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Newsom says it’s still too early to tell when California’s stay-at-home order will end

People walk past a painting of Prince Harry wearing a hoodie reading "Keep Calm and Wash Your Hands," on April 7, 2020, during the coronavirus pandemic in Los Angeles. (ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images)

Gov. Gavin Newsom repeated Wednesday that the duration of the coronavirus stay-at-home order is dependent on whether Californians continue to follow it and wear appropriate face coverings if they go out.

The governor said the state plans to expand testing, including serology tests and community surveillance testing, to better understand when “we get back to a new normalcy.”

“We have a team of people working on this 24/7,” Newsom said. “There’s no question on this that we haven’t asked ourselves on dozens and dozens of occasions. Everybody, not least of which myself as governor of the state of California, wants us to be able to affirmatively answer that question by giving you a specific date and time and in detail telling you how people are going to go back to work, back into their community.”

Newsom said the “curve is bending” in California, but warned people to remain indoors and not be tempted to break the order on Easter Sunday and as temperatures rise. The governor has said that Californians shouldn’t expect the order to be lifted anytime soon and that the state expects to experience a peak in COVID-19 infections in May.

Coronavirus cases in California(Los Angeles Times)

Read the full story on LATimes.com.