[Z JVTWSL[LK [V KH[L! - Carlmont New Classroom Building (10 classrooms) *HYSTVU[ >LPNO[ 9VVT (KKP[PVU *HYSTVU[ 2P[JOLU 4<9 HUK 3VJRLY 9VVT 9LUV]H[PVUZ - Menlo-Atherton New Classroom Building (21 Classrooms) 4LUSV ([OLY[VU :VJJLY -PLSK 9LUV]H[PVU ^ 3PNO[Z Z`U[OL[PJ [\YM - Menlo-Atherton STEM Classroom and Kitchen Building :LX\VPH 4\ZPJ )\PSKPUN 9LUV]H[PVU :LX\VPH 7YHJ[PJL -PLSK 9LUV]H[PVU ^ 3PNO[Z Z`U[OL[PJ [\YM :LX\VPH 7VVS 3PNO[ HUK :OHKL :[Y\J[\YL JHUVW` V]LY ISLHJOLYZ :LX\VPH *\SPUHY` (Y[Z HUK >HYTPUN 2P[JOLU 9LUV]H[PVU :LX\VPH 4LKPH *LU[LY HUK 479 2P[JOLU - Woodside New Classroom Building (10 Classrooms) >VVKZPKL )YHKSL` -PLSK 9LUV]H[PVU >VVKZPKL -VVK :LY]PJL HUK *HML[LYPH 9LUV]H[PVU >VVKZPKL 5L^ *\SPUHY` 9LUV]H[PVU >VVKZPKL *LYHTPJ *SHZZYVVT 9LUV]H[PVU ;0+, (JHKLT` 9LK^VVK /PNO :JOVVS *SHZZYVVT HUK 479 )\PSKPUN =HYPV\Z +PZ[YPJ[ >PKL 0UMYHZ[Y\J[\YL HUK *HWP[HS 9LWHPY 7YVQLJ[Z (on-going) :VSHY 0UZ[HSSH[PVU H[ 9LK^VVK >VVKZPKL HUK +PZ[YPJ[ÂťZ )\Z @HYK *VUZ[Y\J[PVU HUK YLUV]H[PVU WYVQLJ[Z WSHUULK HYL! 4LUSV ([OLY[VU *OLTPZ[Y` 3HI 9LUV]H[PVU - Woodside Quad Improvements +PZ[YPJ[ >PKL =HYPV\Z *HWP[HS 9LWHPY 7YVQLJ[Z VU NVPUN ;OL 4 TPSSPVU PZ ILPUN PZZ\LK PU JVUMVYTHUJL ^P[O [OL KPZ[YPJ[ÂťZ [PTLSPUL MVY JVUZ[Y\J[PVU WYVQLJ[Z ;OL Ă„YZ[ IVUK WYVJLLKZ ^LYL received October 22, 2014 in the amount of $112,000,000. The +PZ[YPJ[ ZVSK P[Z ZLJVUK ZLYPLZ VM IVUKZ PU 5V]LTILY PU [OL amount of $120,000,000. The remaining bond authority was sold on May 8, 2019 in the amount of $33,000,000. John Violet, Chair of the Citizens Bond Oversight Committee will WYLZLU[ H YLWVY[ [V [OL :LX\VPH <UPVU /PNO :JOVVS +PZ[YPJ[ÂťZ )VHYK VM ;Y\Z[LLZ VU 4H` YLNHYKPUN [OL JVTTP[[LLÂťZ WYVJLLKPUN HUK activities. That report is available at www.seq.org for calendar year 2019. 4,(:<9, ( *0;0A,5: )65+ 6=,9:0./; *6440;;,, John Violet, Chairperson Janet Hart, Vice Chairperson Jerry Carlson 3PZH *VZ[H :HUKLYZ Ernesto Jasso Susie Peyton

Page 30 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com

history that is important during this pandemic, Olivarius said, it’s that the public must have information that is accurate and truthful. In 1847, there were many suspected cases of yellow fever earlier than expected in June. Doctors were hesitant to diagnose the disease and made a huge effort not to declare an early case that year. A diagnosis brought fear and upended the economy, she said. When a young Irish immigrant showed symptoms, one doctor first suspected the disease, but he would not issue a definitive diagnosis and sought a second opinion. The second doctor, although noting the symptoms were clearly yellow fever, was also hesitant to label it. “Both didn’t want to be wrong. The boy died, and many thousands of people died. If they had declared it was yellow fever, it would’ve saved many lives,� Olivarius said. On a larger scale, misinformation in New Orleans was propagated by a board of health, which was responsible for collecting mortality data on a weekly basis. “Everyone knew the board was a propaganda arm for business,� she said, and the board made a concerted effort to keep the numbers low. “People knew they were lying to them,� she said. “When people live in an epidemic and the information is not reliable, it erodes trust in many things, and people take things into their own hands,� she said. “This is hugely disruptive,� she said of the COVID-19 pandemic. “Having trust matters.� To reduce disruption, a central message from government leaders must be “we’re in this together,� she said. Q Staff Writer Sue Dremann can be emailed at sdremann@ paweekly.com.

Antebellum society used yellow fever as a justification for slavery. A persistent myth claimed that since yellow fever was known in Africa, black people had a natural resistance to yellow fever. There is no such thing as inherited immunity, however, and slaves who had not contracted the disease in Africa had no immunity when they boarded slave ships and were sent in chains to Louisiana, Olivarius said. Slavers, however, used the mythology to justify having black people work in places where the chances of contracting the disease were the highest. Many deaths soon followed. Slaves who had survived yellow fever were worth more. Advertisements showed that an “acclimated� slave could fetch 25% to 50% more, Olivarius said. Olivarius also sees the United States’ poor people and people of color being the greater victims of the COVID-19 epidemic. There are already racial and geographical disparities in testing and exposure to the virus, she said. Those who are in service jobs come into contact with the public and have a greater likelihood of contracting the disease: grocery store employees, transportation workers and others. White-collar workers stay protected at home and work remotely from their laptops. “Pandemics and epidemics ... lay bare the existing inequality and demonstrate fast and painfully who belongs in society and who does not,� she said. “I’m scared. I worry that with COVID-19, we will radically increase racism. Already, there is huge discrimination against Chinese individuals who are being blamed� for the disease, which originated in Wuhan, China, she said. “Those are bad signs. What’s going to come in the months and years with this epidemic?� If there is one lesson from

voluntary infection.� People at low risk for severe complications deliberately contract the coronavirus so they become immune. (Researchers are not yet sure to what degree if any getting COVID-19 will confer immunity.) The author claims voluntary controlled infections would model “chickenpox parties� that took place before immunizations of childhood diseases such as chickenpox and German measles. Neighborhood children were invited to play with an infected child so “the entire community would get the disease out of the way in one little local epidemic,� according to the article. Immunity obtained at a young age would also prevent people from getting the disease later in life when it would be more dangerous, the article said. “It so enraged me that I wrote a New York Times op-ed about it,� Olivarius said, noting the suffering and lives lost in New Orleans when people deliberately tried to get yellow fever. The potential segmenting of the population according to those who have had COVID-19 and those who have not worries Olivarius. “The problem in the U.S. is we don’t have widespread immunity. We might end up with an immune elite to COVID who can go out to work, restaurants, the movies and parks and the non-immunes without antibodies would be stuck at home,� she said. That could lead to people deliberately trying to get sick to get back to work again. She pointed to serious talk about issuing “immunity passports,� which would allow people who have had COVID-19 to travel freely while the movement of the “have nots� would be restricted. The COVID-19 pandemic also could create a growing justification for racism, she said.

