Shelley Davies waits for her delivery at Plants and Friends./Douglas Zimmerman/SFGate

LATEST, April 20, 4:30 p.m. Four Bay Area counties announced new cases of the coronavirus Monday:

Marin County reported four additional cases, bringing the total to 199.

Napa County reported four additional cases, bringing the total to 48.

Solano County reported 11 new cases, for a total of 180.

Santa Clara County announced 52 new cases, for a total of 1,922.

Santa Clara County also announced additional deaths, bringing the death toll in the county to 83.

April 20, 2:50 p.m. San Francisco Police Chief Bill Scott announced the San Francisco Police Department had issued more citations to individuals over the weekend who were either operating a non-essential business or were not complying with social distancing orders.

A total of 16 citations have so far been issued: seven to businesses and nine to individuals. In addition, 67 people had been "formally admonished" for not obeying the mandate, meaning an incident report had been taken. "Hundreds" more have been given informal warnings.

The announcement comes after a sunny weekend that drew locals to the city's public parks. Notably, reports surfaced that some who visited Dolores Park over the weekend had been kicked out of the park. The SFPD, however, denies that claim, with a spokesperson telling SFGATE officers were "reminding people to spread out and practice social distancing per the Shelter in Place (SIP) public health order."

April 20, 2:45 p.m. SFMTA Director Jeffrey Tumlin announced a number of Muni lines will soon be placed back in service or will be expanded. Four modified partial lines will recommence service on April 25, with buses running portions of the 5-Fulton, 12-Folsom/Pacific, 28-19th Avenue and the 54-Felton.

"The service additions will increase coverage across the city and connect to additional essential services," reads an alert on the SFMTA site, so that locals can more easily visit hospitals and other important resources.

Additionally, the SFMTA will be supplementing three currently running routes — the N, the L and the 9-San Bruno — with more frequently running buses, based on rider complaints of overcrowding. More information here.

April 20, 2:30 p.m. The city of San Francisco has released more detailed COVID-19 cases in the city, segmenting them by zip code in a map, Mayor London Breed announced in a press conference Monday.

As Breed said, the data illuminates “some of the disparities we knew,” that residents in some neighborhoods who are more at risk of income and health discrepancies have disproportionately tested positive for the coronavirus. In particular, the map shows an outsized number of cases in parts of SoMa, the Dogpatch, Potrero Hill, Hunter's Point, the Bayview and the Mission.

“We see in the Mission there are more cases, which is consistent with our findings,” Breed continued. “About 25% of those infected are Latino, but the Latino community represents 15% of the population, so there’s a huge disparity there."

April 20, 1:15 p.m. The coronavirus death toll in the Bay Area crossed 200 on Monday when Contra Costa County reported two new fatalities.

The total is now at 201, with several counties' daily reports still outstanding.

April 20, 12:45 p.m. The number of Bay Area patients hospitalized due to COVID-19 continued to decline over the weekend.

Here are the previous seven days' worth of data reflecting the total number of confirmed and suspected COVID-19 patients hospitalized across the nine counties that comprise the San Francisco Bay Area:

- Monday, April 13: 750 (0.1 percent decrease from previous day)

- Tuesday, April 14: 758 (1.1 percent increase from previous day)

- Wednesday, April 15: 740 (2.3 percent decrease from previous day)

- Thursday, April 16: 673 (9.1 percent decrease from previous day)

- Friday, April 17: 674 (0.1 percent increase from previous day)

- Saturday, April 18: 617 (8.5 percent decrease from previous day)

- Sunday, April 19: 606 (1.8 percent decrease from previous day)

The 9.1 percent decrease from April 15 to April 16 was the largest single-day decrease the region has seen since county-by-county hospitalization data has been available. The drop from April 17 to April 18 was the second-largest single day percent decrease. For reference, April 7 marked the day of the most reported hospitalizations with 831.

Here are the previous seven days' worth of data reflecting the total number of confirmed and suspecting COVID-19 patients in intensive care units across the nine Bay Area counties:

- Monday, April 13: 238 (1.7 percent increase from previous day)

- Tuesday, April 14: 225 (5.5 percent decrease from previous day)

- Wednesday, April 15: 214 (4.9 percent decrease from previous day)

- Thursday, April 16: 217 (1.4 percent increase from previous day)

- Friday, April 17: 224 (3.2 percent increase from previous day)

- Saturday, April 18: 213 (4.9 percent decrease from previous day)

- Sunday, April 19: 205 (3.8 percent decrease from previous day)

April 20, 12:45 p.m. At a noon press conference, California Gov. Newsom focused on the state's efforts to ensure all children in the state have access to distance learning as schools are closed amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The governor said it has been a "two week sprint" to provide Internet access and tens of thousands of devices including iPads and chromebooks to students without connectivity at home. Apple, Google and others have made generous donations.

The governor introduced his wife, First Lady Jennifer Siebel Newsom, who has been a part of the state's effort to expand distance learning opportunities.

"She's been working the phones," he said, of his wife calling on private companies for donations.

The first lady said 1 in 5 students in the state lack connectivity and a survey conducted by the state found 50% of low-income families and 42% of families of color "are worried about distance learning because they don’t have a device at home."

