Estrada v. Superior Court CA1/1 ( 2023 )


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  • Filed 2/28/23 Estrada v. Superior Court CA1/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or
    ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    MIGUEL ANGEL ESTRADA,
    Petitioner,
    A166474
    v.
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE                                          (San Francisco City &
    CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN                                          County
    FRANCISCO,                                                         Super. Ct. No.
    21008360)
    Respondent;
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
    CALIFORNIA,
    Real Party in Interest.
    ANDREW KUHAIKI,
    Petitioner,
    A166508
    v.
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE                                          (San Francisco City &
    CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN                                          County
    FRANCISCO,                                                         Super. Ct. No.
    22004424)
    Respondent;
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
    CALIFORNIA,
    Real Party in Interest.
    1
    In these consolidated writ proceedings,1 petitioners Miguel Angel
    Estrada and Andrew Kuhaiki (Petitioners) each seek a writ of mandate or
    prohibition requiring respondent Superior Court of the City and County of
    San Francisco to dismiss their cases for violating their speedy trial rights
    under Penal Code section 1382.2 Petitioners contend there was no good cause
    to continue their cases past the statutory deadline, maintaining the superior
    court can no longer rely on the “exceptional circumstances” resulting from the
    COVID-19 pandemic. We conclude the superior court did not abuse its
    discretion in finding good cause to continue their trial dates past the
    statutory deadlines or by subsequently denying their motions to dismiss, and
    therefore deny the petitions.
    BACKGROUND
    The COVID-19 Pandemic
    Less than a year ago, a different division of this court, in Hernandez-
    Valenzuela (2022) 
    75 Cal.App.5th 1108
    , 1117 (Hernandez-Valenzuela),
    considered whether the COVID-19 pandemic constituted “exceptional
    circumstances” justifying the superior court’s finding of good cause to
    continue criminal cases past the statutory deadlines. The court thoroughly
    set forth the background of the COVID-19 pandemic and the public health
    and judicial response in California, which we recount here.
    “On March 4, 2020, Governor Gavin Newsom declared a state of
    emergency in response to the global outbreak of COVID-19, a ‘new disease,
    caused by a novel (or new) coronavirus that has not previously been seen in
    humans.’
    1 We ordered the two proceedings consolidated in the November 29,
    2022, order to show cause.
    2   All further undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    2
    “On March 16, 2020, the San Francisco Health Officer issued a shelter-
    in-place order requiring residents of the county to remain in their homes
    except when engaging in essential activities, and to stay at least six feet
    apart from other persons when leaving their homes. A few days later, in an
    attempt to limit the spread of the virus, the Governor issued an executive
    order requiring all Californians to stay at home except for limited activities.
    “On March 23, 2020, Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye, in her capacity
    as Chairperson of the Judicial Council, issued an emergency statewide order
    suspending all jury trials and continuing them for a period of 60 days. The
    Chief Justice also extended by 60 days the time period provided for in section
    1382 for holding a criminal trial. In so ordering, the Chief Justice explained:
    ‘The [Center for Disease Control], the California Department of Public
    Health, and local county health departments have recommended increasingly
    stringent social distancing measures of at least six feet between people, and
    encouraged vulnerable individuals to avoid public spaces. [¶] Courts cannot
    comply with these health restrictions and continue to operate as they have in
    the past. Court proceedings require gatherings of court staff, litigants,
    attorneys, witnesses, and juries, well in excess of the numbers allowed for
    gathering under current executive and health orders. Many court facilities in
    California are ill-equipped to effectively allow the social distancing and other
    public health requirements required to protect people involved in court
    proceedings and prevent the further spread of COVID-19. Even if court
    facilities could allow for sufficient social distancing, the closure of schools
    means that many court employees, litigants, witnesses, and potential jurors
    cannot leave their homes to attend court proceedings because they must stay
    home to supervise their children. These restrictions have also made it nearly
    impossible for courts to assemble juries.’
    3
    “On March 30, 2020, the Chief Justice issued a second statewide
    emergency order, authorizing superior courts to issue implementation orders
    that ‘[e]xtend the time period provided in section 1382 of the Penal Code for
    the holding of a criminal trial by no more than 60 days from the last date on
    which the statutory deadline otherwise would have expired.’
    “On April 29, 2020, the Chief Justice issued a third statewide
    emergency order, stating: ‘The 60-day continuance of criminal jury trials and
    the 60-day extension of time in which to conduct a criminal trial under Penal
    Code section 1382, both of which I first authorized in my order of March 23,
    2020, are to be extended an additional 30 days. The total extension of 90
    days shall be calculated from the last date on which the trial initially could
    have been conducted under Penal Code section 1382.’ The Chief Justice
    explained the extension applied to those matters for which the last date on
    which trial could be conducted under section 1382 occurred or would occur
    between March 16, 2020, and June 15, 2020.
    “On June 1, 2020, the San Francisco health officer updated the shelter-
    in-place order to allow outside gatherings but still required that essential
    government functions comply with social distancing requirements to the
    greatest extent possible.
    “On December 3, 2020, the state public health officer issued a new
    regional stay-at-home order restoring many of the earlier restrictions in an
    effort to slow the spread of COVID-19 and avoid overwhelming the state’s
    hospitals in response to an unprecedented surge in the level of community
    spread of COVID-19. The next day, in response to the surge in COVID-19
    cases, the San Francisco health officer issued another stay-at-home order
    requiring residents of the county to once again remain in their homes except
    when engaging in essential activities. The order was extended on December
    4
    30, 2020. The state’s regional stay-at-home order was lifted on January 25,
    2021, and the San Francisco health officer allowed for certain businesses and
    other activities to reopen starting on January 28, 2021.
    “On June 15, 2021, the San Francisco health officer’s ‘Safer Return
    Together’ order came into effect. The order rescinded the previous stay-at-
    home order and lifted indoor capacity limits and social distancing
    requirements.” (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1114–
    1116, fns. omitted.)
    The San Francisco Superior Court reopened all courtrooms on June 18,
    2021.
    However, numerous emergency rules and orders regarding the court
    remained in effect. The Chief Justice’s orders regarding extension of time to
    hold preliminary examinations, waiver of certain requirements to adopt local
    rules related to the pandemic, and suspension of any California Rule of Court
    to the extent it prevented a court from using technology to conduct remote
    proceedings were not rescinded until April 30, 2022. The last of these,
    including emergency rule 3 regarding remote technology in criminal
    proceedings and emergency rule 5 regarding criminal appearance waivers
    were not rescinded until June 30, 2022.
    San Francisco Department of Public Health requirements for
    employers and employees regarding COVID-19 remained in effect.
    (https://sf.gov/step-by-step/what-do-if-someone-work-has-covid-19 [as of
    February 22, 2023], https://sf.gov/youve-had-close-contact-or-positive-test [as
    of Feb. 28, 2023].) Likewise, CalOSHA regulations regarding COVID-19
    infections and outbreaks in the workplace continued in effect during the
    relevant time period. (Cal. Code Regs, tit. 8, § 3205.1.) And at the federal
    5
    level, the Secretary of Health and Human Services Declaration of Public
    Health Emergency with respect to Covid-19 remained in effect.3
    Trial Court Proceedings Against Petitioner Estrada
    In May 2022, the San Francisco District Attorney charged defendant
    Estrada by information with attempted murder (§§ 664, 187, subd. (a));
    assault with a deadly weapon (§ 245, subd. (a)(1)); battery with serious bodily
    injury (§ 243, subd. (d)); mayhem (§ 203); and possession of a switchblade
    knife in a motor vehicle (§ 21510, subd. (a)), along with various enhancing
    allegations.
