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Federal legislators attempt to repeal California Clean Air Act waivers

State officials on Thursday offered harsh criticism for the effort to target California’s clean vehicles program.

The Republican-controlled House used the Congressional Review Act, or CRA, in what critics said was an illegal move to attempt to repeal California’s Clean Air Act waivers, which authorize California’s clean cars and trucks program.

State officials said that attempt defies decades of precedent of these waivers not being subject to the CRA, and contradicts the non-partisan Government Accountability Office and Senate Parliamentarian, who both ruled that the CRA’s short-circuited process does not apply to the waivers.

“Trump Republicans are hellbent on making California smoggy again. Clean air didn’t used to be political. In fact, we can thank Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon for our decades-old authority to clean our air,” said Gov. Gavin Newsom.

“The only thing that’s changed is that big polluters and the right-wing propaganda machine have succeeded in buying off the Republican Party — and now the House is using a tactic that the Senate’s own parliamentarian has said is lawless,” said Newsom. “Our vehicles program helps clean the air for all Californians, and we'll continue defending it. Washington may want to cede our economy to China but California is standing by American innovation.”

The state’s efforts to clean its air ramped up under then-Gov. Ronald Reagan when he established the California Air Resources Board.

California’s Clean Air Act waivers date back to the Nixon Administration — allowing the state to set standards necessary for cleaning up some of the worst air pollution in the country.

California’s climate leadership

State officials said pollution is down and the economy is up. Greenhouse gas emissions in California are down 20% since 2000 — even as the state’s GDP increased 78% in that same time period.

The state continues to set clean energy records. Last year, California ran on 100% clean electricity for the equivalent of 51 days — with the grid running on 100% clean energy for some period two out of every three days. Since the beginning of the Newsom Administration, battery storage is up to over 13,000 megawatts — a 1,600%+ increase.

California’s clean air authority

Since the Clean Air Act was adopted in 1970, the U.S. EPA has granted California more than 100 waivers for its clean air and climate efforts.

California has always demonstrated that its standards are feasible, and that manufacturers have enough lead time to develop the technology to meet them. It has done so for every waiver it has submitted.

Waivers do not expire and there is no process for revoking a waiver — which makes sense because governments and industry rely on market certainty waivers provide for years after they are granted to deliver clean vehicles and develop clean air plans.

Although California standards have dramatically improved air quality, the state’s unique geography means air quality goals still require continued progress on vehicle emissions.

Five of the 10 cities with the worst air pollution nationwide are in California. Ten million Californians in the San Joaquin Valley and Los Angeles air basins currently live under what is known as “severe nonattainment” conditions for ozone. People in these areas suffer unusually high rates of asthma and cardiopulmonary disease. Zero-emission vehicles are a critical part of the plan to protect Californians.
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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 02 May 2025

Police, county health agencies conduct outreach at encampments

CLEARLAKE, Calif. — The Clearlake Police Department reported on its latest effort, in collaboration with county agencies, to address encampments through outreach and referrals to services.

On Wednesday, the department conducted a multi-agency outreach operation in collaboration with Lake County Behavioral Health Services and Lake County Adult Protective Services.

Police said the goal of the operation was to assess unlawful encampments, abandoned vehicles and debris accumulation, while simultaneously providing vital support services to individuals in need.

The operation focused on multiple locations, east of Walmart, a region known for illegal campsites, large-scale dumping and a history of fire hazards, police said.

During the operation, approximately 13 individuals were contacted. Police said all of the contacted individuals were provided with printed resource guides for housing, mental health and social service programs available throughout Lake County, along with care packages.

At the unoccupied encampments, the printed resource materials and care packages were left, so that the occupants would have access to them when they return, the department reported.

The city of Clearlake thanked Lake County Behavioral Health Services and Adult Protective Services for their assistance. “Their presence and expertise during this operation was instrumental in providing meaningful, person-centered outreach,” the city said.

Police said additional operations of this nature are planned throughout the city as part of an ongoing effort to address illegal encampments, reduce public health risks, fire hazards and connect individuals with services that promote improved quality of life.
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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 01 May 2025

Some travel, entertainment, recreation related industries back from pandemic downturn by 2022

At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic U.S. offices and entertainment venues shuttered, dealing a financial blow to travel and many other recreation-related industries.