Jennifer said the effort to get more kids connected started with a call to action to companies and a pledge from Google of over 4,00 chromebooks. The state has since secured 70,000 devices.

"I’ve been so moved by the efforts to help close the states digital divide,” she said.

The governor also provided an update on the number of cases in the state and said 42 lives have been lost in the last 24 hours. The number of hospitalizations went up 1.9% in the past day and the number of patients in intensive care units jumped 2.8%. Newsom said that while the numbers are encouraging and the curve flattening, "hospitalizations are still growing."

Newsom said on Wednesday, he will provide more details on the state's goals to enter new phase with the shelter-in-placer order relaxed.

April 20, noon The East Bay city of El Cerrito announced Monday the annual Fourth of July festivities are canceled. This is the city's biggest event of the year and usually attracts about 3,000 people to Cerrito Vista Park.

April 20, 11:40 a.m. Fencing was put up around Golden Gate Park's Hippie Hill to prevent people from gathering on Monday for 4/20, the celebration of all things marijuana that has been cancelled this year amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Road blocks are also set up to deter access to the area of the park where people usually gather to smoke.

At a press conference last week, San Francisco Mayor London Breed said, "We will not tolerate anyone coming to San Francisco for 4/20 this year. Police officers will be patrolling the area. We will cite people and if necessary arrest them."

April 20, 10 a.m. San Francisco updated its COVID-19 case count on the public health department website Monday morning to reflect 59 more cases, bringing the total to 1,216. The death toll remains 20. The county and city reported 99 more coronavirus cases over the weekend.

While cases spiked in San Francisco in the past three days, hospitalizations are down with no new hospitalizations reported Monday. The last day hospitalizations were reported is Saturday with 77 coronavirus patients in S.F. hospital beds and 27 in intensive care units, the lowest number since March 4.

San Mateo County announced 82 new cases for a total of 920 on Monday morning. Total deaths remain 28.

April 20, 8:20 a.m. As the number of global cases of the coronavirus nears 2.5 million, the U.S. death toll passed 40,000 over the weekend. In the Bay Area, 197 people have died.

San Francisco reported 99 more coronavirus cases over the weekend, bringing its total tally up to 1,157. The city's death toll stayed at 20.

Last month, an outbreak was announced at S.F.'s Laguna Honda Hospital and Rehabilitation Center and, as of Sunday, 19 individuals with ties to the city's largest nursing home have tested positive. This includes 15 staff members and four residents. County officials have said they expect more cases to pop up at the facility with 750 residents.

One additional death and 53 new cases of the virus were reported in Alameda County on Saturday. There are now 1,114 known coronavirus cases and 41 deaths in the county. Alameda County's death toll trails only Santa Clara County, where there are 73 fatalities.

Elsewhere in the East Bay, Contra Costa County reported 37 new cases and one new fatality, bringing the total case number up to 685 and death count to 20.

San Mateo County reported 41 new cases with no new deaths on Saturday. There are 838 confirmed cases and 28 deaths in the county.

Marin announced eight new cases, bringing the county total to 195. The death toll remains 10. Sonoma County reported only one new case. There have been two fatalities total in the county.

Note: Many counties only report new cases on Saturday and not Sunday.

Cumulative cases in the greater Bay Area (due to limited testing these numbers reflect only a small portion of likely cases):

ALAMEDA COUNTY: 1,191 confirmed cases, 42 deaths

For more information on Alameda County cases, visit the public health department website.

CONTRA COSTA COUNTY: 707 confirmed cases, 22 deaths

For more information on Contra Costa County cases, visit the public health department website.

LAKE COUNTY: 6 confirmed cases

For information on Lake County and coronavirus, visit the public health department website.

MARIN COUNTY: 199 confirmed cases, 10 deaths

Fore more information on Marin County cases, visit the public health department website.

MONTEREY COUNTY: 141 confirmed cases, 4 deaths

For more information on Monterey County cases, visit the public health department website.

NAPA COUNTY: 48 cases, 2 deaths

For more information on Napa County cases, visit the public health department website.

SAN BENITO COUNTY: 44 confirmed cases, 2 deaths

For more information on San Benito County cases, visit the public health department website.

SAN FRANCISCO COUNTY: 1,216 confirmed cases, 20 deaths

For more information on San Francisco County cases, visit the public health department website.

SAN MATEO COUNTY: 920 confirmed cases, 28 deaths

For more information on San Mateo County cases, visit the public health department website.

SANTA CLARA COUNTY: 1,922 confirmed cases, 83 deaths

Fore more information on Santa Clara County cases, visit the public health department website.

SANTA CRUZ COUNTY: 106 confirmed cases, 2 deaths

For more information on Santa Cruz County cases, visit the public health department website.

SOLANO COUNTY: 180 confirmed cases, 2 deaths

For more information on Solano County cases, visit the public health department website.

SONOMA COUNTY: 181 confirmed cases, 2 deaths

For more information on Sonoma County cases, visit the public health department website.

In California, 1,057 coronavirus-related deaths have been reported, according to Johns Hopkins University. For comparison, New York has 17,131, New Jersey 3,840 and Illinois 1,134.

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