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Tesla just Tweeted this...

Getting Back to Work

"Tesla is the last major carmaker remaining in California, and the largest manufacturing employer in the State with more than 10,000 employees at our Fremont factory and 20,000 statewide. We understand the impacts COVID-19 has caused and have a responsibility to look out for the livelihoods and safety of our personnel, many of whom rely on us and have been out of work for weeks due to the impacts of shelter-in-place orders.

Given the Governor’s recent guidance, which is supported by science and credible health data, the state and federal government’s classification of vehicle manufacturing as national critical infrastructure, and our robust safety plan, Tesla has started the process of resuming operations. Our employees are excited to get back to work, and we’re doing so with their health and safety in mind.

What We’re Doing
Our restart plan is the result of months of careful planning and preparation. It was modeled after the comprehensive return to work plan we established at our Shanghai Gigafactory, which has seen smooth and healthy operations for the last three months.

We are taking the time we need to get our personnel properly trained before they begin work and all employees must complete an online video training before returning to work at any Tesla facility. We have a thorough return-to-work plan for all locations. A cross-functional response team, including an in-house physician, has been working daily to establish health and safety guidelines based on location- and job-specific risk assessments, and we are continuously reviewing our processes to ensure they work for our employees in this new environment.

Back in March, we conducted risk assessments at each site, looking at how and where people work, how they interact, and what measures are needed to meet safety standards. In some cases, we have added partitions or barriers to separate work areas and minimized employee interactions by positioning parts closer to where that task is completed on the line. We are also requiring additional personal protective equipment, along with rigorous cleaning and disinfecting protocols.

Our Return to Work playbook details the comprehensive safety measures we have introduced to ensure employee safety.

Why We’re Restarting
Tesla is not an outlier, nor are we going against the grain. From the State’s very first shelter-in-place order, national critical infrastructure, including vehicle manufacturing like Tesla’s Fremont factory, was considered vital and given permission to continue operating. The Governor repeated this direction this week when he made clear manufacturing should resume.

In addition, at least three neighboring counties in the same situation have already restarted their economies including manufacturing, including Solano, Napa, and San Joaquin Counties. Meanwhile, Alameda county, where our factory resides, and Santa Clara County next door, have stated in their return to work order FAQs that the manufacturing of distributed energy resources (which is defined in state law to include electric vehicles, solar and battery storage) is permitted to resume.

How We’ve Worked with the County
Contrary to the Governor’s recent guidance and support from the City of Fremont, Alameda County is insisting we should not resume operations. This is not for lack of trying or transparency since we have met with and collaborated on our restart plans with the Alameda County Health Care Services Agency. Unfortunately, the County Public Health Officer who is making these decisions has not returned our calls or emails.

The list below is just some of the information we’ve shared with city and county officials:

  1. Detailed health and safety restart plan with checklist and photos
  2. Employee health and safety guidelines
  3. Risk assessment process, including what we’ve done throughout the factory
  4. Risk assessment improvements, including how we’ve identified and addressed high/medium/low risks
  5. Temperature screening protocol plus a commitment to add temperature screening when we resume long-distance shuttle routes
  6. Revised Fremont production restart plan
  7. Factory layout with square footage to illustrate on how people are spread out across our 6 million square foot facility
  8. Break room capacities (reduced for social distancing) and numbers of people in each room based on work area
We will continue to put people back to work in a safe and responsible manner. However, the County’s position left us no choice but to take legal action to ensure that Tesla and its employees can get back to work. We filed a lawsuit on May 9 asking the court to invalidate the County Orders, to the extent the County claims they prevent Tesla from resuming operations."
 
The only thing I wish Elon would make more of a point is that Tesla's products "actively" help with the symptoms of the Covid virus by reducing the local pollution with every ICE car that a Tesla replaces. It's been shown that pollution worsens the effects of the virus. If that's not "essential" I don't know what is.

I tend to agree with this. However, Elon is pretty savvy when it comes to how things like this might play out in the public arena and he might have good reasons for not going there. People have a hard time connecting the dots between statistical medical data and their personal reality. They can't believe that having a few more EV's and a few less ICE cars on the road could actually be the difference between life and death for an individual who has complications from COVID-19.

What would be ideal is if the AMA came out with that observation! Sssshhh! Don't wake me up, I'm having a wonderful dream!
 
  • Funny
  • Like
Reactions: S3XY and JusRelax
05396C05-6D1D-4236-B3F4-92C32535FAAC.jpeg
 
I don't think there's any way Elon wants to live outside California.
Among many, many other things keep those personal CA visits under 181 days and if any " Great circle route " travel takes you over CA keep your credit card in your pocket. (Also find out who Trumps tax advisors are)
 
More interesting bits from the lawsuit (my emphases):

Subsequently, on March 17, 2020, Defendant Sheriff Ahern announced on Twitter that Plaintiff was “not an essential business as defined in the Alameda County Health Order” and could therefore only “maintain minimum basic operations.”
...
In addition, Alameda County has violated the Due Process Clause insomuch as it fails to provide any meaningful procedure for challenging its determination that a business is non-essential, either pre or post deprivation of Tesla’s constitutional right to use of its property. Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co., 455 U.S. 422, 432-33 (1982). Instead, the County simply announced by Tweet that Tesla’s operations were not essential, without any formal process.
...
Plaintiff respectfully seeks a declaration that the Third County Order violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