As people started returning to work and recreation, many of these industries began to recover, with some reaching pre-pandemic levels as early as 2022, two years after the pandemic struck the United States.

In this article, we use U.S. Census Bureau employment and revenue data available to show how quickly selected recreation, travel, entertainment and other related industries rebounded from the pandemic.

Table 1. State and Local Government Parks and Recreation Employment: March 2020-2024


Parks and recreation, hunting and fishing

The Census Bureau’s Annual Survey of Public Employment & Payroll (ASPEP) shows that the number of full- and part-time people employed by state and local governments at parks and recreational facilities (golf courses, camping grounds, public pools, marinas, etc.) initially declined from 2020 to 2021, but grew steadily the next three years (Table 1).

The ASPEP publishes annual public sector employment estimates for the pay period that includes March 12. These estimates give us timely pre-pandemic numbers, considering this reporting period was just days before the start of pandemic shutdowns.

State and local governments employed 365,895 parks and recreation workers in 2021, down 13.9% from 2020.

Most of the job loss was among part-time employees; about 22.9% of part-time employees were let go or left compared to 3.2% of full-time employees.

As residents increasingly engaged in outdoor activities, parks and recreation-related employment grew by 10.9% to 405,839 in 2022 and by 4.4% to 423,712 in 2023.

In the latest release of ASPEP data, parks and recreation employment grew by 5.6% to 447,335 employees in 2024, surpassing its pre-pandemic level.

Unlike many other recreation sectors, hunting and fishing license fee collections actually grew from 2020 to 2024. According to the Census Bureau’s Annual Survey of State Tax Collections, these totaled $1.8 billion in 2020, up 7.8% from 2019.

As other activities reopened, fee collections still grew but at a slower pace: up 3.4% in 2021, 0.1% in 2022, 1.4% in 2023 and 0.7% to $1.9 billion in 2024.



Travel and transportation

Air and sea travel

Revenue of Scheduled Passenger Air Transportation dropped 60.0% from $206.8 billion in 2019 to $82.8 billion in 2020 (Table 2), according to the Census Bureau’s 2022 Service Annual Survey (SAS) – which provides estimated revenues for employer firms across services.

The industry (which covers transportation of passengers and/or cargo over regular routes and on regular schedules) started to recover in 2021, with revenue climbing to $133.5 billion. It did not rebound to 2019 levels until 2022.

While the Deep Sea Passenger Transportation industry began to recover in 2022, it was still behind 2019 pre-pandemic levels (Table 2). This industry provides deep sea transportation of passengers to and from foreign ports.

According to the SAS, the revenue of this industry dropped 64.2% from $26.5 billion in 2019 to $9.5 billion in 2020. It continued to fall, dropping 42.3% to $5.5 billion in 2021.

In 2022, it soared 299.7% to $21.9 billion, a significant jump but still 17.4% lower than 2019 revenue levels ($26.5 billion). That year (2022), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) updated its pandemic cruise ship restrictions, allowing individual cruise lines to monitor their own COVID-19 protocols. But most major cruise lines did not drop testing requirements until fall 2022.



Taxi, charter bus and limousine services

In 2019, the Taxi Service industry thrived with revenues of $17.3 billion, according to the SAS (Table 3). By the end of 2020, however, revenues had dropped 39.8% to $10.4 billion. The taxi service industry eventually surpassed its 2019 revenue by 19.9% to $20.7 billion in 2022.

The Charter Bus Industry and Limousine Services followed similar year-to-year revenue trajectories (Table 3).

In 2019, the charter bus industry had annual revenues of $4.1 billion. Revenues dropped 52.8% in 2020 to $1.9 billion but increased in 2021 and returned to pre-pandemic levels ($4.2 billion) in 2022.

Limousine Services had $4.5 billion in revenue in 2019, which fell 49.9% to about $2.3 billion in 2020. Revenues increased 29.6% in 2021, followed by another 61.6% in 2022.



Entertainment: Promoters of performing arts, sports and similar events

During the COVID pandemic, many live entertainment events were cancelled or postponed for over a year. According to Oxford Economics, a leading global economic advisory firm, concerts and other live entertainment significantly drive economic activity across the United States, also contributing to off-site spending in places like local bars, restaurants, transportation, lodging, parking and retail.