    Estrada was arraigned on May 27, 2022, on those charges, entered not
    guilty pleas, and requested a jury trial on a no-time-waiver basis.
    On July 26, 2022, the statutory last day for trial under section 1382,
    both sides announced they were ready for trial. The court asked the clerk if a
    courtroom was available, to which the clerk replied: “No, Your Honor. Please
    find good cause to continue the trial to September 28th.” The court granted
    the continuance, and issued a 16-page written order in which it made
    extensive findings about the pandemic and the court’s response, concluding
    “due to shelter-in-place orders, social distancing requirements, insufficient
    courtroom staff and security, and the unavailability of adequate alternative
    locations to conduct defendant’s trial, there is good cause to continue
    defendant’s jury trial past the statutory last day. These circumstances were
    not caused by chronic court congestion nor the neglect or failure of the Court
    or the People to adequately provide court services, but solely based on a
    3  
    6
    global pandemic constituting exceptional and extraordinary circumstances
    warranting a good cause finding. Based on the totality of the circumstances,
    the Court finds good cause to continue the jury trial in this case and that the
    length of the continuance is reasonable under the circumstances, the delay is
    minimal, and the defendant has failed to present evidence of prejudice by the
    delay. (People v. Engram (2010) 
    50 Cal.4th 1131
    , 1162-1163 [(Engram)]. . . .)
    As such, the Court finds good cause to continue the jury trial until a
    courtroom becomes available.”
    Two months later, Estrada filed a motion to dismiss on the ground
    their4 speedy trial right under section 1382 had been violated. The court
    denied the motion. In its order, it reincorporated its prior good cause
    findings, and added: “The Court further notes that on July 26, 2022, there
    were two cases on calendar in Department 22 for trial call. And as of July 26,
    2022, there were 300 no-time-waiver felony jury trial cases with a statutory
    last day earlier than the last day for Defendant’s trial. And as of October 11,
    2022, there are about 405 pending no-time-waiver felony jury trials. With
    regard to the number of no-time-waiver felony cases pending trial, the Court
    further notes that of the 1013 arraignments that have occurred in
    Department 22 since reopening, there have been 904 cases that have
    proceeded on a no-time-waiver basis. Additionally, on July 26, 2022, court
    personnel were unavailable to staff courtrooms because of COVID-19.”5
    4   Estrada prefers use of the they/them pronouns.
    5  Estrada’s counsel, in other cases, had objected to this finding, noting
    “The People did not offer evidence of this fact, and the daily court status
    reports do not show that courtrooms were dark because of COVID-19-related
    staff absences.” The superior court rejected the claim but granted a
    continuing objection to the finding, stating “I still believe the sentence is
    appropriate at this time. I will continue to keep it in the orders. You need
    7
    At the hearing, the court expressed frustration with the number of no-
    time waivers, noting “From January of 2022 to August of 2022, the backlog
    reduced from approximately 490 felony cases to approximately 350 cases and
    was continuing to decline. However, these efforts were met with a headwind
    of no time waivers from the Public Defender’s Office in the preliminary
    hearing departments . . . for both in and out of custody misdemeanor and
    felony cases at unprecedented levels for the county and the state, reaching
    approximately 90 percent or higher. [¶] The trial backlog can only be
    eliminated where the justice partners act to eliminate it. We do not have
    justice partners at this time; we have civil litigants.”
    Estrada’s trial was continued until November 28, 2022.
    Trial Court Proceedings Against Petitioner Kuhaiki
    Petitioner Kuhaiki was charged by information with assault with a
    deadly weapon (§ 245, subd. (a)(1)); making criminal threats (§ 422); two
    counts of dissuading a witness by force or threat (§ 136.1, subd. (c)(1)); first
    degree residential burglary (§ 211); two counts of false imprisonment (§ 236);
    and inflicting injury on an elder or dependent adult likely to cause great
    bodily injury (§ 368, subd. (b)(1)). On June 6, 2022, he was arraigned,
    entered pleas of not guilty, and requested a jury trial on a no-time-waiver
    basis.
    The trial court called Kuhaiki’s case on August 5, 2022, the statutory
    last day for trial. It found good cause to continue the trial “based on the
    exceptional and extraordinary circumstances caused by the global pandemic.
    The Court finds those continue to exist through today and will . . . file a
    not object to it each time. I note your objection to it for all the similar
    proposed orders.”
    8
    written order in support of the good cause finding.” The court issued a 16-
    page written order with the same findings made in Estrada’s case.
    Kuhaiki objected to the continuance and orally moved to dismiss his
    case. The court denied the motion without prejudice to filing a written
    motion, which Kuhaiki did on September 28, 2022.
    The court denied his written motion, using the same language as in the
    order denying Estrada’s motion. It reincorporated its prior good cause
    findings and added “Additionally, on August 5, 2022, court personnel were
    unavailable to staff courtrooms because of COVID-19.” As it had in Estrada’s
    case, the court rejected Kuhaiki’s objection that the prosecutor offered no
    evidence of this fact.
    Petitioners’ Writ Proceedings
    On November 2, 2022, Estrada filed a petition for writ of mandate or
    prohibition seeking dismissal of their case based on violation of their speedy
    trial rights and a stay of the trial. One week later, on November 8th,
    Kuhaiki filed a petition for writ of mandate or prohibition seeking dismissal
    of his case, but not seeking a stay.
    We issued an order to show cause and stay of trial in Estrada’s case on
    November 23rd. On November 29th, we ordered Estrada’s writ proceedings
    consolidated with those of Kuhaiki, stayed trial in Kuhaiki’s case, and
    ordered the People to file a consolidated return to the petitions within 30
    days of the order.6
    6  Respondent superior court sought leave to file an informal response
    and an extension of time in which to do so. We granted respondent leave to
    file an amicus brief but declined to extend the time in which to file it beyond
    November 14th. Respondent declined to file an amicus brief by the ordered
    deadline, stating it could not “file a meaningful and informative brief under
    the time parameters.” In our November 29th order consolidating the two
    9
    DISCUSSION
    Petitioners contend the trial court abused its discretion in finding good
    cause existed to continue their trials past the statutory deadlines. They
    acknowledge that the court in Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra, 
    75 Cal.App.5th 1108
     addressed the same arguments advanced by petitioners—that the
    inability to get cases to trial is the result of chronic court mismanagement,
    including unused courtrooms, excessive judicial vacations, and failure to hold
    trials at the civic center courthouse, and not the result of extraordinary
    circumstances arising from the COVID-19 pandemic. Hernandez-Valenzuela
    rejected these arguments, holding the “backlog which has delayed petitioners’
    trials was the result of exceptional circumstances arising from the COVID-19
    pandemic.” (Id. at p. 1134.)
    Hernandez-Valenzuela cautioned, however, that “respondent court
    cannot turn to the pandemic and ‘perpetually cite “exceptional
    circumstances” to avoid dismissal under section 1382.’ At some future point,
    should respondent court’s backlog persist while courtrooms remain dark and
    unused for long stretches of time, a backlog that originated with the
    pandemic could transform into one that persists or grows due to court
    administration, or the nonuse of available judicial resources. Here, we only
    decide that on August 16, September 2, and September 24[,] [2021], that
    point was not reached, and we decline to adopt any outside time limitation or
    metric that establishes such a point.” (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra,
    75 Cal.App.5th at p. 1135.)
    writ proceedings, we granted respondent further time to file an amicus curiae
    brief, on or before the deadline set for the People’s return, but the court never
    filed a brief.