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For a list of open restaurants, please go to: www.cityofpaloalto.org/coronavirus www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 31


Upfront PUBLIC HEALTH

Hayward and Fremont: Setting the standard for widespread testing With six weeks of experience with drive-thru testing, East Bay cities hone their strategies by Sue Dremann

I

n Hayward and Fremont, city leaders have learned much about testing for the coronavirus through their drivethru sites and have been adapting their strategies to match the needs they’ve seen. Testing began six weeks ago, spearheaded by the fire chiefs in both cities. Hayward began its tests on March 22 to help take pressure off of hospital emergency rooms and provide quicker answers for health care workers and first responders with COVID-19 symptoms, Chief Garrett Contreras said. No one who meets the criteria for the illness is turned away regardless of where they live, their immigration status or ability to pay. Of the 4,497 people tested during the first five weeks, 1,481 were Hayward residents and 1,666 live elsewhere in Alameda County, according to the city’s website. About 12% of the roughly 5,500 people tested through May 6 turned out positive, Contreras said. He attributed it to the city’s large population of health care workers, first responders, people who work in congregate workplaces such as meat-packing and the wholesale food and beverage industry. Hayward also is home to “tons of long-term-care facilities staff” who commute around the Bay Area, he added. Although the sites first adhered to strict criteria for symptoms as outlined by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (fever of 100 degrees or higher, cough and shortness of breath,

high-risk groups such as seniors or people with heart disease, diabetes, etc.), Contreras said they soon learned that fever was a poor indicator of the illness. “On the first day, the patient didn’t qualify and now it’s Wednesday and the disease is worse and they have a fever. They come back and they test positive. The patient has lost two days of potential treatment, and we’ve had two more days of spreading the disease,” he said. Sheltering in place, while important, is also limiting. “That’s good until you are sheltering in place in an apartment with nine residents,” he said. Hayward expanded its program, adding a mobile unit on April 22, following up on leads they often discover during the daytime testing. After the testing site closes, staff head out in the van to apartments and other places where people live in crowded conditions. “Right now they are at an apartment (of) a woman whose parent tested positive. She’s the breadwinner and cohabits with five construction workers. We’re testing her and the five workers,” he said on Wednesday. The mobile unit spends its time early in the morning at longterm-care facilities. If there’s been an outbreak, they’ll test all of the residents and employees, or they’ll do blanket testing if the county has so requested, he said. Sometimes they will test a wing of patients and staff at the request of a facility if it’s had a

is looking for other sources of funding and ways to reduce costs to keep the program sustainable. In the first weeks, Avellino Labs, the Menlo Park-based laboratory conducting the PCR tests, charged the city $150 per test. The cost is now down to $75 each as the company has refined its technology, Contreras said. He hopes that with further refinements, the tests will cost $40 or $50. He’s also used volunteers, nonprofit organizations, city staff and personnel from the fire department. On May 18, a graduating class of new nurses may be utilized to do swabbing to help sustain the program, he said. “One site is a drop in the bucket,” however, he said. Alameda County could use seven more sites; Santa Clara County needs six or seven, he said. “That’s what will get to the government’s goal to 30,000 a day,” he said. The city of Fremont decided to learn from Hayward, sending four of its personnel from the fire department to volunteer and learn from the Cal State testing site, Chief Curtis Jacobson said. Fremont did its testing at its fire training center, near an industrial area where there isn’t much traffic and an adjacent feeder street could be used to divert traffic if necessary. “Location, location, location is very important,” he said. Like Hayward, there was no cost to the public and no one was turned away based on their

positive case or suspected cases. Contreras noted that although long-term-care facilities are places where outbreaks occur because they are congregate environments, he hasn’t found the facilities to blame. “It’s nothing they did,” he said. At one facility, they tested 140 patients and 120 staff members. “Not one tested positive,” he said. At a food manufacturing site, after a worker there tested positive, the mobile team assessed 160 employees, but they found no further positive cases and the plant was able to continue its operations. Contreras said they have also done targeted testing. Two other food-processing companies have asked to have their workers tested. One place they haven’t found many COVID-19-positive people: homeless encampments. Contreras said the mobile unit has gone to places where they know homeless people gather and sleep and offer to test them. Hayward provided $2.3 million for testing kits, infrastructure, safety equipment, personnel and temporary housing for staff so they would not have to travel home and risk contaminating their families. They used eight emergency medical technicians from a private ambulance service, which cost less than using firefighters and four hospital staff members who had been furloughed. Hayward has paid for some of the testing, but Contreras

Testing (continued from page 5)

Lloyd Lee

test roughly 4,000 people per day before the stay-at-home order can be relaxed, County Executive Jeffrey Smith told the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday, May 5. As of last week, it had reached only about 1,000 tests per day. The 4,000 tests per day are the minimum needed; the county’s goal is to expand to 15,000 to 20,000 tests per day, he said. Testing is crucial to getting the county’s businesses, schools and other facilities reopened. Without testing, it’s hard to identify who has the disease and to whom they are spreading it, Dr. Sara Cody, the county’s public health officer, has said. County Supervisor Joe Simitian voiced his frustration with the slow pace of testing. “We’ve only gotten in the last week or so to 1,000 tests. Our current level is 25% of where it needs to be by the end of this month,”

Santa Clara County Communications Manager Roger Ross holds up a swab test that will be used at the county’s COVID-19 testing site at James Lick High School in east San Jose on May 4. when the shutdown order ends, he told this news organization. At Tuesday’s meeting, Simitian expressed urgency about testing at all long-term-care facilities,

Page 32 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com

like skilled nursing homes. It’s known that the virus has been introduced to residents of these facilities by employees, which highlights the importance of testing

asymptomatic individuals, he said. “This needs to happen now. Forty percent of the deaths are in long-term-care facilities,” he said. Kniss’ and Simitian’s concerns are widely shared among the county’s 15 mayors, who joined together last week to try to spur the county to faster action and greater collaboration with its cities. In an April 29 letter to county leaders, the mayors specifically requested that the county identify a clear goal “in unambiguous, quantitative terms” for testing frequency that would be sufficient to safely reopen schools and businesses; create a comprehensive list of testing sites; and identify how many people would be needed for contact tracing, the process of identifying — and isolating — people who may have been exposed to someone who tested positive. The letter noted that Gov. Gavin Newsom’s Testing Task Force has asked for partnerships and more testing sites but has not offered

immigration status. About 50% to 55% of those who came for testing came from Alameda, Contra Costa and Stanislaus counties; 40% came from Santa Clara County, he said. Among them were firefighters, police and health care workers who weren’t able to access tests in Santa Clara County, he said. Fremont also targeted its testing to these groups and to vulnerable populations. They also did outreach to residential care facilities and focused on workers in those facilities, he said. “We’re open to anyone who has symptoms,” he said. The most people they tested in one day was 181, and they were initially open daily. Currently, they operate Tuesdays and Thursdays from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on an appointment basis as well as through a mobile service. Fremont is now testing grocery store workers and those who work in “big box” stores — groups that will come into contact with many people, he said. The program is expandable, but that’s predicated on receiving additional funding from the federal and state governments and whatever the county public health department provides, he said. He’d like to be involved in a regional program, but that will depend largely on funding. A large testing program should be mobilized “like mutual aid for wildland fires,” he said, where testing groups can be moved to locations where they are most needed and can strategize, he said. Q specific details. The mayors urged the county to form a county task force devoted to testing. “Without dramatic scaling of testing from the current levels ... we cannot reopen our county,” the letter states. At the urging of Kniss, Palo Alto’s council on May 4 unanimously agreed to hold a full discussion on Monday, May 11, about ways it can help expand testing. Councilman Greg Tanaka noted that Shenzhen, China, which was one of the first cities to experience the pandemic, has been able to reopen about 90% of its economy by offering widespread testing and contact tracing. He also pointed to the free testing run by the cities of Fremont and Hayward (see sidebar). Testing “lets us know what the spread is,” Tanaka said. “And that’s what other places have done — Seoul, South Korea, and China. They’ve been able to reopen successfully and without a resurgence (continued on next page)


Upfront (continued from previous page

because of this kind of practice.” Yet council members also recognize that the city’s ability to offer tests and reopen schools and businesses hinges on the county, given its charge of protecting public health. Mayor Adrian Fine said that anything the city does needs to be “additive to the county process” and not duplicative or counter to what the county is doing. The city would need the county’s help to figure out what type of tests to do, how to report results and how to maintain residents’ privacy, Fine said. “We as a city are not professional in those areas,” he said.