The New York Times reported that in 2020, the sports industry and music festivals faced one of their largest economic challenges in a decade.

According to the SAS, the Promoters of Performing Arts, Sports, and Similar Events industry experienced a 46.5% decrease in revenue from $34.8 billion in 2019 to $18.6 billion in 2020 (Table 4).

But from 2021 to 2022, revenue went up 58.3% from $26.3 billion to $41.6 billion, surpassing 2019 levels.

The Amusement and Theme Parks industry also bounced back (Table 4).

This industry’s revenue fell 63.0% from $20.1 billion in 2019 to $7.4 billion in 2020. In 2021, revenues rose 139.2% to $17.8 billion and in 2022 by 44.9% to $25.8 billion, exceeding pre-pandemic levels.

Maria Villarreal is a survey statistician in the Census Bureau’s Accommodations, Entertainment, and Consumer Services Branch of the Economy-Wide Statistics Division. Letha Rubin is a supervisory survey statistician in the Census Bureau’s Healthcare and Educational Services Branch of the Economy-Wide Statistics Division. Laura Tilley is a survey statistician in the Census Bureau’s Information and Business Services Branch of the Economy-Wide Statistics Division. Sandra Cooke-Hull is an economist in the Census Bureau’s Public Sector Programs Office of the Economy-Wide Statistics Division
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Written by: Maria Villarreal, Letha Rubin, Laura Tilley and Sandra Cooke-Hull
Published: 01 May 2025

Whooping cough is making a comeback, but the vaccine provides powerful protection

 

Infants can get vaccinated against whooping cough starting at 6 weeks of age. Hill Street Studios/Corbis via Getty Images

Whooping cough, a bacterial infection that can be especially dangerous for babies and young children, is on the rise. Already in 2025 the U.S. has recorded 8,485 cases. That’s compared with 4,266 cases during the same period in 2024.

Like measles, which is also spreading at unprecedented levels, whooping cough, more formally known as pertussis, can be prevented by a safe and effective vaccine. But with anti-vaccine sentiment increasing and cuts to immunization services, vaccination rates for whooping cough over the past two years have declined in children.

The Conversation asked epidemiologist Annette Regan to explain why pertussis has become so prevalent and how families can protect themselves from the disease.

What is pertussis and why is it dangerous?

Pertussis is a vaccine-preventable disease caused by the bacterium Bordetella pertussis. Researchers in France first identified the B. pertussis bacterium in 1906. The first recorded epidemic of pertussis is thought to have occurred in Paris in 1578.

Infection can cause an acute respiratory illness characterized by severe and spasmodic coughing spells. The classic symptom of pertussis is a “whoop” sound caused by someone trying to breath during a bad cough. Severe complications of pertussis include slowed or stopped breathing, pneumonia and seizures. The disease is most severe in young babies, although severe cases and deaths can also occur in older children and adults.

Some doctors call pertussis “the 100-day cough” because symptoms can linger for weeks or even months.

The World Health Organization estimates that 24.1 million pertussis cases and 160,700 deaths occur worldwide in children under 5 each year. Pertussis is highly contagious. Upon exposure, 80% of people who have not been previously exposed to the bacterium or vaccinated against the disease will develop an infection.

Fortunately, the disease is largely preventable with a safe and effective vaccine, which was first licensed in the U.S. in 1914.

Whooping cough causes violent fits of coughing that can make it difficult to inhale.

How do cases last year and this year compare with past years?

During the COVID-19 pandemic between 2020 and 2022, pertussis cases were lower than usual. This may have been a result of limited social contact due to social distancing, masking, school closures and lockdown measures, which reduced the spread of disease overall.

In the past two years, however, pertussis cases have surpassed figures from before the pandemic. In 2024, local and state public health agencies reported 35,435 pertussis cases to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention – a rate five times higher than the 7,063 cases reported in 2023 and nearly double the 18,617 cases reported in 2019 prior to the pandemic.

Between October 2024 and April 2025, at least four people in the U.S. have died of pertussis: two infants, one school-age child and one adult.

Why are pertussis cases rising?