    10
    Petitioners maintain “Respondent [Superior] Court is now long past
    that point.”
    The Hernandez-Valenzuela Decision
    In order to provide context to petitioners’ claims, we set forth the facts
    and analysis in Hernandez-Valenzuela in detail.
    The Right to Speedy Trial
    Hernandez-Valenzuela provided a detailed summary of the applicable
    law. “ ‘The right to a speedy trial is a fundamental right guaranteed by both
    the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section
    15 of the California Constitution. [Citation.] The purpose of the speedy trial
    right is “(i) to prevent oppressive pretrial incarceration; (ii) to minimize
    anxiety and concern of the accused; and (iii) to limit the possibility that the
    defense will be impaired.” [Citation.] “To implement an accused’s
    constitutional right to a speedy trial, the Legislature enacted section 1382.” ’
    (Burgos v. Superior Court (2012) 
    206 Cal.App.4th 817
    , 825 . . . ; see also
    People v. Sutton (2010) 
    48 Cal.4th 533
    , 545. . . . (Sutton) [‘[S]ection 1382 is
    one of the principal provisions implementing a criminal defendant’s statutory
    right to a speedy trial.’].)
    “Section 1382 prescribes certain time periods within which an accused
    must be brought to trial. (§ 1382, subd. (a).) The statute provides that, in a
    felony case, ‘the court shall dismiss the action when a defendant is not
    brought to trial within 60 days of his or her arraignment on an indictment or
    information, unless (1) the defendant enters a general waiver of the 60-day
    trial requirement, (2) the defendant requests or consents (expressly or
    impliedly) to the setting of a trial date beyond the 60-day period (in which
    case the defendant shall be brought to trial on the date set for trial or within
    11
    10 days thereafter), or (3) “good cause” is shown.’ (Sutton, supra, 48 Cal.4th
    at p. 545; see also § 1382, subd. (a).)
    “ ‘No affirmative showing of prejudice is necessary to obtain a dismissal
    for violation of the state constitutional speedy trial right as construed and
    implemented by statute. [Citation.] Instead, “an unexcused delay beyond the
    time fixed in section 1382 . . . without defendant’s consent entitles the
    defendant to a dismissal.” ’ (People v. Martinez (2000) 
    22 Cal.4th 750
    ,
    766. . . .)
    “The prosecution has the burden of establishing good cause to avoid
    dismissal. (People v. Johnson (1980) 
    26 Cal.3d 557
    , 569, fn. 12, . . . (Johnson);
    Rhinehart v. Municipal Court (1984) 
    35 Cal.3d 772
    , 781, . . . (Rhinehart) [‘The
    burden of showing good cause is on the prosecution.’].) ‘ “[I]n making its
    good-cause determination, a trial court must consider all of the relevant
    circumstances of the particular case, ‘applying principles of common sense to
    the totality of the circumstance . . . .’ ” ’ ” (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra,
    75 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1122–1123, italics omitted.)
    “ ‘ “The cases recognize that, as a general matter, a trial court ‘has
    broad discretion to determine whether good cause exists to grant a
    continuance of the trial’ [citation], and that, in reviewing a trial court’s good-
    cause determination, an appellate court applies an ‘abuse of discretion
    standard.” ’ ([Engram, supra,] 
    50 Cal.4th 1131
    , 1163. . . .)” (Hernandez-
    Valenzuela, supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1122–1123.)
    Meaning of Good Cause
    “ ‘ “[S]ection 1382 does not define ‘good cause’ as that term is used in
    the provision, but numerous California appellate decisions that have
    reviewed good-cause determinations under this statute demonstrate that, in
    general, a number of factors are relevant to a determination of good cause: (1)
    12
    the nature and strength of the justification for the delay, (2) the duration of
    the delay, and (3) the prejudice to either the defendant or the prosecution
    that is likely to result from the delay.” ’ (Engram, supra, 50 Cal.4th at
    pp. 1162–1163.)” (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at p. 1124.)
    “In reviewing a trial court’s exercise of its discretion in determining
    what constitutes good cause, ‘the appellate courts have evolved certain
    general principles. The courts agree, for example, that delay caused by the
    conduct of the defendant constitutes good cause to deny his motion to dismiss.
    Delay for defendant’s benefit also constitutes good cause. Finally, delay
    arising from unforeseen circumstances, such as the unexpected illness or
    unavailability of counsel or witnesses constitutes good cause to avoid
    dismissal.’ (Johnson, supra, 26 Cal.3d at p. 570. . . .)” (Hernandez-
    Valenzuela, supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at p. 1124.)
    “ ‘[A] broad variety of unforeseen events may establish good cause
    under section 1382.’ (People v. Hajjaj (2010) 
    50 Cal.4th 1184
    , 1198 . . .
    (Hajjaj).) For instance, in In re Venable (1927) 
    86 Cal.App. 585
     . . . , an
    epidemic of infantile paralysis was prevalent in the town where court
    sessions were held and prohibited calling juries. (Id. at p. 587.) The court
    concluded the quarantine imposed to prevent the spread of the infectious
    disease was good cause for the delay of trial and found there was no
    unreasonable delay in bringing the case to trial after the cessation of the
    epidemic. (Id. at p. 587.) In People v. Tucker (2011) 
    196 Cal.App.4th 1313
    . . . , the defendant could not appear for trial as he was under quarantine
    because another inmate had contracted the H1N1 flu virus. (Id. at p. 1315.)
    The court concluded that medical necessity of the defendant’s quarantine
    constituted good cause for the continuance of his trial. (Id. at pp. 1317–1318.)
    More recently, in Stanley v. Superior Court (2020) 
    50 Cal.App.5th 164
     . . . ,
    13
    Division Four of this court concluded the COVID-19 pandemic and impact it
    has had within the state supported the trial court’s finding of good cause to
    continue the defendant’s trial. (Id. at p. 166.) The court observed that the
    COVID-19 pandemic was ‘of such severity’ as to justify a 90-day continuance
    and observed that courts were places of high risk during the pandemic given
    they involved gatherings of judges, court staff, litigants, attorneys, witnesses,
    defendants, law enforcement, and juries in excess of the numbers allowed for
    gatherings under the then applicable executive and health orders. (Id. at
    pp. 169–170 [‘Health quarantines to prevent the spread of infectious diseases
    have long been recognized as good cause for continuing a trial date.’].)”
    (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1124–1125.)
    Good Cause to Continue in Summer 2021
    Hernandez-Valenzuela considered whether good cause had been shown
    for continuances of trials approximately two months after reopening of the
    San Francisco Superior Court, in the late summer/early fall of 2021.7
    (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at p. 1117.)
    The court first addressed the backlog of no-time-waiver cases and
    whether it was “attributable to exceptional circumstances connected to the
    COVID-19 pandemic [or] chronic conditions in [the superior] court.”