The problems with testing

C

ounty leaders have offered a variety of reasons for why testing in Santa Clara County continues to fall short of the need. On April 29, Smith told the Board of Supervisors’ Health and Hospitals Committee that testing is “a priority we have very little control over, locally.” Smith cited the shortage of reagents (chemicals that are used for analysis of samples); the length of time to get approval for tests from the FDA, the CDC and CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services); the ineffectiveness of the test developed by the CDC;

and the fact that other parts of the nation are doing far worse than Santa Clara County and, as such, are “sucking up the capacity.” Ken Dueker, director of Palo Alto’s Office of Emergency Services, similarly attributed the shortage of tests to inadequate supplies of test kits and uneven distribution of personal protective equipment for the health care workers implementing the tests. In some cases, he said, ability to test is limited by a shortage of the required nasopharyngeal swabs. “Reagents and chemical components have been hit and miss in the supply chain. Even the medium to safely transport the samples has been in short supply,” Dueker told the City Council on May 4. He also noted that while the state has been funneling testing supplies to various parts of California and setting up new testing sites, these resources have not for the most part been directed to Santa Clara County. “They’ve gone elsewhere,” Dueker said. All of these reasons do not entirely sit well with the county’s supervisors, who instead — like the cities’ mayors — point to a lack of coordination as significantly contributing to the problems with testing. Simitian, who serves on the county’s Health and Hospitals Committee, suggested on April 29

that that the committee take the lead in coordinating the county’s effort to ramp up testing. “I know for public health purposes that the incremental growth in testing that we’ve been able to achieve has significance, but in terms of charting a course back (to normal life), these numbers are pretty modest,” Simitian said at the meeting. “That’s the kindest way I can put it.” Supervisor Susan Ellenberg, who also serves on the committee, agreed. “There is such discrepancy in what is happening from state to state and from county to county that I fully believe there is more that we could be and must be doing to move this along,” Ellenberg said. That lack of coordination has been evidenced in Kniss’ experience of trying to get tested for COVID-19 in her home county — one in which she both worked as a public health nurse and served as a county supervisor. Even as Los Angeles and Sacramento counties have partnered with nonprofit groups to provide COVID-19 tests to all their residents, Santa Clara County’s testing network resembles a collection of disparate systems, each with its own rules and objectives. Most health care systems — Kaiser Permanente, El Camino Health, Palo Alto Medical Foundation — will test only their

own patients provided they have symptoms that meet the CDC guidelines and receive a doctor’s referral. Stanford Health Care initiated testing with similar restrictions in March, although now the organization allows non-Stanford patients with symptoms or exposure risks to be screened for a possible test. (Stanford Health Care has also focused on testing its 14,000-member workforce and its patients.) Beyond the private and nonprofit health care networks, there has been no clear route to getting tested unless you fit certain limited criteria. (See graphic, “How can I get tested?”) The Palo Alto VA Health Care System is testing military veterans with symptoms. The County Health System is testing those who don’t have insurance. Verily Life Sciences — a research subsidiary of Mountain View’s Alphabet — has been testing persons who are either symptomatic or working in frontline professions, such as first responders or health care or prison employees. And through a new public-private partnership between the state of California and health-services company OptumServe, two sites in south county will offer COVID testing to all, but with the caveat that priority will be given to a range of groups, including high-risk workers, the elderly,

HEALTH CARE SYSTEM

VERILY (PROJECT BASELINE)

Do you have a medical provider?

Do you have symptoms or are you a specific type of worker?

YES: Make an appointment to see your doctor NO: Call the County Health System at 1-888-334-1000 STANFORD HEALTH CARE

HOW CAN I GET TESTED?

Are you a Stanford patient? YES: If you have symptoms, make an appointment with your doctor

Are you in a priority testing group? FREMONT & HAYWARD

Do you have a fever that’s over 100 degrees, a cough and shortness of breath?

U.S. VETERANS AFFAIRS

YES: Go to Cal State East Bay test site at 25800 Carlos Bee Blvd., in parking lot A. hayward-ca.gov/ COVID-19

YES: If you have symptoms of COVID-19, contact your doctor through My HealtheVet at myhealth.va.gov/ or call 1-844-698-2311

YES: Sign up for a test through the Verily website at projectbaseline.com/study/ covid-19/eligibility/ STATE / OPTUMSERVE

NO: Call 650-498-9000 to see if you qualify anyway based on your symptoms or exposure to people with the coronavirus

Are you a military veteran?

(Health care, prison, first responder)

NO: If you had a fever but no longer do, and either were exposed to someone with COVID-19 or have respiratory symptoms or other chronic health conditions, you can go to the Fremont site. Call 510-252-6808 for an appointment.

(Health care/social service workers, first responders; 65 years or older; chronically ill and atrisk; public health referred; congregate-living residents or workers; essential workers - utilities, grocery store, food supply, other public employees; or symptomatic) YES: Call 1-888-634-1123 or visit lhi.care/covidtesting NO: You can try to get a test but you will be prioritized lower

Symptoms of COVID-19 The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention currently lists the common symptoms of COVID-19 as: • Fever • Cough • Shortness of breath • Chills • Muscle pain • New loss of taste or smell • Vomiting or diarrhea • Sore throat

the chronically ill, those referred by public health, people living or working in group-care facilities and those with symptoms. Those who are asymptomatic are at the bottom of the list.

Where do we go from here?

E

ven as local leaders have urged swifter action, the county has made some progress on boosting its testing numbers. And this week, officials announced new plans to ramp up testing capacity and create a new group to improve coordination. Between April 1 and April 15, the county reported an average of 511 tests per day, according to Public Health Department statistics; in the period between April 16 and May 4, the average number of tests rose to 844; and in the past 10 days, the county reported an average of 1,040 tests per day, with a peak on May 1, when there were 1,383 tests. The county also formed a new COVID-19 testing task force, to be headed by former county public health officer Dr. Marty Fenstersheib, to move the county toward adequate testing and its longer-term goal of complete contact tracing, which Smith said could require a workforce of 600. Smith told the Board of Supervisors on May 5 that in order for the county to get closer to testing capacity of 4,000 per day, the tests will come from outside sources. Stanford Health Care has the capacity to do 2,800 tests per day, Kaiser Permanente 1,500 tests, and Valley Medical Center can 2,000, although it currently can test only 300 a day. It expects to receive new reagent and new machinery at the end of this week. “We can quickly approach capacity,” he said. Dr. Scott Boyd, associate professor of pathology at Stanford School of Medicine, who created a serology test to identify antibodies to COVID-19 in blood samples, said there are plans to increase the capacity for the PCR swab tests, which identify the virus by its RNA, and the serology test. Stanford has tested a mix of patients, including some individuals who were asymptomatic, and it has tested samples sent by other medical centers on a small scale. So far, Stanford has had enough (continued on page 34)

www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 33


Upfront

Testing (continued from page 33)

supplies for the testing, but shortages have been an ongoing issue in general with tests. “It’s a moving target all of the time,� he said. The county also has loosened its criteria a bit for who can be tested by any organization. Depending on test availability, other health care workers, first responders and essential employees such as grocery clerks, utility workers, food supply workers and others who have close contact with the public can be tested. People who are hospitalized

and undergoing elective procedures can also be tested, as can all residents of congregate living facilities, such as senior-care centers. Anyone older than 60 years of age or individuals with chronic medical conditions that increase their risk of severe COVID-19 symptoms can also be tested. There is now more testing capacity than there are people being tested, Smith said. Private laboratories, including the Verily site, are underutilized. Smith said he has been told people make appointments but don’t show up. He said he doesn’t know if they have trouble getting to the site or if they aren’t being referred there.

Just about everyone agrees that the county’s communication on testing has been a problem. When Simitian asked on May 5 whether the county should make the criteria for who can get tests less rigorous, Smith pointed to the recent loosening of the county’s guidance and the recent boost in testing capacity. “Since we currently have capacity for selection, I think for the most part that means anybody,� Smith responded. “But that just points out the fact that we’re still having trouble communicating that message effectively, because private doctors and institutions aren’t necessarily doing it as on

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call, or as needed.� That said, the official guidelines that are posted on the Santa Clara County website continue to restrict who can get tested, forcing residents to go to other counties. This includes even residents like Kniss, who fit the county’s recently expanded criteria. Smith acknowledged this week that the county needs “to communicate that (testing) is available, that it can be done here.� Cody said the challenge is matching the capacity to the need and understanding the barriers to getting people to where they need to be tested. “We are successful in driving down the infection,� she said on

May 5 of the nearly 2-month-old public health effort. In areas where there are more infections, the county needs to do intensive testing and make them priority areas, she said. “I’m an eternal optimist,� Cody said. “I feel we can do this.� Q Editorial Assistant Lloyd Lee contributed to this article. Staff writers Sue Dremann and Gennady Sheyner can be reached at sdremann@paweekly.com and gsheyner@paweekly.com. About the cover: Eager to reopen its economy, Santa Clara County tries to ramp up its COVID-19 testing. Illustration by Douglas Young.

