Item Coversheet

Item Number 23.

  

City Council 
Staff Report


Subject:Review of Local Emergency Declaration - COVID 19


Date:May 12, 2020


Submitted By:Steven Rudolph, City Manager


Department:City Manager's Office

Staff Recommendation:

Staff recommends that the City Council continue the declaration of local emergency and reconsider its continuance in an additional 60 days. 

BACKGROUND:

On March 24, 2020, Council adopted a resolution ratifying the proclamation of a Local Emergency by the Director of Emergency Services and proclaiming the continued existence of a local emergency based upon the outbreak of the coronavirus.

 

California State law requires at Government Code section 8630 that the City Council must review the need to continue the local emergency at least once every 60 days until the Council opts to terminate the local emergency.  The law also requires Council to proclaim the termination of a local emergency at the earliest possible date that conditions warrant.

 

Placer County’s proclamation of a local emergency and a local public health emergency remains in effect at this time and is applicable to the City of Rocklin. 

 

At the time of the City Council’s action on March 24, 2020, local, state and federal Public Health Officials had advised that the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) presented a serious risk to public health and safety in that it may result in serious illness or death, and is transmissible from person to person.  In addition, local, state and national emergencies were declared, and the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 as a pandemic.

 

The declarations of a local, state and national emergency ensured public health professionals were provided with all necessary tools at their disposal to keep the community safe from COVID-19.  Proclaiming a local emergency allowed the City of Rocklin to align with state emergency management and to leverage local, state, and federal resources to contain the spread of COVID-19, reduce the impact on hospital systems and protect the most vulnerable.