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Coronavirus Today: Three places the surge spared

Real estate is all about location, location, location. The same seems to apply to the pandemic. While L.A. County’s overall coronavirus case rate skyrocketed by 450% during the holiday surge, there were certain neighborhoods that saw nothing more than a brief blip on the radar. My colleagues Matt Stiles and Hayley Smith report on three of those surge-safe communities: West Hollywood, Malibu and Playa del Rey. Advertisement The fact that these communities are generally more affluent than the areas that suffered the most is hardly a coincidence. Most people who have avoided the coronavirus’ wrath have jobs that allow them to work from home. They aren’t living in overcrowded apartments with multiple generations of family members. They have easy access to outdoor space, where the virus’ strength is diminished.

Riviera Maya Tops America s Most Searched Destinations For 2021

Turn Off The Gas? City Council Looks To Support Closing Playa Del Rey Natural Gas Storage

February 23, 2021 When this storage facility was built, this was not a heavily populated area. [Play del Rey] is now a heavily populated area. Vice Mayor Daniel Lee underscored the main reason that the State of California was considering studying the possible closure of natural gas storage in Playa del Rey. Lee had requested that it be agendized, and reflected that Los Angeles City Councilmember Mike Bonin had already had an item before the City of Los Angeles, calling for not just study, but closure. Subscribe The agenda item for the Culver City Council meeting on Feb. 22, 2021 was a fairly simple resolution to support a study on closing down the natural gas storage facility. While it s not located in Culver City, the facility is close enough that Culver City residents would be directly effected in case of a crisis.

What the road map for reopening California after COVID-19 surge looks like

What the road map for reopening California after COVID-19 surge looks like Rong-Gong Lin II © Provided by The LA Times Petria Seymour walks her dogs Tayto and Volpe in Playa Del Rey. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times) California is beginning to reopen as the winter surge of COVID-19 continues to decline. But it s going to be a methodical process, guided by changes in geographic areas and involving a slow return of various activities, venues and businesses. Progress and warning signs California is recording about 7,000 new coronavirus cases a day now, down from 45,000 a day six weeks ago. The number of COVID-19 patients in California’s hospitals on Sunday was 6,569, down from a high of 21,936 recorded on Jan. 6.

What the road map for reopening California after COVID-19 surge looks like

What the road map for reopening California after COVID-19 surge looks like
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