San Diego workers will power-wash streets with a bleach solution in an attempt to stop the spread of Hepatitis A:
At least 15 people have died in San Diego from an ongoing hepatitis A outbreak. In an effort to stop the spread of the viral liver disease, city officials have begun power-washing streets across the downtown area, according to NBC San Diego.
As of Monday, workers dressed in protective white gear and red hard hats were seen outside spraying the sidewalks with a bleach-based liquid in hopes of killing the virus that lives in human feces. "We're probably going to be doing them every other Monday, see how that works out at least for the time being," Jose Ysea, a city spokesman, told NBC San Diego.
The high-pressure power-washing system using bleach will hopefully remove "all feces, blood, bodily fluids or contaminated surfaces," according to a sanitation plan included in a letter delivered to San Diego city officials, the Associated Press reports. For now, just streets in San Diego are being washed, but in the near future hand-washing and street-sanitizing efforts will be implemented in other cities in the region, Dr. Wilma Wooten, the region's public health officer, told the AP.
Also at LA Times. San Diego outbreak page.
Previously: San Diego Declares Emergency Due to Outbreak of Hepatitis A
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 13 2017, @05:30PM
Sort of, around here we've tried providing public restrooms, but we've had issues with them being used for prostitution and sex. Ultimately, you are right that the cause of this is effectively a lack of public restrooms, but the problem is a lot harder to solve than it might seem.
Really, cities that have homeless need to find some way of funding some sort of minimalist housing with restrooms so that things like this don't happen. Unfortunately, the money for that tends to go to corporate welfare and subsidizing people who choose to live in regions that don't have any industry left.