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Three Regions Of New York To Begin Reopening

N.Y. Gov. Andrew Cuomo
Mike Groll
/
Office of N.Y. Gov. Andrew Cuomo
N.Y. Gov. Andrew Cuomo listens to a question during a coronavirus press conference.

New York is poised for a first step in reopening businesses, as Governor Andrew Cuomo announces that three regions of the state have met his criteria to begin a slow reopen, starting with some construction and manufacturing businesses as soon as this Friday. 

The news comes as the rate of hospitalizations for the coronavirus, at 7,226, and the May 10th death toll, of 161 fatalities, continues to decline. The numbers are nowhere near what they were on March 19th, before the worst of the present wave of the virus began.

Cuomo says three regions of the state, the Rochester-Finger Lakes area, the Southern Tier and the Mohawk Valley, have met a list of seven criteria to begin reopening some businesses.

“We start a new chapter today,” Cuomo said.  

In addition to construction and manufacturing industries, Cuomo says all retail shops can reopen in those regions, for curbside pickup or in store pickup.

The criteria for partial reopening includes a 14-day decline in cases of COVID-19, as recommended in federal Centers for Disease Control guidelines. Hospitals in the region must have 30% of their beds open in case the virus spikes again, and there needs to be enough tests, 30 tests for every 1,000 residents, and enough contact tracers, 30 contact tracers for every 1000,000 residents.

Two other regions, Central New York and the North Country, have met six of the seven requirements, but currently do not have the capacity for enough tests. The two regions might be able to begin reopening by Friday if they can demonstrate they have met the testing requirement.  

Cuomo also announced some statewide business reopenings for outdoor-based companies, including landscapers and gardeners. Some outdoor low-risk recreational sports facilities, like tennis courts, can reopen. And drive-in movie theaters will be allowed to show films.  

Many responsibilities for the gradual reopening now fall to the individual regions, Cuomo says. The businesses that want to reopen must submit plans to control boards that include state and local officials, to demonstrate that they can operate with safe social distancing, and that they have enough personal protective gear, including masks and gloves, for their employees.

And the governor says the control boards will closely monitor their health care systems to make sure that the reopenings don’t raise the infection rates.

“You’re increasing the activity, you’re watching the infection rate, you’re watching the hospitalization rate, you see that start to tick up. You have to have a circuit breaker,” Cuomo said. “Slow down the activity level, because you are increasing the infection rate. And nobody wants to be there.”

Cuomo admits that “nobody knows” how fast businesses can reopen and whether each phase of the planned reopenings will be sustainable.

Other countries, including China, South Korea, and Germany have had to retighten restrictions, after partial reopenings led to a flare-up of the virus.   

If phase one of the reopening is successful, the regions might be able to proceed to phase two by the end of the month. It would allow the opening of professional services, retail stores, real estate and rental leasing offices. After another two weeks, the third phase, which would allow restaurants and hotels to open, could begin. And finally, if all of the reopenings do not lead to an increase in the spread of the virus, then concerts, and art museums, schools and universities could reopen. 

There is no timetable yet for when regions that have had more incidents of the virus will be allowed to begin to reopen.

In the Capital Region, Western New York, Long Island and the Hudson Valley, the number of new hospitalizations and deaths is not yet declining. In New York City, while there are fewer new cases and fewer fatalities, there are not enough free hospital beds to meet the reopening criteria. None of those regions currently have enough contact tracers, though they are expected to meet that requirement soon.

Nassau County Executive Laura Curran says Long Island is close.

“So we are definitely going in the right direction, and we seem to be going in the right direction rather quickly.”

She couldn’t give a timeline for when the island can enter the state’s phase one reopening plan. But said she said this week would be extremely unlikely.

Cuomo signed an executive order that extends the shutdown orders until June 7th, but he and his aides say a region could begin to reopen earlier than that, if it meets all of the criteria.

Read the latest on WSHU’s coronavirus coverage here.

Do you have questions you’d like WSHU to answer in local coverage of the coronavirus? Let us know via this survey.
 

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Charles is senior reporter focusing on special projects. He has won numerous awards including an IRE award, three SPJ Public Service Awards, and a National Murrow. He was also a finalist for the Livingston Award for Young Journalists and Third Coast Director’s Choice Award.
Karen has covered state government and politics for New York State Public Radio, a network of 10 New York and Connecticut stations, since 1990. She is also a regular contributor to the statewide public television program about New York State government, New York Now. She appears on the reporter’s roundtable segment, and interviews newsmakers.
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