Employment

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SW Engineer SW Engineer - Personalis, Inc. has an opening in Menlo Park, CA. SW Engr (Platforms/Products): design, develop, test & maintain. Submit resume (principals only) to: gail. stanley@personalis.com & include recruitment source + full job title in subject line. EOE

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There will be a MANDATORY pre-bid conference and site visit at 10:00 a.m. on May 12, 2020 at the 780 Arastradero Road, Palo Alto, CA 93406 Âś TLL[ H[ [OL *HTW\Z (KTPUPZ[YH[PVU 6ɉJL [V ZPNU PU Bid Submission: 7YVWVZHSZ T\Z[ IL YLJLP]LK H[! *O\YJOPSS (]L 7HSV (S[V *( +PZ[YPJ[ -HJPSP[PLZ 6ɉJL )\PSKPUN + Âś UV SH[LY [OHU ! 74 VU 4H` ;V IPK VU [OPZ 7YVQLJ[ [OL )PKKLY PZ YLX\PYLK [V WVZZLZZ VUL VY TVYL VM [OL MVSSV^PUN :[H[L VM *HSPMVYUPH JVU[YHJ [VYZÂť SPJLUZL Z ! B, C-10, C-20 or as appropriate for this Work. 0U HKKP[PVU [OL )PKKLY PZ YLX\PYLK [V IL YLNPZ[LYLK HZ H W\ISPJ ^VYRZ JVU[YHJ[VY ^P[O [OL +LWHY[TLU[ VM 0UK\Z[YPHS 9LSH[PVUZ W\YZ\HU[ [V [OL 3HIVY *VKL 7\YZ\HU[ [V 7\ISPJ *VU[YHJ[ *VKL Š VUS` WYLX\HSPĂ„LK IPKKLYZ ^PSS IL LSPNPISL [V Z\ITP[ H IPK (U` IPK Z\ITP[[LK I` H IPKKLY ^OV PZ UV[ WYLX\HSPĂ„LK ZOHSS IL UVU YLZWVUZP]L 4VYLV]LY HU` IPK SPZ[PUN Z\IJVU[YHJ[VYZ OVSKPUN * * * * * * VY * SPJLUZLZ ^OV OH]L UV[ ILLU WYLX\HSPĂ„LK ZOHSS IL KLLTLK UVUYLZWVUZP]L )VUKPUN YLX\PYLK MVY [OPZ WYVQLJ[ PZ HZ MVSSV^Z! )PK )VUK VM [OL [V[HS IPK 7LYMVYTHUJL )VUK [V IL 7H`TLU[ )VUK PZ [V IL PREVAILING WAGE LAWS: ;OL Z\JJLZZM\S )PKKLY HUK HSS Z\IJVU[YHJ[VYZ ZOHSS WH` HSS ^VYRLYZ MVY HSS >VYR WLYMVYTLK W\YZ\HU[ [V [OPZ *VU[YHJ[ UV[ SLZZ [OHU [OL NLULYHS WYL]HPSPUN YH[L VM WLY KPLT ^HNLZ HUK [OL NLULYHS WYL]HPSPUN YH[L MVY OVSPKH` HUK V]LY[PTL ^VYR HZ KL[LYTPULK I` [OL +PYLJ[VY VM [OL +LWHY[TLU[ VM 0UK\Z[YPHS 9LSH[PVUZ :[H[L VM *HSPMVYUPH MVY [OL [`WL VM ^VYR WLYMVYTLK HUK [OL SVJHSP[` PU ^OPJO [OL ^VYR PZ [V IL WLYMVYTLK ^P[OPU [OL IV\UKHYPLZ VM [OL +PZ[YPJ[ W\YZ\HU[ [V Š L[ ZLX VM [OL *HSPMVYUPH 3HIVY *VKL 7YL]HPSPUN ^HNL YH[LZ HYL HSZV H]HPSHISL VU [OL 0U[LYUL[ H[! #O[[W! ^^^ KPY JH NV]% ;OPZ 7YVQLJ[ PZ Z\IQLJ[ [V SHIVY JVTWSPHUJL TVUP[VYPUN HUK LUMVYJLTLU[ I` [OL +LWHY[TLU[ VM 0UK\Z[YPHS 9LSH[PVUZ W\YZ\HU[ [V 3HIVY *VKL Š HUK Z\IQLJ[ [V [OL YLX\PYLTLU[Z VM ;P[SL VM [OL *HSPMVYUPH *VKL VM 9LN\SH[PVUZ ;OL *VU[YHJ[VY HUK HSS :\IJVU[YHJ[VYZ \UKLY [OL *VU[YHJ[VY ZOHSS M\YUPZO LSLJ[YVUPJ JLY[PĂ„LK WH`YVSS YLJVYKZ KPYLJ[S` [V [OL 3HIVY *VTTPZZPVULY ^LLRS` HUK ^P[OPU [LU KH`Z VM HU` YLX\LZ[ I` [OL +PZ[YPJ[ VY [OL 3HIVY *VTTPZZPVULY ;OL Z\JJLZZM\S )PKKLY ZOHSS JVTWS` ^P[O HSS YLX\PYLTLU[Z VM +P]PZPVU 7HY[ *OHW[LY (Y[PJSLZ VM [OL 3HIVY *VKL )PKKLYZ TH` L_HTPUL )PKKPUN +VJ\TLU[Z H[ -HJPSP[PLZ 6ɉJL )\PSKPUN ¸+š )PKKLYZ TH` HSZV W\YJOHZL JVWPLZ VM [OL WSHUZ HUK ZWLJPĂ„JH[PVUZ H[ ARC Document Solutions, 829 Cherry Lane, San Carlos, CA 94070, Phone Number (650) 631-2310 ;OL +PZ[YPJ[ ZOHSS H^HYK [OL *VU[YHJ[ PM P[ H^HYKZ P[ H[ HSS [V [OL SV^LZ[ YLZWVUZP]L YLZWVUZPISL IPKKLY IHZLK VU [OL IHZL IPK HTV\U[ VUS` ;OL )VHYK YLZLY]LZ [OL YPNO[ [V YLQLJ[ HU` HUK HSS IPKZ HUK VY ^HP]L HU` PYYLN\SHYP[` PU HU` IPK YLJLP]LK 0M [OL +PZ[YPJ[ H^HYKZ [OL *VU[YHJ[ [OL ZLJ\YP[` VM \UZ\JJLZZM\S IPKKLY Z ZOHSS IL YL[\YULK ^P[OPU ZP_[` KH`Z MYVT [OL [PTL [OL H^HYK PZ THKL <USLZZ V[OLY^PZL YLX\PYLK I` SH^ UV IPKKLY TH` ^P[OKYH^ P[Z IPK MVY UPUL[` KH`Z HM[LY [OL KH[L VM [OL IPK VWLUPUN (SS X\LZ[PVUZ JHU IL HKKYLZZLK [V! 7HSV (S[V <UPĂ„LK :JOVVS +PZ[YPJ[ *O\YJOPSS (]LU\L )\PSKPUN + 7HSV (S[V *( ([[U! 9V`JL 9PWWLYL ,THPS! YV`JL'MZ O JVT

Page 34 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com

Senior Software Engineer Senior Software Engineer sought by Hint, Inc. (dba HintMD). Full-time, 40 Hours/week, Long Term. Write Computer codes for payment facilitator platform; create and build API; fix production issues; test software. Requirements, Master’s in Computer Science; Skills in JavaScript, Java, SQL, Design and development of e-commerce platform. Send resume to Hint, Inc., 7901 Stoneridge Drive, Suite 150, Pleasanton, CA 94588 and reference Senior Software Engineer position to apply.

Senior UX/UI Designer Senior UX/UI Designer sought by Hint, Inc. (dba HintMD). Full-time, 40 Hours/week, Long Term. Draw flowcharts, mockups, layout; Create computer-generated graphics or animation; Take informal designs concepts and extend them into organized and accurate design system; Draw and print artwork using computer design software. Requirements, Master’s in Design; Skills in UX/UI Design, Wireframing, Prototyping, Information Architecture. Send resume to Hint, Inc., 7901 Stoneridge Drive, Suite 150, Pleasanton, CA 94588 and reference Senior UX/UI Designer position to apply.

To place an ad or get a quote, call 650.223.6582 or email digitalads@paweekly.com.