...
In light of the foregoing, Plaintiff respectfully prays that this Court:
A. Issue a permanent injunction enjoining enforcement of the Third County Order against Plaintiff;
B. Issue a declaratory judgment, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2201 and Rule 57 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, that the Third County Order violates the Due Process Clause as applied to Plaintiff because it fails to provide fair notice of what the law requires;
C. Issue a declaratory judgment, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2201, California Constitution, art. XI, § 7, and California Health and Safety Code § 131080, that the Third County Order is void to the extent it is inconsistent with the provisions of the Governor’s Order expressly allowing the continued operation of the federal critical infrastructure sectors;
D. Award reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988; and
E. Award such other relief available under the law that may be considered appropriate under the circumstances, including other fees and costs of this action to the extent allowed by the law.
 
Tesla just Tweeted this...

Getting Back to Work

"Tesla is the last major carmaker remaining in California, and the largest manufacturing employer in the State with more than 10,000 employees at our Fremont factory and 20,000 statewide. We understand the impacts COVID-19 has caused and have a responsibility to look out for the livelihoods and safety of our personnel, many of whom rely on us and have been out of work for weeks due to the impacts of shelter-in-place orders.

Given the Governor’s recent guidance, which is supported by science and credible health data, the state and federal government’s classification of vehicle manufacturing as national critical infrastructure, and our robust safety plan, Tesla has started the process of resuming operations. Our employees are excited to get back to work, and we’re doing so with their health and safety in mind.

What We’re Doing
Our restart plan is the result of months of careful planning and preparation. It was modeled after the comprehensive return to work plan we established at our Shanghai Gigafactory, which has seen smooth and healthy operations for the last three months.

We are taking the time we need to get our personnel properly trained before they begin work and all employees must complete an online video training before returning to work at any Tesla facility. We have a thorough return-to-work plan for all locations. A cross-functional response team, including an in-house physician, has been working daily to establish health and safety guidelines based on location- and job-specific risk assessments, and we are continuously reviewing our processes to ensure they work for our employees in this new environment.

Back in March, we conducted risk assessments at each site, looking at how and where people work, how they interact, and what measures are needed to meet safety standards. In some cases, we have added partitions or barriers to separate work areas and minimized employee interactions by positioning parts closer to where that task is completed on the line. We are also requiring additional personal protective equipment, along with rigorous cleaning and disinfecting protocols.

Our Return to Work playbook details the comprehensive safety measures we have introduced to ensure employee safety.

Why We’re Restarting
Tesla is not an outlier, nor are we going against the grain. From the State’s very first shelter-in-place order, national critical infrastructure, including vehicle manufacturing like Tesla’s Fremont factory, was considered vital and given permission to continue operating. The Governor repeated this direction this week when he made clear manufacturing should resume.

In addition, at least three neighboring counties in the same situation have already restarted their economies including manufacturing, including Solano, Napa, and San Joaquin Counties. Meanwhile, Alameda county, where our factory resides, and Santa Clara County next door, have stated in their return to work order FAQs that the manufacturing of distributed energy resources (which is defined in state law to include electric vehicles, solar and battery storage) is permitted to resume.

How We’ve Worked with the County
Contrary to the Governor’s recent guidance and support from the City of Fremont, Alameda County is insisting we should not resume operations. This is not for lack of trying or transparency since we have met with and collaborated on our restart plans with the Alameda County Health Care Services Agency. Unfortunately, the County Public Health Officer who is making these decisions has not returned our calls or emails.

The list below is just some of the information we’ve shared with city and county officials:

  1. Detailed health and safety restart plan with checklist and photos
  2. Employee health and safety guidelines
  3. Risk assessment process, including what we’ve done throughout the factory
  4. Risk assessment improvements, including how we’ve identified and addressed high/medium/low risks
  5. Temperature screening protocol plus a commitment to add temperature screening when we resume long-distance shuttle routes
  6. Revised Fremont production restart plan
  7. Factory layout with square footage to illustrate on how people are spread out across our 6 million square foot facility
  8. Break room capacities (reduced for social distancing) and numbers of people in each room based on work area
We will continue to put people back to work in a safe and responsible manner. However, the County’s position left us no choice but to take legal action to ensure that Tesla and its employees can get back to work. We filed a lawsuit on May 9 asking the court to invalidate the County Orders, to the extent the County claims they prevent Tesla from resuming operations."

I love the leadership displayed here!

The only thing that has me scratching my head is how do you file a lawsuit on May 9th, a Saturday? In Washington, that is simply not possible.

Oh, one other head-scratcher. I've never seen a tweet with so many words! ;)
 
Tesla just Tweeted this...