    (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at p. 1127.) It noted there was
    no dispute the “ ‘backlog was originally caused by public health restrictions to
    combat the COVID-19 pandemic.’ Thus, the backlog petitioners’ cases were a
    7 Hernandez-Valenzuela was also a consolidated writ proceeding
    involving two defendants. (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at
    p. 1113.) Defendant Valdivia Torres maintained his speedy trial rights were
    violated by the continuances of his trial granted on August 16 and September
    2, 2021, while defendant Hernandez-Valenzuela contended his speedy trial
    rights were violated by a continuance granted on September 24th. (Id. at p.
    1121.)
    14
    part of was due at least in part to the pandemic and thus far from a routine
    event.” (Id. at p. 1130.)
    The court observed: “[t]he COVID-19 pandemic has been a
    ‘ “unique, nonrecurring event[]” ’ which ‘ “ha[s] produced an inordinate
    number of cases for court disposition,” ’ and thus exceptional circumstances
    justifying delay of petitioner’s trial. (Johnson, supra, 26 Cal.3d at p. 571.)
    From early March 2020 to June 28, 2021—when respondent court fully
    reopened—respondent court was unable to operate at its usual capacity for
    approximately 15 months due to safety orders imposed by health officers in
    response to the pandemic. During three of the 15 months, jury trials were
    suspended by the Chief Justice’s statewide emergency orders. The Chief
    Justice’s blanket 90-day extension of the last days of all criminal jury trials
    with last days between March 16, 2020, and June 15, 2020, reflected the
    challenge of conducting jury trials during the pandemic. As the Chief Justice
    explained, courts were a ‘high risk’ environment during the pandemic given
    they required the assembly of judges, court staff, litigants, attorneys,
    witnesses, defendants, law enforcement, and juries in excess of the number
    allowed for gathering under governing health orders. Criminal jury trials in
    respondent court were suspended again for another month during the surge
    of community spread of COVID-19 in December 2020. During the other
    months that jury trials were not suspended, respondent court was limited to
    using only four of its 10 trial courtrooms for criminal jury trials due to social
    distancing requirements imposed by health orders. None of these events
    were the fault of the prosecution or respondent court but rather the
    unprecedented effects of the pandemic.
    “When respondent court reopened on June 28, 2021, after 15 months of
    diminished or no capacity to conduct criminal jury trials, it was not
    15
    surprising that it confronted an ‘ “inordinate number of cases for court
    disposition.” ’ (Johnson, supra, 26 Cal.3d at p. 571.) The pandemic had
    severely limited its ability to conduct jury trials. Upon reopening, scores of
    no-time-waiver felony cases past their statutory day had accumulated during
    the 15-month period of limited operations. As of August 29, 2021, respondent
    court’s jury trial list indicated there were approximately 220 no-time-waiver
    felony cases with original last days sometime in the 15-month period before
    reopening. The District Attorney explains that respondent court attempted
    to address this backlog by prioritizing older cases first when it reopened.
    Respondent court assigned trials out in order of their statutory last days,
    prioritizing three courtrooms for in-custody felony trials, and maintaining the
    remaining courtrooms for out-of-custody trials with earlier last days.
    “It was in this context in which petitioners’ trials were called and
    continued on August 16, September 2, and September 24, [2021], since on
    those dates other defendants with earlier last days than petitioners—most of
    whom with last days falling within the 15-month period before reopening—
    were still awaiting trial. After 15 months of constrained operations resulting
    in a backlog of numerous no-time-waiver cases, it was not unreasonable for
    respondent court to not have addressed its backlog within seven, nine, or
    twelve weeks of reopening, that is, by Valdivia Torres’s August 16 and
    September 2 last days, or by Hernandez-Valenzuela’s September 24 last day.
    Moreover, it was not unreasonable after those 15 months for the court to need
    some latitude to determine how best to address[] its backlog, while the
    pandemic persisted despite the full reopening. (See Sutton, 
    supra,
     48 Cal.4th
    at p. 555, fn. 10 [quoting ABA standards which observe that it is unfeasible to
    expect the same prompt disposition of court business when a unique,
    nonrecurring event results in many cases for disposition and advocating for
    16
    ‘ “some leeway for additional time” ’ in such circumstances].) The method the
    court chose of advancing cases from the backlog by order of their statutory
    last days did not reflect court mismanagement. Rather, it was a reasonable
    approach in line with priorities set forth in section 10488 and not detrimental
    to the good cause finding. Based on the totality of these circumstances, it
    was not an abuse of discretion for the respondent court to conclude that the
    backlog delaying petitioners’ cases was attributable to exceptional
    circumstances constituting good cause and to continue their trials.”
    (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1127–1129.)
    The petitioners nevertheless asserted the backlog in the superior court
    was due to “ ‘poor administration,’ ” as evidenced by dark courtrooms at the
    Hall of Justice due to judicial vacations or absences, and failure to reassign
    additional courtrooms to hear jury trials, including at the civic center
    courthouse. (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1130–1133,
    1142.)
    Hernandez-Valenzuela addressed and rejected these claims. “[E]mpty
    or available courtrooms,” both during the period since reopening and on the
    dates petitioners’ cases were called, did “not mean respondent court was not
    undertaking efforts to reduce its backlog.” (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra,
    75 Cal.App.5th at p. 1131.) Although the empty courtrooms were “startling
    8 “Section 1048 provides in part: ‘(a) The issues on the calendar shall
    be disposed of in the following order, unless for good cause the court directs
    an action to be tried out of its order:
    (1) Prosecutions for felony, when the defendant is in custody.
    (2) Prosecutions for misdemeanor, when the defendant is in custody.
    (3) Prosecutions for felony, when the defendant is on bail.
    (4) Prosecutions for misdemeanor, when the defendant is on bail.’ (§ 1048,
    subd. (a)(1)–(4).)”
    17
    and troubling,” the evidence showed the court had advanced “221 no-time
    waiver felony trials” in the six months since reopening. (Ibid.)
    Hernandez-Valenzuela also rejected the claim that failure to use the
    Civic Center Courthouse for criminal trials evidenced court mismanagement
    and precluded a good cause finding. (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra,
    75 Cal.App.5th at p. 1133.) It observed the superior court had “noted that
    use of the Civic Center Courthouse was not a viable option . . . because of the
    inability to provide adequate security [and because] there were not enough
    bailiffs to staff each courtroom.” (Id. at pp. 1133–1134.) The evidence
    showed “Civic Center Courthouse lacked security devices designed to prevent
    escape, which are features of the Hall of Justice. For additional in-custody
    criminal matters at the Civic Center Courthouse, additional holding cells
    would need to be constructed, and various locks and cameras, secure
    entrances, and additional emergency communication devices would need to
    be installed. In addition, thirteen more full-time sheriff staff would be
    needed to staff additional criminal matters at the Civic Center Courthouse.
    These security and structural concerns related to the Civic Center
    Courthouse provide further reason to not fault respondent court from not
    assigning additional criminal matters there.” (Id. at p. 1134.)
    Petitioners’ Assertions Regarding Lack of Good Cause
    Petitioners make the same claim advanced in Hernandez-Valenzuela—
    that the shortage of trial capacity on their last no-waiver trial dates was the
    result of the superior court’s “chronic, needless underuse of its trial resources
    over thirteen months,” due to the “combined result of courtroom closures due
    to judicial vacations and a remarkably inefficient trial assignment system.”
    They also take issue with the court’s comments about the number of
    defendants proceeding on a no-time waiver basis, asserting exercise of their
    18
    statutory rights does not constitute good cause, and the court failed to
    consider the “severe psychological harm” to defendants “forced to wait in jail”
    “under extreme lockdown conditions that risk grave damage to [their] mental
    health.” (Italics omitted.)