Give blood for life! b l o o d c e n t e r. s t a n f o r d . e d u


Upfront

Seniors (continued from page 5)

Public Agenda A preview of Palo Alto government meetings next week CITY COUNCIL ... The council plans to hear an update on the city’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic; consider eliminating a rule banning commercial developers from using in-lieu fees to fulfill parking requirements; and discuss the proposed budget for fiscal year 2021. The virtual meeting will begin at 5 p.m. on Monday, May 11. The meeting will be broadcast on Cable TV Channel 26, at youtube.com/c/cityofpaloalto, and midpenmedia.org. Those wishing to participate by Zoom can do so by dialing 669-900-6833 and using Meeting ID: 362 027 238. BOARD OF EDUCATION ... The school board will hear updates on distance learning, planning for the next school year and the district’s budget; and will discuss plans for summer school. The virtual meeting will begin at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 12. The meeting will be broadcast on Cable TV Channel 28 and and midpenmedia.org. Those wishing to participate by Zoom can do so by going to pausd.zoom. us/j/94997346242 or dialing 669-900-6833 and using Meeting ID: 949 9734 6242. CITY COUNCIL ... The council plans to continue its discussion of the proposed fiscal year 2021 budget by reviewing the proposed nondepartmental budget as well as the budgets of the Utility and Public Works departments; public-safety services; community programs and library services; the Human Resources and Administrative departments; and the offices of the city attorney, city manager, city clerk and city auditor. The virtual meeting will begin at 1 p.m. on Tuesday, May 12. The meeting will be broadcast on Cable TV Channel 26, at youtube.com/c/ cityofpaloalto, and midpenmedia.org. Those wishing to participate by Zoom can do so by dialing 669-900-6833 and using Meeting ID: 362 027 238. CITY COUNCIL ... The council plans to continue its discussion of the proposed fiscal year 2021 budget with a focus on the 2021 municipal fee schedule, planning and transportation services and the capital budget in the General Fund, which includes the Cubberley Community Center improvement plan. The virtual meeting will begin at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, May 13. The meeting will be broadcast on Cable TV Channel 26, at youtube.com/c/cityofpaloalto, and midpenmedia.org. Those wishing to participate by Zoom can do so by dialing 669-9006833 and using Meeting ID: 362 027 238. PLANNING AND TRANSPORTATION COMMISSION ... The commission plans to discuss approaches to converting portions of the Palo Alto’s zoning code relating to review standards into objective standards for development. The virtual meeting will begin at 6 p.m. on Wednesday, May 13. The meeting will be broadcast on Cable TV Channel 26, and at midpenmedia.org. Those wishing to participate by Zoom can do so by dialing 669-900-6833 and using Meeting ID: 925 9144 5934. HISTORIC RESOURCES BOARD ... The board plans to discuss 235 Hamilton Ave., the proposed reclassification of Cardinal Hotel from a Local Historic Resource Category 3 to Category 2; and consider the compliance of proposed modifications to Hotel President at 488 University Ave. with the Secretary of the Interior’s standards. The virtual meeting will be held at 8:30 a.m. on Thursday, May 14. It will be streamed at midpenmedia.org. Those wishing to participate by Zoom can do so by dialing 669-900-6833 and using Meeting ID: 935 2189 4451.

celebration in the future. Some seniors decided to don their already purchased prom outfits and take socially distant photos, or they got together over Zoom on what would have been prom night. For students who couldn’t attend prom in their junior year or planned to only go senior year because of the expense, the cancelation of this event was particularly disappointing. Seniors also have had to forego other end-of-year competitions and events. Liu has acted in every play and musical the school has put on and to not bring that experience to a close was “disheartening.” Gunn theater students found out their final production was canceled the same day it was set to take place. Others are missing their final debate tournaments, robotics competitions or athletic events. Paly students and administrators have planned a series of remote celebrations for what would have been the last week of school, including a virtual paper toss held on Zoom and organizing times to say online goodbyes to teachers and staff. On June 3, for the citywide “shout out,” they’re asking people across Palo Alto to decorate their front yards and go outside at 5:30 p.m. to shout congratulations for the Class of 2020. Frida Rivera, Paly’s senior class president, has been involved in the planning of these events. She acknowledged none of them are adequate replacements for what seniors expected to have in person but said they’re the “best possible outcome.” Staff at the Madrono, Paly’s yearbook, don’t yet know how or when the yearbook they’ve been working on for months will be safely distributed, but they’ve been adjusting its pages to reflect an unprecedented moment in history. A timeline with local and global events now includes dates of when schools closed and major events related to the coronavirus. Instead of the usual photos of students together for the “senior superlatives” feature, which honors pairs of seniors in categories like “most likely to become president” and “most likely to be late to graduation,” the yearbook staff is creating drawings of the winners. Clubs that hadn’t yet submitted photos have sent in group Zoom screenshots. Students at Palo Alto, Mountain View and Los Altos high schools also have used Instagram to highlight seniors’ post-high school plans. Rivera said some students responded to Paly’s Instagram feature in unexpected ways that she appreciated: One senior said his post-high school plans were simply to “be awesome.” Another one? “Write a novel.”

Celebrating post-high school plans amid a cloud of uncertainty The next chapter for many high school seniors — college — is still hanging in the balance as colleges and universities across the

Magali Gauthier

be the best year of high school. We go through 12-plus years of schooling awaiting that final year and all the fun things it entails,” she said. “Senior year is the last year you get to spend with your friends ... those everlasting memories of our childhood that we get to to carry on with us throughout our life.” A member of the track team, Sias had long pictured herself walking down the track field on senior night and proudly announcing where she’s going to college (the University of Hawaii at Manoa, where she plans to study education). She also was looking forward to a senior trip to the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk. One anticipated time with

friends — prom night — has already come and gone. Mountain View High School senior Jonathan Liu said he had an elaborate “promposal” planned — including an original song — before the pandemic struck. He was looking forward to prom as well as graduation. “These are the events that I feel are the heart of the high school experience, events that everybody remembers long after they have graduated. Not having these oncein-a-lifetime experiences is a real bummer since I can’t help wondering ‘What if?’” he said. Menlo-Atherton’s student activities director and student leaders floated the idea of a virtual prom to students, but it wasn’t a popular one, Menlo-Atherton Principal Simone Rick-Kennel said. Administrators hope to gather the class of 2020 for a prom or

A sign celebrates the Palo Alto High School class of 2020 at an intersection in downtown Palo Alto. country figure out what school will look like in the fall. The University of California has indicated it could reopen just one-third to one-half of dorm rooms. Other colleges are planning for hybrid models with a mix of virtual and in-person instruction. It’s top of mind for all seniors. “There are two topics you can talk about right now: college and coronavirus,” Kolbasov joked. Many seniors received news about their college admissions during the shelter in place. Some said it was a relief not to be surrounded by peers talking about their acceptances on campus and

997 All Other Legals NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: GLORIA L. READE Case No.: 20PR187813 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of GLORIA READE. A Petition for Probate has been filed by: GORDON READE in the Superior Court of California, County of SANTA CLARA. The Petition for Probate requests that: GORDON READE be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. The petition requests the decedent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court. The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A HEARING on the petition will be held on May 13, 2020 at 9:00 a.m. in Dept.: 13 of the Superior Court of California, County of Santa Clara, located at 191 N. First St., San Jose, CA, 95113.

nervously monitoring their inboxes for news during class. Kolbasov is planning to attend Brown University in Rhode Island to study English and psychology. Brown was her first choice, but she seriously considered attending a California school instead because of the uncertainty around travel due to the virus. She said some friends are considering taking gap years for this reason. “I think almost everybody thought about the impact of this on their college decision,” she (continued on page 36)

If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58 (b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: Stephen Vernon/Cecelia C. Fusich Gilfix & La Poll Associates LLP 2479 E. Bayshore Rd. Suite 220 Palo Alto, CA 94303 (650) 493-8070 (PAW Apr. 24; May 1, 8, 2020)

Call Alicia Santillan at 650-223-6578 or email asantillan@paweekly.com for assistance with your legal advertising needs. www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 35


Upfront

Seniors (continued from page 35)

said. “Ultimately I decided the rest of college, being where I’ve wanted to go for so long, is worth it. I don’t want to regret closing that opportunity once we are hopefully on campus.” Sias said she’s considering going to Foothill College in Los Altos Hills for her freshman year if she can’t attend college in person — for her, the cost of full tuition for online classes wouldn’t be worth it. Hanna Suh, a Gunn High School senior, has been nervously

monitoring the coronavirus case count in New York City, where she plans to attend New York University in the fall. “I’ve gotten into this new routine of getting up in the morning, picking up The New York Times and seeing their daily coronavirus stats out of anxiety of whether I can go to college in the fall,” she said.

