Health & Fitness

45 More Coronavirus Cases Reported In Santa Cruz County

Statewide, 519,427 Californians have been sickened and 9,501 have died as a result of COVID-19.

All Bay Area counties are on the state's monitoring list.
All Bay Area counties are on the state's monitoring list. (Rachel Nunes/Patch)

SANTA CRUZ COUNTY, CA β€” Santa Cruz County reported another 45 cases of the coronavirus Tuesday for a total of 1,196 cases.

The death toll remains at four people.

Here's the breakdown:

Find out what's happening in Watsonvillefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Capitola: 34

Santa Cruz: 202

Find out what's happening in Watsonvillefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Scotts Valley: 27

Watsonville: 597

Unincorporated: 208

Under investigation: 128


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In other COVID-19 news, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday that the state's COVID-19 coronavirus positivity rate has trended down over the last week, a sign that the state pulling back its reopening plans may be working to prevent further spread of the virus.

The state's seven-day average of daily positive cases fell more than 20 percent from 9,859 cases July 27 to 7,764 Monday, Newsom said. The state's seven-day test positivity rate has also fallen from around 8 percent a week ago to around 6.1 percent as of Sunday.

Newsom cautioned that increased testing will drive the state's positivity numbers up and state public health officials will need to see at least two to three more weeks of sustained decreases in positivity before allowing businesses like salons and indoor dining to reopen.

Elsewhere in the Bay Area, delays in the Senate over a new stimulus package will likely have detrimental effects in Santa Clara County, said county Supervisor Dave Cortese.

The expiration on Aug. 1 of the $600 weekly supplemental unemployment benefits from the federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act leaves thousands of families unable to continue covering rent, likely increasing the homelessness surge in the county. Hundreds of families in East Palo Alto have been unable to pay rent due to the COVID-19 pandemic and are struggling to get assistance, housing advocates said at a briefing Monday. An April survey by the city's Rent Stabilization Board showed that of 224 tenants who responded, more than half had lost their jobs or had their work hours reduced due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and 29 percent could not pay their April rent in full. The city has a moratorium on evictions if tenants cannot pay rent due to COVID-19. The moratorium currently ends Sept. 30, and will automatically extend if Gov. Gavin Newsom extends the state's order on evictions.


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β€” Bay City News contributed to this report

Full coronavirus coverage: Coronavirus In California: What To Know

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