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Hello HSBaseballweb California community.

Our student athletes need your help!

Los Angeles high school students have been locked out of school for the past 10 months and there is no projected re-opening date. Sports are banned for high school student-athletes by the California Department of Health. It is a misdemeanor crime to participate in organized athletic events for children in LA.

Please join the community petitioning to open athletics to students. The movement has several important milestones this week. You can find more information on Twitter at #LetthemplayCA and on the Facebook group LetthemplayCA.

My family has directly received calls offering support from our local California state assemblyman and senator. They ask that we get the word out as broadly as possible and that all students tell their stories to their elected officials.

From the Facebook page (I am a member, not the organizer):

Hello All, I have not put much on the page as of late because we have been incredibly busy behind the scenes preparing for our press conference in Sacramento next Wednesday. Here is how you can help: Call and email your state Senator and Assemblymen and ask them to attend the Let Them Play CA Press conference on the west steps of the Capital at 1:00 PM on 1/27/21
senate.ca.gov/senators to find the directory and contact information for your Senator.

assembly.ca.gov/assemblymember to find the directory and contact information of your assemblymen.

Tell them its important that they attend and support The Let Them Play CA movement.

This is how you help get it done, this is how we help all of our kids do lets goooo!!!!

Last edited by Los Angeles 2021 Parent
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I appreciate what you are doing, and hope you have success.  LA schools are bought and paid for by the teachers unions, and they don't want to open the schools so it will be a tough fight.  I will get busy on Monday to help your effort out.  You should also join the effort to recall Governor Newsom.

In the meantime, you have to do what you can to help your own kids improve and advance on your own, and as many have/are doing travel to LV or AZ or TX to play.

Don’t forget what has happened during the following election cycles the leaders come up for election. If you vote everyone out the new leaders will get the message.

Our school board had nine members with three year terms. Three seats came up each year. They made a decision more than 75% of the parents disagreed. We voted three out. The other six changed their position. First and foremost politicians believe in what keeps them in office.

Last edited by RJM

Los Angeles is too important to turn your back on it! Great baseball weather too! Our children deserve better from our elected and appointed officials!

With over 1/10th  of the county's population with confirmed cases, and over 8k cases reported yesterday, hospitals turning away patients because they are are full, how can they open schools and allow organized sports?

It's out of control. Seriously.

If you want support, what are you and others doing to help stop the spread? 

@TPM posted:

With over 1/10th  of the county's population with confirmed cases, and over 8k cases reported yesterday, hospitals turning away patients because they are are full, how can they open schools and allow organized sports?

It's out of control. Seriously.

Very good points. One of the scary bits of data out this week: in November about one in eight admitted to LA County hospitals for CoVid died. Now it’s one in four.  

But to turn back to baseball, here is my view of Dodger Stadium a few days ago. I hope to be back for a game there soon.

C56E58BE-2778-4701-B476-2006E8A92C12

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  • C56E58BE-2778-4701-B476-2006E8A92C12
Last edited by JCG

Shutting down youth activities because have COVID has got to have a negative impact on teen suicide and drug overdose.

There are also studies out that say shutdowns are only as effective as social distancing and masks. Unfortunately studies these days often tend to support the position of whomever is paying for them.  But it does make sense that if you control the spread of respiratory particles you will control the spread of the disease.  Make that limit not control.

@TPM posted:

With over 1/10th  of the county's population with confirmed cases, and over 8k cases reported yesterday, hospitals turning away patients because they are are full, how can they open schools and allow organized sports?

It's out of control. Seriously.

If you want support, what are you and others doing to help stop the spread?

I  hear you. And maybe the new variants are contagious enough to keep the state shut down. But as I posted on another thread, here are the facts to date:

- zero evidence for on-field transmission in both baseball and softball. The MLB and Athletes Unlimited did not have a single case of on-field transmission during the months that they played. Compare this with, say, hockey, which was shut down on the East Coast due to rapid spread via indoor play, cold air, low humidity and low airflow.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/spor...the-game/ar-BB1b3ILj

- fomite transmission is vanishingly small to non-existent. Someone with covid would have to sneeze or cough directly onto the bat or ball or some other surface, which would have to be touched immediately by a player, coach, or umpire, who would then have to quickly touch one of their mucous membranes. It just hasn't happened.

https://www.thelancet.com/jour...rticle/PIIS1473-3099(20)30561-2/fulltext

https://www.washingtonpost.com...n-cleaning-surfaces/

- sunlight degrades the virus, although it is not as effective as masks and distancing

https://www.sciencedaily.com/r.../12/201216155211.htm

- CA's case rate is not substantially below that of neighboring states, which have continually allowed youth sports. **

https://www.nytimes.com/intera...avirus-us-cases.html (paywall) (data is from Johns Hopkins. Here are the relevant parts: Cases per 100k of population: UT: 10446, AZ: 9859, NV: 8756, CA: 7964, OR: 3244 as of 1/23/21)

**This I think it the biggest reason why not playing ball in CA makes no sense.

Overall, very little evidence that baseball/softball play is a problem.

With many teams now traveling beyond CA to compete, the exact opposite behavior of what a 'stay at home' order is intended to encourage, one could argue that playing sports locally, with mandatory mask use and enforced social distancing for fans is a better, safer solution than the current blanket ban.