    Underuse of Trial Resources
    Petitioners concede that by the time of reopening in June 2021, there
    was “a massive backlog of criminal trials,” (italics omitted) but claim the
    backlog should have been cleared by the time of their statutory dates because
    the superior court announced that it was returning to “ ‘pre-pandemic’ levels
    of service on June 28, 2021,” and “our criminal justice system has gradually
    returned to normal.”
    In June 2021, the superior court reopened the 11 trial departments in
    the Hall of Justice that were open before the pandemic—Departments 10, 13,
    16, 19, 21, and 24–29. There were around 562 cases waiting to be tried,
    including about 155 felony cases in which the defendant was in custody
    Petitioners have submitted hundreds of pages of “Criminal Daily Court
    Status Report[s]” (some capitalization omitted) produced by the court
    (specifically reports from June 28 through August 8, 2022). Using these
    reports, petitioners calculated that “on an average day” in the 11-month
    period between July 1, 2021 and May 31, 2022, 56 percent of the 11 trial
    departments were holding trials.
    These status reports also noted reasons why the dark courtrooms were
    dark. The most common reason, responsible for 48 percent of the 182 dark
    days from June 1 to August 8, 2022, was a judge’s “ ‘approved absence,’ ”
    “ ‘scheduled absence’ ” or “ ‘excused absence.’ ” The second most-common
    reason, responsible for 33 percent of dark courtrooms, was “Covering another
    department,” while the third most common reason, responsible for eight
    19
    percent of dark courtrooms, was “Official business.” Of the judicial absences
    resulting in a dark courtroom day during that time period, 54 percent were
    due to vacations, 14 percent were due to being on, or covering for another
    judge on, official business, nine percent were due to medical leave or covering
    for another judge on medical leave, and five percent were due to personal
    leave.
    As petitioners point out, “[i]t is settled that, although a broad variety of
    unforeseen events may establish good cause under section 1382, the
    unavailability of a number of judges or courtrooms sufficient to handle the
    court’s caseload, due to chronic congestion of the court’s docket, does not
    establish good cause, absent exceptional circumstances.” (People v. Hajjaj
    (2010) 
    50 Cal.4th 1184
    , 1198; Rhinehart v. Municipal Court (1984) 
    35 Cal.3d 772
    , 783 [judicial vacations alone do not constitute good cause for trial
    delay].) Neither does the absence of judges due to their attendance at a
    “ ‘mid-career’ training program,” when no good cause appeared why the court
    “fail[ed] to recall [them] from the conference to try these cases.” (Lewis v.
    Superior Court (1981) 
    122 Cal.App.3d 494
    , 498–499 (Lewis).)
    However, contrary to petitioners’ claims, and unlike in the cases they
    cite, the evidence does not show that judicial vacations, alone, were the cause
    of either the backlog of cases or the lack of court room availability at the time
    in question.
    To begin with, it is unremarkable that during the traditional summer
    vacation months of June, July, and August 2022, numerous judges were
    taking vacation days. And petitioners’ statistics obfuscate the true number of
    judicial vacation days during that time period. Of the 182 dark courtroom
    days during that time period, only 88 were due to judicial absences. Of those
    88 days, only 71 were judicial vacations, or 39 percent of the total dark
    20
    courtroom days during that time period. Nor did the backlog develop during
    that time period, and forbidding judges to take vacation days, even if that
    were possible, would not have alleviated it. In short, unlike in Lewis,
    petitioners’ cases could not have proceeded to trial simply by recalling judges
    from a nearby training session. (Lewis, supra, 122 Cal.App.3d at pp. 498–
    499.)
    Petitioners cite no authority for the proposition that allowing judges to
    take vacation days or cover for other absent judges is trial court
    mismanagement. Indeed, they admit that “when a trial judge covers for an
    absent colleague, that judge sometimes conducts his or her own regularly
    assigned calendar as well as covering the other department.” And as
    Hernandez-Valenzuela concluded, the massive backlog in the summer of 2021
    was the result of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the evidence in the instant
    writ proceedings shows the pandemic and its attendant disruptions, while
    somewhat abated, certainly had not ceased.
    Moreover, the superior court had made significant progress in clearing
    the backlog of cases awaiting trial since the dates at issue in Hernandez-
    Valenzuela. The court had reduced its backlog of felony in-custody no-time-
    waiver trials from 280 cases in February 2022 to 192 cases in July 2022, with
    the backlog rising slightly to 204 cases in September 2022. The court had
    also reduced its backlog of felony out-of-custody no-time-waiver trials, from
    202 cases in February, to 182 cases in July, to 170 cases in September of
    2022. Although petitioners point to the fact the backlog had increased
    between June 2021 and February 2022, that time period ended almost six
    months before the good cause determination in these cases and during that
    six-month period the court made substantial progress reducing the backlog.
    Moreover, it did so while criminal cases continued to be filed and without
    21
    additional court facilities or judgeships. This reflects responsive
    management, rather than mismanagement, of court resources.
    Petitioners acknowledge that as of May 2022, the court’s records
    indicate 89 percent of the 11 trial courtrooms were in use. But they assert
    that beginning in mid-May, the court’s “ ‘HOJ Courts in Trial’ ” statistics
    were overstated because they included “out-of-custody trials that had been
    assigned to departments for all purposes, but had not actually started.”
    Thus, as defendants calculated it, there were an average of eight courtrooms
    that were actually in trial each day in May 2022, not the 9.8 average
    calculated using the “ ‘HOJ Courts in Trial’ ” statistics. However, even
    accepting petitioners’ calculation, this still meant 73 percent of the 11
    courtrooms were in use—a dramatic increase from the 33 percent and 28
    percent, respectively, for the months of August, and September 2021 at issue
    in Hernandez-Valenzuela. And on the last days for trial for Estrada and
    Kuhaiki, 73 percent of the 11 courtrooms were again in use.9
    Hernandez-Valenzuela addressed whether open courtrooms evidenced
    court mismanagement and “disagree[d] that the open courtrooms preclude
    respondent court’s good cause finding.” (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra,
    75 Cal.App.5th at p. 1130.) The court observed that in Hajjaj, supra,
    
    50 Cal.4th 1184
    , “the Supreme Court recognized that ‘a broad variety of
    unforeseen events may establish good cause under section 1382’ and that the
    unavailability of judges or courtrooms sufficient to handle a court’s caseload
    due to chronic congestion of the court’s docket was not such an event. (Id. at
    p. 1198. . . .) In contrast, the backlog pending in respondent court at issue
    9 Petitioners’ evidence showed there were three dark courtrooms on
    both July 26 (Estrada) and August 5, 2022 (Kuhaiki). A fourth courtroom
    was “dark during trial” on August 5th.
    22
    here has not been due to chronic congestion, but rather the result of a global
    pandemic—a ‘unique, nonrecurring event[ ] [that has] produced an inordinate
    number of cases for disposition’ and which may properly [be] regarded as an
    exceptional circumstance that would support a court’s good cause
    determination. (See id. at p. 1204; Johnson, supra, 26 Cal.3d at p. 571; see
    also Arreola v. Municipal Court (1983) 
    139 Cal.App.3d 108
    , 114 . . . [‘While
    chronic congestion will not constitute good cause, court backlogs caused by
    exceptional circumstances will excuse delay in bringing a defendant to
    trial.’].)” (Hernandez-Valenzuela, at p. 1130, italics omitted.)