Getting Back to Work

"Tesla is the last major carmaker remaining in California, and the largest manufacturing employer in the State with more than 10,000 employees at our Fremont factory and 20,000 statewide. We understand the impacts COVID-19 has caused and have a responsibility to look out for the livelihoods and safety of our personnel, many of whom rely on us and have been out of work for weeks due to the impacts of shelter-in-place orders.

Given the Governor’s recent guidance, which is supported by science and credible health data, the state and federal government’s classification of vehicle manufacturing as national critical infrastructure, and our robust safety plan, Tesla has started the process of resuming operations. Our employees are excited to get back to work, and we’re doing so with their health and safety in mind.

What We’re Doing
Our restart plan is the result of months of careful planning and preparation. It was modeled after the comprehensive return to work plan we established at our Shanghai Gigafactory, which has seen smooth and healthy operations for the last three months.

We are taking the time we need to get our personnel properly trained before they begin work and all employees must complete an online video training before returning to work at any Tesla facility. We have a thorough return-to-work plan for all locations. A cross-functional response team, including an in-house physician, has been working daily to establish health and safety guidelines based on location- and job-specific risk assessments, and we are continuously reviewing our processes to ensure they work for our employees in this new environment.

Back in March, we conducted risk assessments at each site, looking at how and where people work, how they interact, and what measures are needed to meet safety standards. In some cases, we have added partitions or barriers to separate work areas and minimized employee interactions by positioning parts closer to where that task is completed on the line. We are also requiring additional personal protective equipment, along with rigorous cleaning and disinfecting protocols.

Our Return to Work playbook details the comprehensive safety measures we have introduced to ensure employee safety.

Why We’re Restarting
Tesla is not an outlier, nor are we going against the grain. From the State’s very first shelter-in-place order, national critical infrastructure, including vehicle manufacturing like Tesla’s Fremont factory, was considered vital and given permission to continue operating. The Governor repeated this direction this week when he made clear manufacturing should resume.

In addition, at least three neighboring counties in the same situation have already restarted their economies including manufacturing, including Solano, Napa, and San Joaquin Counties. Meanwhile, Alameda county, where our factory resides, and Santa Clara County next door, have stated in their return to work order FAQs that the manufacturing of distributed energy resources (which is defined in state law to include electric vehicles, solar and battery storage) is permitted to resume.

How We’ve Worked with the County
Contrary to the Governor’s recent guidance and support from the City of Fremont, Alameda County is insisting we should not resume operations. This is not for lack of trying or transparency since we have met with and collaborated on our restart plans with the Alameda County Health Care Services Agency. Unfortunately, the County Public Health Officer who is making these decisions has not returned our calls or emails.

The list below is just some of the information we’ve shared with city and county officials:

  1. Detailed health and safety restart plan with checklist and photos
  2. Employee health and safety guidelines
  3. Risk assessment process, including what we’ve done throughout the factory
  4. Risk assessment improvements, including how we’ve identified and addressed high/medium/low risks
  5. Temperature screening protocol plus a commitment to add temperature screening when we resume long-distance shuttle routes
  6. Revised Fremont production restart plan
  7. Factory layout with square footage to illustrate on how people are spread out across our 6 million square foot facility
  8. Break room capacities (reduced for social distancing) and numbers of people in each room based on work area
We will continue to put people back to work in a safe and responsible manner. However, the County’s position left us no choice but to take legal action to ensure that Tesla and its employees can get back to work. We filed a lawsuit on May 9 asking the court to invalidate the County Orders, to the extent the County claims they prevent Tesla from resuming operations."
That is.....impressive.
 
Fremont city has its own police department. I don't believe the county has a police department and would need to reply on the city police to enforce anything. If Fremont city refuses to enforce, I doubt anything in the factory could be stopped.

Here in Los Angeles County police departments have jurisdictions in their cities while unincorporated areas are policed by Los Angeles County Sheriff (LACS) and cities without their own police departments contract services with LACS.
 
Now the board is condemning government overreach and cheering a move to Texas.

Only explanation I have for the change is that the posters are a lot richer now. :D

In my observation, this board has always condemned governmental overreach. Conservatives don't own that, they just tend to have a much different definition of what constitutes overreach.

I think most people, both liberals and conservatives, support the government's ability to curtail rights when the situation demands it. And most people, liberals and conservatives, would also say it's overreach if an individual's rights are trampled without very good reasons why it's necessary. And that''s exactly what's going on in Alameda County.
 
Somebody on TMC needs PACER access and to be willing to spend the per-page fee to download and distribute.

Another problem with America. The public courts should be for the public, rich or poor. In the age of computers, court filings should all be easily available unless deemed sensitive for valid reasons.
 
I don’t speak Tweet. What do cartoon eyes mean?
Simply that the Gov'n of Texas saw the tweet, he acknowledges the situation, and is watching very closely. Not bad for 2 ASCII characters, wot? ;)

Well, legal will probably get involved so maybe it will take until Tuesday. ;)
If legal isn't getting their asses kicked out of torpor this morning and on top of this before Tesla HQ leaves town, if this takes til Tuesday to undo, there's gonna be 34 million tax payers mightily pissed off voters come execution election day. Starting with the Governor.