So, let the kids play!

PS - not that it matters, because facts are facts, but our immediate family contains a doctor who is on the front lines. We also had an elderly relative pass away last Fall from covid. We still think the kids should play.

@TPM posted:

With over 1/10th  of the county's population with confirmed cases, and over 8k cases reported yesterday, hospitals turning away patients because they are are full, how can they open schools and allow organized sports?

It's out of control. Seriously.

If you want support, what are you and others doing to help stop the spread?

Our high school has suffered 1 suicide and 0 deaths from other causes this year. If you have children you know the positives of athletics far outweigh the risks—otherwise you would not drive and fly to tournaments across the state and country (automobile accidents are the leading cause of death for young people).

If you do not want your child to participate due to the perceived risk I’m not asking you to join. Others will gladly fill your son’s roster spot if we were to play tomorrow. But please do think it over and consider joining the movement!

Last edited by Los Angeles 2021 Parent

A doctor in CA explained to me that they have fewer hospitals per capita than most states, because years ago they were required to conform to more strict earthquake codes, and many hospitals closed rather than adapt or rebuild. They thus had the minimum hospitals for normal times, and obviously far too few for a pandemic. That's why the transmission rate in CA is similar to other states, but the hospital situation is more dire, and so they are more worried than other states about having more cases. They really did need to flatten the curve.

I agree that there is very little risk from playing baseball. College students don't have much risk, either, especially if they are being tested often. But, I guess every infected person can lead to a hospitalization somewhere down the line.

A doctor in CA explained to me that they have fewer hospitals per capita than most states, because years ago they were required to conform to more strict earthquake codes, and many hospitals closed rather than adapt or rebuild. They thus had the minimum hospitals for normal times, and obviously far too few for a pandemic. That's why the transmission rate in CA is similar to other states, but the hospital situation is more dire, and so they are more worried than other states about having more cases. They really did need to flatten the curve.

I agree that there is very little risk from playing baseball. College students don't have much risk, either, especially if they are being tested often. But, I guess every infected person can lead to a hospitalization somewhere down the line.

The point of the petition is that the majority of other states, nearly all of which have far less resources than California, have figured out how to resume high school athletics. Our elected and appointed officials should be acting with urgency to return athletics to our high school age population to improve their physical and emotional well-being.

Last edited by Los Angeles 2021 Parent

Our high school has suffered 1 suicide and 0 deaths from other causes this year. If you have children you know the positives of athletics far outweigh the risks—otherwise you would not drive and fly to tournaments across the state and country (automobile accidents are the leading cause of death for young people).

If you do not want your child to participate due to the perceived risk I’m not asking you to join. Others will gladly fill your son’s roster spot if we were to play tomorrow. But please do think it over and consider joining the movement!

I understand and I am in agreement with you.

I was just pointing out how bad COVID is in LA county.  Wouldn't or shouldn't the first step be to control the virus?  I know that it takes a lot of hard work, planning and hours and hours to get a college team from first day of practice to first game of the season.   There is HS sports going on in Florida and I am sorry it's not happening everywhere.

It is true that young adults do not get very ill from COVID.  The issue is bringing it home to family members, and as pointed out by anotherparent, lack of hospitals, which I guess seems to be a really big problem.

Best of luck.

Last edited by TPM
@DD 2024 posted:
With many teams now traveling beyond CA to compete, the exact opposite behavior of what a 'stay at home' order is intended to encourage, one could argue that playing sports locally, with mandatory mask use and enforced social distancing for fans is a better, safer solution than the current blanket ban.

This right here. You are not going to stop kids from playing. The kids that want to play, will find a way. They are going to go to AZ, TX, FL, etc. We are seeing this in our organization. We are getting lots of calls and emails from kids in states who are shutdown asking about coming to play. Heck we are getting kids from Hawaii asking about coming to play.  It was evident last weekend in the PG event here. 26 teams from California came to play. Also saw it on the PB Area Code identifier event in AZ today. Bunch of kids from California were there.

TPM:

Maybe the parents, who believe in playing could form their own league, hire umpires, rent a field, hire the coaches, have medical personal available, wavier release, set the rules on masks, temp checking, pitch counts, equipment, purchase baseballs, invite college coaches, run metrics, film the games, purchase accident and liability insurance and select sponsors.

"Let them play" is not the solution, Common sense is!

Bob

Last edited by Consultant
@Consultant posted:

TPM:

Maybe the parents, who believe in playing could form their own league, hire umpires, rent a field, hire the coaches, have medical personal available, wavier release, set the rules on masks, temp checking, pitch counts, equipment, baseballs, invite college coaches, run metrics, film the games.

"Let them play" is not the solution, Common sense is!

Bob

Bob,

What you are suggesting is one viable option that is currently against the law, but should be under consideration. The state has prioritized resources for other activities so if there is a framework independent of the current scholastic high school system we welcome those alternative options. Again, the movement is to find an acceptable path forward to let student athletes play immediately, not to circumvent any precautions or best practices. If additional resources outside of the state-provided resources exist, such as the need to recruit community volunteers in addition to state and local officials, then let’s identify the shortfalls and work on a fix together.

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