    We also observe that while petitioners, in the trial court, complained
    about lack of use of the Civic Center Courthouse, they have not pursued this
    complaint in the instant writ proceeding. Hernandez-Valenzuela concluded
    that the “security and structural concerns related to the Civic Center
    Courthouse [were] reason to not fault respondent court from not assigning
    additional criminal matters there.” (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra,
    75 Cal.App.5th at p. 1134.) Here, the superior court, after detailing the
    circumstances surrounding use of that courthouse, found “the Civic Center
    Courthouse has not been a viable option for either in-custody or violent out of
    custody criminal trials. However, with the lifting of shelter-in-place orders
    and the relaxing of social distancing requirements, in addition to the return
    of additional judicial officers, staff, and bailiffs, the Court has begun to send
    more non-violent out-of-custody trials to the Civic Center Courthouse.
    Judges at the Civic Center Courthouse have been instructed by the Presiding
    Judge of the Superior Court that no time waiver jury trials will be given
    highest priority at that courthouse.” Thus, the court has also made
    23
    significant efforts to utilize its Civic Center facility to assist in working
    through the backlog of no time waiver cases.10
    While petitioners insist the persisting, but steadily diminishing,
    backlog of no time waiver cases in the San Francisco Superior Court can no
    longer be attributed to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, the evidence
    simply does not support this claim. The backlog that resulted from the court
    closures and the later disruptions from surges and new variants is not a
    problem that can reasonably be expected to have dissipated within only
    months or even a year or two, particularly given the continued filing of new
    criminal cases.
    Superior Court’s Findings
    The superior court took judicial notice of its “records, policies,
    procedures, courtroom facilities, and operations during the relevant periods
    of the COVID-19 pandemic and the Emergency Orders and Rules issued by
    the Governor, the Chief Justice, the Judicial Council, the Presiding Judge of
    the San Francisco Superior Court, San Francisco County Health Officer, the
    State of California Department of Public Health, and any other local or
    statewide governmental agency . . . issued in response to the COVID-19
    pandemic,” as well as its own records, practices, and official acts taken during
    the pandemic. And based thereon, it made extensive findings in support of
    its 16-page orders finding good cause to continue petitioners’ the trials.
    10 Petitioners also claim there must be mismanagement at the San
    Francisco Superior Court because other superior courts have eliminated their
    COVID-19 related backlogs. Suffice it to say that without an examination of
    the circumstances, including the number of no-time-waiver cases, facilities,
    and personnel at those courts, and an analysis of the similarities and
    differences—evidence petitioners did not present—this assertion is
    meaningless.
    24
    The court found: “even with the reopening of the courtrooms, isolation
    and quarantine requirements persisted in San Francisco, surrounding
    counties, the State, and under CDC guidelines. These requirements caused
    significant delays during the trials that were in session as well as hampered
    the Court in sending out trials at a similar pace prior to the pandemic. [¶]
    Since the recent emergence of the delta and omicron variants of the
    coronavirus, the Court has again had to balance the safety of the public, the
    staff, the defendants, and the attorneys with the right to a speedy and public
    trial. The increase in infections due to these new variants has caused
    concerns with potential jurors, affected the readiness of witnesses, and
    decreased the appearances of defendants. The delta and omicron variants
    have impacted both the unvaccinated and the vaccinated. On December 13,
    2021, the State reinstituted the indoor mask mandate in all public settings
    regardless of vaccination status. San Francisco has not been immune from
    the spread, and as of January 3, 2022, it had the third highest transmission
    rate in the state. Governor Newsom extended the state of emergency to
    March 21, 2022.”
    As to the issues regarding the Sheriff’s Department, the court found
    “the Sheriff’s Department is already stretched for staffing at the county jails
    and the Hall of Justice due to retirements, resignations, and staffing
    shortages caused by the global pandemic.” “The massive spread of these new
    variants has had a substantial impact on court staff and sheriff’s deputies.
    In early January of 2022, numerous sheriff’s deputies were unavailable due
    to the new variants. Trial judges were forced to make good cause findings to
    continue active trials [until] adequate deputies became available. For
    example, on one particular day, the Sheriff’s Department was short 13
    deputies at the Hall of Justice. Some trials were forced to have dark days
    25
    during the trial because there were not enough bailiffs to staff the
    courtrooms. This, of course, lengthened the time of each trial, contributing to
    the backlog. This also hampered sending new cases out to trial because there
    were not enough deputies to secure open courtrooms. The Court was
    informed by the Sheriff’s command staff that the bailiff shortage is
    anticipated to continue through March of 2022. The number of sheriff
    deputies has diminished by over 200 members since the onset of the
    pandemic. This bailiff shortage, which has been a problem since the
    beginning of the pandemic, has substantially increased since the emergence
    of the delta and omicron variants. The shortage has also impacted the ability
    of the courts to conduct anything more than one or two misdemeanor non-
    violent criminal cases at a time at the Hall of Justice.”
    “The recent spread of the variants also impacted court staff and judicial
    officers. In January of 2022, there was a mistrial declared after two jurors
    and a deputy public defend[er], who was 32-weeks pregnant tested positive
    for the virus. In addition, the judicial officer and the entire courtroom staff
    assigned to the case were forced to stay home due to potential exposure,
    eliminating the use of the courtroom for other trials. In a separate case, a
    judge tested positive during a trial and had to isolate for close to two weeks
    causing a delay in the proceedings. Other judges who have either tested
    positive, been exposed to someone who has tested positive, or live with
    vulnerable individuals have been forced to remain home requiring the Court
    to shift judicial resources to cover those judges in their absence, or to
    designate a courtroom dark. These circumstances have substantially
    impacted the Court’s functioning and operating ability.”
    The court further found that “in May of 2022, the Bay Area again
    began experiencing a massive spike in positive cases impacting the courts.
    26
    There were numerous judges, staff, attorneys, jury trial witnesses, and jurors
    unable to appear in court from May of 2022 until the present. During this
    same time period, the Court’s Human Resource Department declared all
    three floors of the Hall of Justice in ‘outbreak’ status in accordance with
    applicable law and CalOSHA guidelines. The virus continues to disrupt our
    everyday lives, the judicial process is no exception.”
    While petitioners acknowledge that the court made these and other
    factual findings about the continuing effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on its
    operations, they complain the orders were “boilerplate” and the findings
    unsupported by any evidence.
    With respect to petitioners’ complaint that the court issued
    “boilerplate” orders, it is well settled that a trial court has “inherent power to
    exercise reasonable control over litigation pending before it ‘ “in order to
    ensure the orderly administration of justice.” ’ (Rutherford v. Owens-Illinois,
    Inc. (1997) 
    16 Cal.4th 953
    , 967 . . . ; see §§ 128, subd. (a)(3), 187.) These
    inherent powers primarily encompass ‘procedural matters, typically to control
    the court’s own process, proceedings and orders,’ or to create ‘workable
    means’ to enforce statutory rights.” (Carlsbad Police Officers Assn. v. City of
    Carlsbad (2020) 
    49 Cal.App.5th 135
    , 150–151, italics omitted.) Given the
    hundreds of cases in which defendants had not waived time, a boilerplate
    order setting forth the background of the COVID-19 pandemic and the court’s
    response was not only within the trial court’s discretion, but a time-efficient
    way of addressing motions to dismiss.