Graduating without the usual pomp or circumstance With the end of the school year just weeks away, most high schools have wrestled with the

TOWN OF ATHERTON NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING MUNICIPAL CODE AMENDMENT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Atherton City Council will hold a public hearing to consider recommending the City Council adopt a Health and Safety Ordinance Amendment to add Chapter 8.56 Regulating the Use of Single-Use Disposable Food Service Ware by Food Facilities to the Atherton Municipal Code. Summary of Ordinance: Adding a new Chapter 8.56 of the Atherton Municipal Code “Disposable Food Service Ware By Food Facilities”. The Ordinance would restrict the use of disposable food service ware that is not compostable, reusable, or recyclable, for commercial food facilities. The goal of the proposed Ordinance is to eliminate disposable food service ware that is not reusable or compostable, improve the health and safety of San Mateo County community members, and help the County meet its regional storm water permit requirements by reducing street litter. This meeting is being held in compliance with the Governors Executive Order N-25-20 issued on March 4, 2020, and Executive Order N-29-20 issued on March 17, 2020, allowing for deviation of teleconference rules required by the Brown Act. The purpose of this is to provide the safest LU]PYVUTLU[ MVY Z[HɈ HUK [OL W\ISPJ ^OPSL HSSV^PUN MVY W\ISPJ WHY[PJPWHtion. The meeting will be held by tele or video conferencing. The public may participate in the City Council Meeting via: Zoom Meeting. Join Zoom Meeting: https://zoom.us/j/506897786 Meeting ID: 506 897 786 One tap mobile +16699006833,,506897786# US (San Jose) Dial by your location +1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose)

Remote Public Comments: Meeting participants are encouraged to submit public comments in writing in advance of the meeting. The following email will be monitored during the meeting and public comments received will be read into the record. Email: asuber@ci.atherton.ca.us

NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that said application is set for hearing by the City Council at its regular meeting on Wednesday, May 20, 2020 at 7:00 p.m. via teleconference accessible through the above-described information, at which time and place all persons interested may appear and show cause, if they have any, why the Municipal Code Amendment should or should not be approved. This Ordinance is exempt from the environmental review requirements of CEQA pursuant to Section 15061 (b)(3) of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations because it can be seen with certainty that there is UV WVZZPIPSP[` [OH[ [OL WYV]PZPVUZ JVU[HPULK OLYLPU TH` OH]L H ZPNUPÄJHU[ LɈLJ[ VU [OL LU]PYVUTLU[ -\Y[OLY [OL 6YKPUHUJL PZ HSZV L_LTW[ MYVT the requirements of CEQA pursuant to CEQA Guidelines Sections 15307 and 15308 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations as actions taken by regulatory agencies to assure the maintenance, restoration, enhancement of natural resources, or protection of the environment. IF YOU CHALLENGE the Municipal Code Amendment in court, you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else raised at the Public Hearing described in this notice, or in written correspondence delivered to the City Council at, or prior to, the Public Hearing. If you have any questions on the item please contact Stephanie Davis, Principal Planner, at sbertollo-davis@ci.atherton.ca.us or 650-773-7249. Any attendee who wishes accommodation for a disability should contact the Building Division at (650) 752-0542 at least 48 hours prior to the meeting. ATHERTON CITY COUNCIL /s/ L Costa Sanders Lisa Costa Sanders, Town Planner

Page 36 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com

agonizing decision of what to do with commencement and landed on a plan, either to move it online or reschedule it months from now. Many local seniors overwhelmingly opposed a virtual graduation, which some said would be “anti-climatic” and even “sad.” Palo Alto High School senior Ben Knopper said he’s glad his school district postponed graduation until December. “It gives us a chance to celebrate, to meet back up and say goodbye one more time,” he said. “I’m hoping it acts more as a sixmonth reunion.” Menlo-Atherton plans to livestream a virtual commencement ceremony on June 4 at 4 p.m. Students can also still order caps and gowns, and some have talked about walking down the street in their caps and gowns together. Kylie Wong, a Menlo-Atherton senior who plans to attend the University of Oregon in the fall, said that while disappointed not to have an in-person ceremony, “I know that the school’s administration is doing its best with the current conditions.” She noted that a unique, longstanding tradition at MenloAtherton will be lost this year: Seniors choose a teacher or staff member who was important to them to present them with their diploma. “During the first (fall) semester, there was consideration to remove this process, but students rallied together to keep this special aspect of graduation,” she wrote in an email. “Ironically, the current situation unraveled graduation plans including the teacherdiploma component.” The school will keep the possibility of an in-person ceremony open depending on when the school can safely gather large crowds again, Menlo-Atherton principal Rick-Kennel said. Woodside High School’s virtual ceremony will include a pre-recorded rendition of pomp and circumstance; student and principal speeches; announcing each student’s name as their preloaded photo in orange cap and gown with their quote appear; and ending with the traditional turning of the tassel. Despite the disappointment and anxieties about what’s ahead, local seniors said they have mostly come to terms with what they have no control over — a global pandemic — and are focusing on staying positive. Suh, the Gunn senior, still plans to decorate her graduation cap regardless of when she’ll be able to toss it in the air, surrounded by her classmates. “I think there’s a new sense that we’re persevering through this together,” she said. Q Embarcadero Media staff writers Angela Swartz and Kate Bradshaw contributed to this article. Staff Writer Elena Kadvany can be emailed at ekadvany@paweekly.com.

News Digest Embattled nonprofit gets city grant The Downtown Streets Team, a nonprofit that has faced multiple allegations of sexual harassment and a hard-partying culture, will receive its full allotment of grant funding from Palo Alto without having to offer documentation that it has addressed these problems, the City Council Finance Committee decided on Tuesday. In voting to give the nonprofit the full funding allotment with no strings attached, the committee overruled the recommendations of the Human Relations Commission’s Selection Committee, which had conditioned the release of the $336,000 from the federal Community Development Block Grant program on the release of documents. The Selection Committee also asked the nonprofit for a report on pay equity and for a survey of the current climate at the organization, which provides services to homeless individuals and operates a food closet. But the Finance Committee was swayed by City Manager Ed Shikada, who made the case for not requiring the nonprofit to provide any of the documents that were requested by the Selection Committee. Shikada argued that requesting the information would be “out of proportion from the kind of information we request from other organizations.” Q — Gennady Sheyner

Elective surgeries ramp up at Stanford Stanford Health Care is rapidly resuming elective surgeries, diagnostic tests and other procedures, with more than 800 scheduled for this week at the main Stanford Hospital and outpatient clinics, President and CEO David Entwistle said in a phone call on Monday. Typically, the hospital and clinics perform 1,200 procedures per week. The regional medical center performed 170 procedures on Monday, May 4. Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered hospitals to freeze all but essential procedures starting March 13 to free up hospital beds for a projected spike in COVID-19 cases. That spike did not occur, largely due to the state’s and local counties’ early shelter-at-home orders. Newsom lifted the stay on April 22. Stanford began offering tests to asymptomatic employees who would come into contact with patients two weeks ago and has been testing employees with symptoms since early March. Entwistle said the health system’s hospitals have not had any recorded transmissions of the coronavirus between patients and health care workers, and the coronavirus tests showed that only about 0.3% of asymptomatic employees tested positive for COVID-19. “Stanford Medicine prepared for the worst, and now we’re ready to resume much of what was put on pause during this health crisis. We have planned for this recovery and restoration, and I’m confident that we can hit the ground running,” Entwistle said. Q — Sue Dremann