Although vaccines have resulted in a dramatic decline in pertussis infections in the U.S., incidence of the disease has been rising since the 1990s, except for a brief dip during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Before the start of routine childhood vaccination for pertussis in 1947, its rates hovered between 100,000 and 200,000 cases per year. With vaccines, rates plunged under 50,000 annually by the late 1950s and under 10,000 per year in the late 1960s. They reached a low of 1,010 cases in 1976.

Starting in the 1980s and 1990s, however, the U.S. and several other countries have been seeing a steady resurgence of pertussis cases, which have exceeded 10,000 cases in the U.S. every year from 2003 to 2019. They dropped again during the pandemic until last year’s resurgence.

There is no single explanation for why cases have been rising recently, but several factors probably contribute. First, pertussis naturally occurs in cyclic epidemics, peaking every two to five years. It is possible that the U.S. is headed into one of these peaks after a period of low activity between 2020 and 2022. However, some scientists have noted that the increase in cases is larger than what would be expected during a usual peak.

Man holding up two test tubes of blood in a laboratory
A public health worker processes blood samples during a whooping cough outbreak in Ohio in December 2010. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

Some scientists have noted that this apparent resurgence correlates with a change in the type of vaccine used in children. Until the 1990s, the pertussis vaccine contained whole, killed B. pertussis bacteria cells. Whole-cell vaccine can stimulate a long-lasting immune response, but it is also more likely to cause fever and other vaccine reactions in children.

In the 1990s, national vaccine programs began to transition to a vaccine that contains purified components of the bacterial cell but not the whole cell. Some scientists now believe that although this partial-cell vaccine is less likely to cause high fevers in children, it provides protection for a shorter time. Immunity after whole-cell vaccination is thought to last 10-12 years compared with three to five years after the partial-cell vaccine. This means people may become susceptible to infection more quickly after vaccination.

Vaccination rates are also not as high as they should be and have started falling in children since 2020. In the U.S., the percent of kindergartners who are up to date with recommended pertussis vaccines has declined from 95% during the 2019-20 school year to 92% in the 2023-24 school year. Even fewer adolescents receive a booster dose.

How can people protect themselves and their families?

Routine vaccination for children starting in infancy followed by booster doses in adolescents and adults can help keep immunity high.

Public health experts recommend that children receive five doses of the pertussis vaccine. According to the recommendations, they should receive the first three doses at 2, 4 and 6 months of age, then two additional doses at 15 months and 4 years of age, with the aim of providing protection through early adolescence.

Infants younger than 6 weeks are not old enough to get a pertussis vaccine but are at the greatest risk of severe illness from pertussis. Vaccination during pregnancy can offer protection from birth due to antibodies that pass from the mother to the developing fetus. Many countries, including the U.S., now recommend that women receive one dose of pertussis vaccine between the 27th and 36th week of every pregnancy to protect their babies.

To maintain protection against pertussis after childhood, a booster dose of pertussis vaccine is recommended for adolescents at 11 to 12 years of age. The CDC recommends that all adults receive at least one booster dose.

Young boy receives a vaccine
The pertussis vaccine’s protction wanes over time, so public health experts recommend a booster around age 11 or 12. SELF Magazine via flickr, CC BY

Because immunity declines over time, people who are in contact with infants and other high-risk groups, such as caregivers, parents and grandparents, may benefit from additional booster doses. When feasible, the CDC also recommends a booster dose for adults 65 years and older.

Vaccine safety studies over the past 80 years have proven the pertussis vaccine to be safe. Around 20% to 40% of vaccinated infants experience local reactions, such as pain, redness and swelling at the vaccination site, and 3% to 5% of vaccinated infants experience a low-grade fever. More severe reactions are much less common and occur in fewer than 1% of vaccinated infants.

The vaccine is also highly effective: For the first year after receiving all five doses of the pertussis vaccine, 98% of children are protected from pertussis. Five years after the fifth dose, 65% of vaccinated children remain protected.

Booster vaccination during adolescence protects 74% of teens against pertussis, and booster vaccination during pregnancy protects 91% to 94% of immunized babies against hospitalization due to pertussis.

Families can talk to their regular health care providers about whether a pertussis vaccine is needed for their child, themselves or other family members.The Conversation

Annette Regan, Adjunct Associate Professor of Epidemiology, University of California, Los Angeles

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Written by: Annette Regan, University of California, Los Angeles
Published: 01 May 2025
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