    With respect to the evidence supporting the court’s findings, petitioners
    assert “the court’s own records” show that from April 1 through August 8,
    2022, “only six dark days . . . were caused by COVID-19 protocols, courtroom
    capacity limits, or ‘staffing’ issues.” Thus, they maintain “[t]hese statistics
    27
    hardly support the notion that COVID-19-related staffing problems were to
    blame for the continuance[s],” specifically disputing the court’s findings that
    on the petitioners’ last days for trial “court personnel were unavailable to
    staff courtrooms because of COVID-19.”
    Petitioners acknowledge the finding that a new outbreak of COVID-19
    occurred at the Hall of Justice in May 2022, but suggest the outbreak had
    little effect on court administration. They assert an outbreak “simply means
    that the worksite must report the matter to the local health department and
    that employees must wear masks and test regularly for infection. It does not
    require the closure of any courtroom, and so cannot justify delaying trials for
    months.” (Fn. omitted.)
    Petitioners are mistaken. A workplace “outbreak” in San Francisco is
    defined as “when three or more employees have COVID-19 in a two-week
    period.” (https://sf.gov/step-by-step/what-do-if-someone-work-has-covid-19 [as
    of Feb. 28, 2023].) Although the outbreak must be reported to the San
    Francisco Department of Public Health, that is not the only requirement.
    (Ibid.) The employer must “[t]alk with the employee who tested positive,”
    determine when they tested positive or their symptoms began, make a list of
    “close contacts,” (which includes anyone the individual has been indoors with
    for more than 15 minutes, even if wearing a mask), and inform those contacts
    they have been exposed. (Ibid.) Individuals who test positive, with or
    without symptoms, must “stay home and away from others for [five] days.”
    (https://sf.gov/youve-had-close-contact-or-positive-test [as of Feb. 28, 2023].)
    An individual who still tests positive after five days must stay home until a
    negative COVID-19 test or 10 days have passed since the first positive test,
    whichever comes first. (Ibid.)
    28
    Thus, an “outbreak” results in significant disruption to the superior
    court, as the court must contact individuals with positive tests, identify their
    “close contacts,” and inform them of possible exposure. At the same time, the
    individuals who have tested positive must isolate at home for between 5-10
    days. While it is true, as petitioners claim, that the San Francisco Public
    Health Department does not require a courtroom closure during an outbreak,
    trial delays are the natural result as judges, court staff, litigants, attorneys,
    witnesses, defendants, law enforcement, and jurors are required to test and
    isolate.
    Petitioners also take issue with the superior court’s finding that, on
    petitioners’ last statutory days for trial, “court personnel were unavailable to
    staff courtrooms because of COVID-19,” claiming “this assertion is wholly
    unsupported by the evidence.”11 The court, however, took judicial notice of its
    own “findings, records, policies, procedures, courtroom facilities, and
    operations during the relevant periods of the COVID-19 pandemic.”
    Petitioners do not challenge the propriety of the court taking judicial notice of
    these matters, and consequently have failed to show this finding was
    unsupported by the evidence.
    Practices of Public Defender’s Office
    In addition to the foregoing findings, the superior court found two
    practices of the San Francisco Public Defender’s Office had contributed to the
    no time waiver backlog.
    The first was the unprecedented increase in no time waiver felony
    cases. The court found that before the pandemic, “about 58.9% of the
    11 We note this finding does not necessarily mean the judge had
    COVID-19, but rather, due to the overall effects of the COVID-19 pandemic
    on the court, personnel were unavailable to staff courtrooms that day.
    29
    defendants arraigned on a Felony Information set their cases for trial on a no
    time waiver basis. . . . From January 1, 2021 to July 13, 2021, during the
    height of the pandemic, the number of felony defendants who asserted their
    right to a speedy trial increased to 81.1%. Since the reopening, the number of
    felony defendants who asserted their right to a speedy trial has grown to
    approximately 96%.”
    Petitioners maintain that asserting their rights to a speedy trial and
    declining to waive time cannot be considered good cause, citing Arreola v.
    Municipal Court (1983) 
    139 Cal.App.3d 108
     (Arreola). In that case, due to
    certain policies of the court and district attorney’s office, the public defender
    counseled clients to plead not guilty and request a trial rather than seek a
    plea bargain. (Id. at p. 112.) A backlog of 100 cases awaiting trial developed,
    but the court denied motions to dismiss for failure to timely bring the cases to
    trial. (Ibid.) The defendants sought writ relief, which the Court of Appeal
    granted.
    The appellate court first observed that “delay caused by chronic court
    congestion and overcrowding is not good cause. [Citation.] If the contrary
    were true, ‘[a] defendant’s right to a speedy trial may be denied simply by the
    failure of the state to provide enough courtrooms or judges to enable
    defendant to come to trial within the statutory period.’ [Citation.]
    Insufficient allocations of admittedly limited public funds should not justify
    the deprivation of the right to speedy trial.” (Arreola, supra,139 Cal.App.3d
    at pp. 113–114, fns. omitted.) It went on to conclude that the exercise of
    speedy trial rights could not, “even in unprecedented numbers,” be called “an
    exceptional circumstance. The state must stand ready to provide a jury trial
    to every defendant. The state may not demand as a price in exchange
    therefor that a defendant give up the right to a speedy disposition of the
    30
    cause. As a matter of policy the ‘courts should not participate in, or
    encourage, a procedure which obliges the accused to forfeit one constitutional
    right in order to retain the protection of another.’ ” (Id. at p. 115.)
    The circumstances in Arreola differ markedly from those at hand. In
    Arreola, the defendants exercised their speedy trial rights in response to
    perceived stricter policies adopted by the master calendar judge and the
    district attorney. In other words, the sole reason for the backlog were policies
    the court and district attorney had unilaterally enacted. The circumstances
    here are entirely different. At bottom, the principal reason for the backlog
    and the court’s facility and personnel difficulties in the instant proceeding
    was continuing fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic.
    We are not questioning petitioners’ right to assert their speedy trial
    rights. Rather, their doing so is simply another consequence of the pandemic
    that has magnified the pandemic’s impact on court facilities and personnel.
    The second practice the court commented on was “assigning deputy
    public defenders to ‘second chair’ cases . . . diminish[ing] the number of cases
    that can be sent out to trial due to the ‘second chair’ attorney’s
    unavailability.” The court further found since “[t]here are six individual
    public defenders responsible for approximately 35% of the entire trial
    backlog, their unavailability contributes significantly to the delay in getting
    trials out and reducing the backlog.”12 Petitioners do not contest those
    12 Real party maintains other defense practices have also contributed
    to the backlog, including waiting until after a case has been assigned to a
    trial courtroom to enter into a plea agreement, move to continue, or declare a
    doubt as to competency, citing to exhibits lodged with its return. Although
    these documents were not submitted to the trial court, real party asserts that
    the court’s taking judicial notice of its operating procedures meant “this
    information was before Respondent Court.”
    31
    findings. Accordingly, we accept them as true for the purposes of this
    proceeding. (See People v. Superior Court (J.C. Penney Corp., Inc.) (2019)
    
    34 Cal.App.5th 376
    , 406, fn. 18.) And as we have observed, “ ‘[d]elay for
    defendant’s benefit,’ ” such as the presence of second chair counsel,
    constitutes good cause to deny a motion to dismiss. (Hernandez-Valenzuela,
    supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at p. 1124, quoting Johnson, supra, 26 Cal.3d at
    p. 570.)