Ravenswood, MayView deal finalized It’s official: The Ravenswood Family Health Network has acquired the MayView Community Health Center Clinics. The move, announced in December last year, has been finalized. The Ravenswood Family Health Center has become the Ravenswood Family Health Network and expanded its footprint to include five locations: the Ravenswood Family Health Center, the Ravenswood Family Dentistry clinic, and MayView’s current clinics in Palo Alto, Mountain View and Sunnyvale. The combined sites employ about 300 staff, including more than 50 clinicians, and serve about 27,000 low-income patients, according to a press release issued Monday. But visitors to the former MayView clinics aren’t likely to experience any key differences in their experiences at the clinics. The clinics are keeping MayView as part of their name, and all but three MayView staff members were retained, according to Ravenswood Family Health Network CEO Luisa Buada. The biggest problem the network now faces, however, is that people aren’t coming in for routine visits due to the coronavirus pandemic. Visits are down to about 40% of the usual patient volume, Buada said. In-person visits remain critical for some patients, especially those needing prenatal care, children under 2 years old needing vaccines and developmental tests, and patients with chronic disease, Buada added. The clinics continue to offer in-person visits and COVID-19 testing to people by appointment. COVID-19 tests are done in the parking lot from visitors’ vehicles to reduce exposure. People can also pick up prescriptions curbside at the East Palo Alto pharmacy. Q —Kate Bradshaw


www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 37


788 Forest Avenue

Shown By Appointment Only

Timeless Old-World Charm in Community Center

3 bedrooms 2 baths VdaO ĺ Û _ds ĺ Û

Palo Alto

Alan Dunckel DRE #00866010 650.400.0327 compass.com/agents/sf/alan-dunckel/

alan.dunckel@compass.com

Xin Jiang

788Forest.com #TTOoOM BsÚ ĝ Û Û Compass is the brand name used for services provided by one or more of the Compass group of subsidiary companies. Compass is a real estate broker licensed by the State of California and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. License Number 01079009. All material presented herein is intended for WbTdoaBsWdbB_ ltoldpOp db_| BbM Wp KdalW_OM Toda pdtoKOp MOOaOM oO_WBJ_O Jts VBp bds JOOb yOoW OMà VBbUOp Wb loWKOÛ KdbMWsWdbÛ pB_O do zWsVMoBzB_ aB| JO made without notice. No statement is made as to accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footage are approximate.

Page 38 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com

DRE #01961451 650.283.8379 compass.com/agents/sf/xin-jiang/

xin.jiang@compass.com


Luxury Newer Home with Guest House in Premier Crescent Park

1337 LINCOLN AVENUE PALO ALTO

FOR SALE • 5 bedrooms and 3.5 baths • Guest house with 1 bedroom, 1 bath, and kitchenette • ssBKVOM BbM  bWpVOM •øKBo UBoBUO • Approximately 3,450 total square feet • Gated driveway and pedestrian entrances • BoMzddM ‚ ddop sVodtUVdts • 2oOaObMdtp UoOBs odda l_tp odda Tdo TdoaB_ _WyWbUĂ› aOMWBĂ› do dT KO •

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$4,495,000 | 1337Lincoln.com

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Tom LeMieux,

MBA

Jennifer Bitter, MBA

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@lemieuxRE

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www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 39


SILICO N VALLE Y H O M ES

567 Maybell Ave, Palo Alto Offered at $5,425,750 Michael Dreyfus · 650.485.3476 Lic. #01121795 Noelle Queen · 650.427.9211 Lic. #01917593

728 La Para Ave, Palo Alto Offered at $4,995,000 Michael Dreyfus · 650.485.3476 Lic. #01121795 Noelle Queen · 650.427.9211 Lic. #01917593

286 Willowbrook Dr, Portola Valley 80 Gresham Ln, Atherton Offered at $4,295,000 Offered at $4,998,000 Omar Kinaan · 650.776.2828 Penelope Huang · 650.281.8028 Lic. #01723115 Lic. #01023392

636 Fan Tail Way #901, Redwood City Offered at $1,300,000 Kelly Radetich · 650.303.9589 Lic. #01229022

510 De Anza Ave, San Carlos Offered at $1,850,000 John Shroyer · 650.787.2121 Lic. #00613370

640 Forest Ave Unit C, Palo Alto Offered at $1,425,000 Lucy Berman · 650.208.8824 Lic. #01413627

731 Alvarado Ct, Stanford Offered at $2,998,000 Chris Iverson · 650.450.0450 Lic. #01708130

174 Vista Verde Way, Portola Valley Offered at $3,285,000 Mary Jo McCarthy 650.400.6364 Lic. #01354295

326 Belmont Ave, Redwood City Offered at $1,595,000 Brian Ayer · 650.242.2473 Lic. #01870281 Daniela Haaland · 650.980.8866 Lic. #02045462

3034 Fernwood St, San Mateo Offered at $2,068,000 Henry Chu · 650.918.8118 Lic. #01855861

847 Cabot Ln, Foster City Offered at $1,349,000 Anna DuPont · 650.269.9024 Lic. #01208187 Jackie Cockreham · 650.619.2801 Lic. #00885071

Stay home. Tour homes. See some of our premier listings from the comfort of your own home through 3D virtual reality and high definition video.

Palo Alto Office 728 Emerson St 650.644.3474

Menlo Park Office 640 Oak Grove Ave 650.847.1141

goldengatesir.com/HD

Los Altos Office 195 S. San Antonio Rd 650.941.4300

Woodside Office 2989 Woodside Rd 650.851.6600

Redwood City Office 555 Middlefield Rd 650.577.3700

goldengatesir.com/VR Burlingame Office San Carlos Office 1250 San Carlos Ave 101 401 Primrose Ave, St. J 650.865.3000 650.597.1800

Los Gatos Office 663 Blossom Hill Rd 408.358.2800

Other Offices BELV EDERE-TIBU RO N · BERKELE Y · DA NVILLE · L A FAY E T T E · MILL VA LLE Y · M O NTCL AIR NAPA · N OVATO · OA KL AND · ROS S VA LLE Y · SA N R A FA EL · SAUSALITO · STINSO N BE ACH Each Franchise is Independently Owned and Operated.

Page 40 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com


BY APPT ONLY

1001 HAMILTON AVENUE, PALO ALTO

Offered at $3,998,000

5 bedroom, 3 bathroom home with incredible potential in prime Crescent Park just four blocks from downtown. First floor has an open floor plan and includes a formal entry with wide staircase to the upstairs, a living room/dining room combo with wood-burning fireplace, a family room overlooking the rear yard, and a spacious bedroom with adjacent full bath. Every room on the first floor has direct access to the outside. The second floor includes a large Master bedroom suite with two closets and a balcony overlooking the rear yard and pool, as well as 3 additional spacious bedrooms with generous closets. Random plank hardwood floors, Central Air Conditioning, a 2-car carport, ample storage including a tremendous attic space, and excellent schools (Addison Elementary, Greene Middle, Palo Alto High) add to the appeal. Living space is 2,873 sq.ft. on a 10,784 sq. ft. lot. (Images include virtual staging.)

This information was supplied by third party sources. Sales Associate believes this information is correct but has QRW YHULÜHG WKLV LQIRUPDWLRQ DQG DVVXPHV QR OHJDO UHVSRQVLELOLW\ IRU LWV DFFXUDF\ %X\HU VKRXOG YHULI\ DFFXUDF\ DQG LQYHVWLJDWH WR %X\HUoV RZQ VDWLVIDFWLRQ

BRIAN CHANCELLOR (650) 303-5511 brianc@serenogroup.com brianchancellor.com DRE# 01174998 www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 41


3555 MURDOCH DRIVE, PALO ALTO ÂœĂ›i Ă€Âˆ}Â…ĂŒ ÂˆÂ˜ĂŒÂœ ĂŒÂ…ÂˆĂƒ ĂƒĂŒĂ•Â˜Â˜ÂˆÂ˜} ĂŽ Li`Ă€ÂœÂœÂ“] Ă“ L>ĂŒÂ… VÂœÂ“ÂŤÂ?iĂŒiÂ?Ăž Ă€i“œ`iÂ?i` …œ“i ˆ˜ `iĂƒÂˆĂ€>LÂ?i ˆ`ĂŒÂœĂœÂ˜° /Â…ÂˆĂƒ Â?ˆ}Â…ĂŒÂ‡wÂ?Â?i`] “ˆ`‡ViÂ˜ĂŒĂ•Ă€Ăž “œ`iĂ€Â˜ Stern and Price home is ideally located near top-rated schools, Magical Bridge Playground, Mitchell Park Community Center, local shops & restaurants and Silicon Valley’s major tech companies. •

Light and bright living room with walls of windows and glass door that opens to the verdant backyard.

•

Open kitchen with custom wood cabinets, quartz countertops, breakfast bar, stainless steel appliances, recessed lighting, abundant storage, and sliding glass door that opens to the paver stone patio – perfect for entertaining!

•

Spacious master bedroom suite with skylights and large closet; master bath has a modern vanity with double sinks, tile yÂœÂœĂ€ÂˆÂ˜}] Ăƒi>“Â?iĂƒĂƒ }Â?>ĂƒĂƒ ĂƒÂ…ÂœĂœiĂ€ `ÂœÂœĂ€] >Â˜Ăƒ Ă€ÂœÂ…i wĂ?ĂŒĂ•Ă€iĂƒ and a skylight

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Professionally landscaped yards with drought-tolerant plants

•

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•

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Priced at $2,698,000 3555 Murdoch.com

DENISE SIMONS 650.269.0210 denise.simons@compass.com

DeniseSimons.com

578 University Avenue Palo Alto, CA 94301

Lic. #01376733 *Compass is a licensed real estate broker (01991628) in the State of California and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. All measurements, square footages and school data are approximate. Exact dimensions can be obtained by retaining the services of an architect or engineer. Buyer to verify to conduct their own investigation.all information herein deemed reliable but not guaranteed.

Page 42 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com


OUR T EAM IS IN MOT ION FOR YOU

Do you dream of living on the beach or near the ocean? 312 Oceanview Drive, La Selva Beach

D E L E O N R E A LT Y, I N C . Michael Repka | CEO & Managing Broker | DRE #01854880 650.900.7000 | Info@deleonrealty.com | www.deleonrealty.com | DRE #01903224

Has this pandemic changed your mind about where you want to live and how you will work? Perhaps you have dreamed of living on the beach or near the ocean? The beach townhome at 312 Oceanview Drive is on the sand in La Selva Beach. Make your Zoom calls from the mid-level living area after a morning run on the beach. Need something close to the water with a zen like garden and a private home office? Look no further than 533 La Honda Drive in Aptos.

The Palo Alto Weekly offers advertising for Home Services, Business Services and Employment.

Call me today to learn more about these and other properties in Santa Cruz County and get started living the life of your dreams.

If you wish to learn more about these advertising options, please call 650.223.6582 or email digitalads@paweekly.com.

Across 1 It’s built for accessibility 5 Rainless 9 Graceful fowl 13 The Beehive State 14 Curiosity rover launcher 15 Fern’s seed 16 Start of a path, which traces the opening lyric from a “Brady Bunch” song 18 Film director Pier ___ Pasolini 19 “A Woman Speaks” writer Anais 20 “M*A*S*H” actor Alan 21 Sonic Youth bassist/singer Kim 22 Winter warmers 24 Vientiane’s country 25 Cartoon tavern that’s very susceptible to prank calls 26 Hat removers, quaintly 29 Filtered communication 31 College teachers, familiarly 32 Neighbor of Liech. 34 “The BFG” author Roald 35 Pilot light, e.g. 36 Watch sound 37 Container for coffee 38 Chain that merged with AMC Theatres 39 It’s not the same as assertive 40 Language of Andorra and Barcelona 42 New Facebook reaction emoji 43 Tire mark 44 One of Universal’s classic movie monsters 47 “___ & Juliet” (2011 animated film) 50 Hat stat 51 Lyric verse 52 Parts partner 53 End of the path 55 Signs 56 Perceive 57 Singer Rexha 58 Bonus item

533 La Honda Drive, Aptos

Audrey Sullivan Jacob

831.515.9130 ajacob@davidlyng.com www.audreyjacob.com DRE #01943629

“Fresh Air” — or your sunshine days, or not. by Matt Jones

This week’s SUDOKU

Answers on page 24.

Answers on page 24.

59 Grand Ole ___ (venue broadcasting live streams) 60 “Nailed It” host Nicole Down 1 Archaeological attractions 2 Place to store antiques 3 Classic “Muppet Show” song with that “do dooo do do-do” refrain 4 Golden ratio symbol 5 Where some bracelets are worn 6 Steals from, as a fridge 7 Actress Fisher of “The Great Gatsby” 8 East Indian lentil stew 9 Hardly dense 10 Lumber material 11 “Alice’s Restaurant” chronicler Guthrie

12 “Open” sign element 15 Parodies 17 Belly button 21 Blunder 23 Churn 24 Appears menacingly 26 Sketched 27 Ask for support, in a way 28 “___ fun!” (catchphrase from the BBC’s “Miranda”) 29 Ivy extension? 30 Antony who eulogized Caesar 31 Answer, in court 33 Something to look up to 35 Shakespearean compilation 36 Lawn layer

www.sudoku.name

38 Shaq’s former team 39 ___ in comparison 41 Jazz bandleader/drummer and son of Thelonious 42 In a snug manner 44 Less naive 45 Photoshop company 46 More recent 47 Disgusting goo 48 Handle 49 Above, in Augsburg 50 Part of a recipe 53 Craft in videos recently released by the Pentagon 54 Lessen gradually © 2020 Matt Jones

www.PaloAltoOnline.com • Palo Alto Weekly • May 8, 2020 • Page 43


No matter the community, we’ve got you covered! We invite you to tour these homes virtually.

Better Together.

1705 Fulton Street, Palo Alto 5 Bed | 4.5 Bath | Offered at $5,875,000 Living: 3,371 Sq Ft* | Lot: 8,598 Sq Ft* 2VWp aBUbW KObs VdaO dTTOop Bb O{KOlsWdbB_ ddo l_Bb for intergenerational living or work-from-home. The home has been expanded and remodeled with attention sd bO BoKVWsOKstoB_ MOsBW_p BbM KoBTspaBbpVWlà oOBs opportunity to become a part of one of the Peninsula’s most popular holiday traditions — Christmas Tree Lane. 2VO KdbyObWObs _dKBsWdb Wp bOBo pKVdd_pÛ lBo^pÛ pVdllWbU and Stanford University. We invite you to visit this home virtually at 1705Fulton.com

205 Yerba Buena, Los Altos 4 Bed | 3 Bath | Offered at $4,250,000 Living: 2,868 Sq Ft* | Lot: 14,147 Sq Ft* This beautifully remodeled North Los Altos home promotes the appealing indoor/outdoor lifestyle with effortless transitions between interior and exterior spaces. The home enjoys a private resort-like setting zWsV B oOToOpVWbU ldd_Û ptbb| lBsWdpÛ B JBoJOKtO BoOB and a serene garden. The quiet cul-de-sac is just blocks to downtown Los Altos and outstanding public schools. We invite you to visit this home virtually at 205YerbaBuena.com

290 Gloria Circle, Menlo Park 4 Bed | 3.5 Bath | Offered at $4,250,000 Living: 3,310 Sq Ft* | Lot: 12,489 Sq Ft* /WsOM db sVO WbbOo oWbU dT _doWB WoK_O Wb sVO ldlt_Bo 8WbsBUO #B^p bOWUVJdoVddM dT Ob_d +Bo^Û sVWp KtpsdaW OM VdaO TOBstoOp plBKWdtp _WUVsø __OM oddap zWsV VWUV KOW_WbUp BbM Bb O{KO__Obs ddo l_Bbà2VO home opens to a private garden with an inviting blackbottom pool with waterfall. The location is just blocks sd Mdzbsdzb +B_d _sdÛ BbM Ob_d +Bo^Û dtspsBbMWbU ltJ_WK pKVdd_pÛ BbM aB]do /W_WKdb 8B__O| Oal_d|Oopà We invite you to visit this home virtually Bs _doWB WoK_OàKda *

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Carol Carnevale and Nicole Aron 650.465.5958 | 650.740.7954 carol.carnevale@compass.com | nicole.aron@compass.com DRE 00946687 | DRE 00952657 | carolandnicole.com

For questions or further information please contact your Realtor or the listing agents, Carol Carnevale 650.465.5958 or Nicole Aron 650.740.7954, or by email at CarolandNicole@compass.com.

Compass is the brand name used for services provided by one or more of the Compass group of subsidiary companies. Compass is a real estate broker licensed by the State of California and abides by Equal Housing #lldostbWs| _Bzpà WKObpO !taJOo à __ aBsOoWB_ loOpObsOM VOoOWb Wp WbsObMOM Tdo WbTdoaBsWdbB_ ltoldpOp db_| BbM Wp KdalW_OM Toda pdtoKOp MOOaOM oO_WBJ_O Jts VBp bds JOOb yOoW OMà VBbUOp Wb loWKOÛ KdbMWsWdbÛ pB_O or withdrawal may be made without notice. No statement is made as to accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footage are approximate.

Page 44 • May 8, 2020 • Palo Alto Weekly • www.PaloAltoOnline.com


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