    Summary
    In sum, considering the totality of the circumstances, we conclude the
    continued, but abating, backlog at the time in question was primarily the
    result of exceptional circumstances arising from a “ ‘unique, nonrecurring
    event’ ”—the continuing consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic.
    (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1130, 1135, italics
    omitted.) Accordingly, the superior court did not abuse its discretion in
    finding that good cause existed to continue petitioners’ trials, and thus did
    not err in denying their motions to dismiss under section 1382.
    Petitioners, on the other hand, have sought to strike exhibits 1, 2, 7, 8,
    9, and 10, as well as exhibits 1–3 submitted by real party with its the
    preliminary opposition. These exhibits consist of over 2000 pages of
    documents, including the declaration of a deputy district attorney, a
    spreadsheet of all cases assigned to a courtroom from June 18, 2021, through
    December 16, 2022, and a Case Management System printout and minute
    orders for each case in the spreadsheet.
    We do not agree the court’s judicial notice encompassed the truth of the
    contents of thousands of pages of court records and grant the motion to strike
    to the extent the documents comprising these exhibits were not before the
    superior court at the time it ruled on these motions. (See Lockley v. Law
    Office of Cantrell, Green, Pekich, Cruz & McCort (2001) 
    91 Cal.App.4th 875
    ,
    882.)
    32
    Consideration of Prejudice to Petitioners
    Petitioners additionally assert the superior court failed to consider the
    prejudice to them resulting from continuance of their cases. They claim they
    have been “waiting in county jail past [their] last day, under extreme
    lockdown conditions that risk grave damage to [their] mental health.”13
    However, as petitioners point out, no showing of prejudice is necessary to
    prevail on a section 1382 motion to dismiss.14 Thus, it is unsurprising that
    the trial court did not expressly mention it in its order.
    That does not mean, however, that the court did not consider
    petitioners’ submitted evidence of prejudice. Indeed, the court indicated at
    the hearing it had reviewed all the “paperwork” submitted, and we presume
    the court “regularly performed its official duties.” (People v. Sparks (1968)
    
    262 Cal.App.2d 597
    , 600.)
    In any event, prejudice is not necessarily shown by “lengthy
    incarceration during pendency of . . . unresolved criminal charges.” (Elias v.
    Superior Court (2022) 
    78 Cal.App.5th 926
    , 943 (Elias).) Elias, considering
    whether the defendant’s continued pretrial incarceration was prejudicial
    applying the balancing test for the federal Constitution’s speedy trial right,
    concluded the defendant “is in the same position as hundreds of other in-
    custody defendants awaiting trial due to COVID-19 pandemic delays.” (Id. at
    pp. 938, 943.) Moreover, the People submitted evidence in the trial court that
    13  In a letter to this court, Estrada corrected their earlier allegation,
    stating they have been housed in a “special, dormitory-style pod” in county
    jail, and have not been subject to “the lockdown conditions faced by other
    inmates” as asserted in the petition, undercutting their prejudice claim.
    14   Petitioners concede they are not asserting a Sixth Amendment
    claim.
    33
    the allegedly harsher conditions in the county jails during the COVID-19
    lockdown have been improved, with programs and visitation reinstated.
    Changes Suggested by Hernandez-Valenzuela
    Petitioners also claim the San Francisco Superior Court has failed to
    implement the changes suggested in Hernandez-Valenzuela.
    Hernandez-Valenzuela “urge[d] respondent court to consider even more
    measures to adopt, which could include but are not limited to expanding the
    number of trial courtrooms in the Hall of Justice beyond the number that was
    standard pre-pandemic, reassigning additional judicial officers from other
    departments in the Civic Center Courthouse or Hall of Justice, or using
    visiting or retired judges to cover courtroom vacancies. Respondent court’s
    backlog which was borne of exceptional circumstances must be met with an
    equally exceptional response to ensure that our recognition of a defendant’s
    speedy trial rights as a critical constitutional protection is not merely lip
    service.” (Hernandez-Valenzuela, supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at p. 1136.)
    Well aware of Hernandez-Valenzuela, the superior court detailed the
    changes that had been made in the ensuing year. The court had “added an
    additional trial courtroom at the Hall of Justice, utilized judicial officers and
    additional clerical staff from the Civic Center Courthouse and the visiting
    and retired judges’ programs to assist with trial, and sought the assistance of
    a retired judge for additional settlement conferences. In addition, based on
    extensive discussion with the Sheriff’s Department, the Court will begin to
    send three to four misdemeanor cases to the Civi[c] Center Courthouse by
    then end of July of 2022. The Court is still working on trying to get the
    Sheriff’s Department to a staffing level to handle out of custody felony
    matters. It does not appear they will be able to handle in-custody felony
    matters at any time in the foreseeable future.” Indeed, petitioners concede
    34
    “Respondent court often calls on visiting judges to handle gaps in its staffing
    or to hold pretrial conferences.”
    “ ‘It is not our function to interfere with the trial court in its
    administration of the calendar or assignment of judges.’ ” (Hernandez-
    Valenzuela, supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at p. 1133.) As the court in Elias observed,
    “ ‘It is well established, in California and elsewhere, that a court has both the
    inherent authority and responsibility to fairly and efficiently administer all of
    the judicial proceedings that are pending before it, and that one important
    element of a court’s inherent judicial authority in this regard is “the power
    . . . to control the disposition of the causes on its docket with economy of time
    and effort for itself, for counsel, and for litigants. How this can best be done
    calls for the exercise of judgment, which must weigh competing interests and
    maintain an even balance.” ’ ” (Elias, supra, 78 Cal.App.5th at p. 941.)
    In sum, as of the time in question here, the San Francisco Superior
    Court had made reasonable progress under continued challenging
    circumstances. This is not to suggest continued improvements need not be
    made. The superior court must protect defendants’ speedy trial rights and
    should be continually considering ways to expedite these cases. But as the
    court in Elias explained, the superior court is in the best position to exercise
    its judgment, weigh competing interests, and maintain an even balance.
    (Elias, supra, 78 Cal.App.5th at p. 941.)
    Conclusion
    The COVID-19 pandemic and its adverse impacts on the superior court
    did not end when the court reopened. After reopening, the court had to
    address not only the backlog that had developed during the closure of the
    courts, but also the new cases that continued to be filed. And even though
    the court reopened, the COVID-19 pandemic continued to wreak havoc, with
    35
    judicial officers, court staff, sheriff’s deputies, attorneys, defendants, and
    jurors contracting COVID-19, being required to quarantine due to exposure,
    or having to care for family members. Thus, the persistence of a backlog
    during the time period at issue here was principally the result of continuing
    sequelae of the COVID-19 pandemic. Not only the pandemic, itself, but its
    length, seriousness, and continuing effects were unexpected and
    unanticipated, and certainly resulted in exceptional and extraordinary
    circumstances. Accordingly, the superior court did not, in the instant cases,
    abuse its discretion in concluding that exceptional circumstances justified
    continuance of petitioners’ trials past their statutory last days. Nor did it err
    in denying petitioners’ motions for dismissal.
    DISPOSITION
    The petitions for writs of mandate or prohibition are denied, and the
    order to show cause is discharged. The previously imposed stays of the trial
    in both matters are lifted.
    36
    _________________________
    Banke, J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Margulies, Acting P.J.
    _________________________
    Swope, J.*
    **Judge of the San Mateo County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief
    Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    A166474, Estrada v. Superior Court
    37