Tag: NY governor Cuomo

  • Governor Cuomo announces end of Pandemic Emergency in New York State

    Governor Cuomo announces end of Pandemic Emergency in New York State

    NEW YORK (TIP): Announcing the end of pandemic emergency on June 24, Governor Cuomo said, “Today we close out the emergency chapter in the pandemic—effective today, New York’s COVID-19 State of Emergency has ended. Federal CDC guidance will remain in place, meaning if you’re unvaccinated, you should still wear a mask in public indoors. Masks will also still be required on public transit and certain other settings, like health care facilities. Fighting COVID and vaccinating New Yorkers are still our top priorities but the emergency is over”.

    Federal CDC guidelines will remain in effect, which include masks for unvaccinated individuals, as well as all riders on public transit and in certain settings, such as health care, nursing homes, correctional facilities, and homeless shelters. State and local government health departments will still be able to ensure mask rules and other health precautions are adhered to in those settings.

    Since March of 2020, a variety of actions had been taken by executive order to assist in the rapid response to the pandemic by state agencies, local governments, hospitals, and businesses by both temporarily suspending or modifying laws as well as utilizing temporary directives. Hospitals were able to add space and staffing, meetings were authorized to occur virtually, and various deadlines were extended to accommodate a changed landscape. “New York went from one of the worst infection rates to the lowest infection rate in the country, and it was all because of the efforts of New Yorkers who were smart, united and did what they needed to do throughout this entire pandemic,” Governor Cuomo said. “Now we’re starting to write a new chapter for a post-COVID New York–the state disaster emergency is ending and we can focus on reimaging, rebuilding and renewing our state. This doesn’t mean COVID is gone, we still have to get more New Yorkers vaccinated, but we are getting back on track and starting to live life once again.”

  • Cuomo bars summer school in N.Y. amid spike in coronavirus-linked illness afflicting kids

    Cuomo bars summer school in N.Y. amid spike in coronavirus-linked illness afflicting kids

    NEW YORK (TIP): Gov. Cuomo announced Thursday, May 21 that summer school isn’t happening in New York. It is “still too early”, he said, to say if students will be allowed back into their classrooms in the fall amid an uptick in cases of children developing potentially deadly inflammatory symptoms from coronavirus.

    Speaking at a press briefing in Manhattan, Cuomo reported that the State Department of Health is now investigating 157 cases of kids developing inflammatory symptoms similar to Kawasaki disease after contracting COVID-19 — a two-fold increase since last week.

    At least five children in New York have died from the terrifying symptoms, and Cuomo said there’s too many unknowns about the coronavirus-linked illness for him to feel comfortable about allowing in-person summer school to proceed.

    New York schools have been closed since mid-March, when the pandemic first thrust its fangs into the state, depriving millions of students of traditional classroom learning.

    The governor didn’t rule out keeping schools shuttered into the fall semester.

    “It’s still too early to make that determination,” he said.

    Cuomo said the state will issue guidelines to schools and colleges in mid-June so they can start developing plans for potentially reopening in the fall with social distancing in mind. Academic institutions will in turn have to submit those plans for approval at some point in July, Cuomo said.

    Cuomo said he hasn’t made up his mind on summer camps yet, though he appeared to lean toward at least keeping day camps closed, again referencing the coronavirus-caused inflammatory symptoms.

    “Should I send my children to day camp? Is it safe? Until we have this answer on this pediatric syndrome; as a parent, until I know how widespread this is, as a parent I would not send my children to day camp,” he said. “And if I won’t send my children to day camp, I wouldn’t ask anybody to send their children to day camp. It’s that simple.”

    Cuomo did not say whether sleep away camps could be an option but promised to make a decision soon.

    Though rare, the Kawasaki disease-like syndrome can be extremely dangerous, as it attacks blood vessels throughout the body and can cause lethal toxic shock in children, according to researchers.

    Cuomo said scientists are still trying to figure out if some children are more prone to the symptoms.

    “They are still exploring this,” he said.

    The summer school announcement came as New York saw some good news on the coronavirus front.

    Cuomo reported that new cases, hospitalizations and intubations were all trending downward, confirming the state’s coronavirus curve is continuing in the right direction.

    “We got over the mountain,” he said.

    Still, another 105 New Yorkers died from coronavirus overnight, bringing the state’s total death toll above 23,000. The tragic daily count has stayed effectively flat for nearly a week.

    (With inputs from Daily News)

     

  • Governor Cuomo  Favors Reopening but  insists on Wherewithal to do it:  Federal Funding and Testing

    Governor Cuomo Favors Reopening but insists on Wherewithal to do it: Federal Funding and Testing

    NEW YORK (TIP): In his Coronavirus briefing, Saturday, April 18, New York State  Governor Andrew  underlined the need for federal funding to the State  in order to reopen the State.

    Governor Cuomo  said there was a little respite from the  Coronavirus onslaught which hit the State the most in the last couple of days. It appears  the apex has been reached. Giving details, he said, that total coronavirus hospitalizations in New York area  was  16,967, the lowest in nearly two weeks; the high point was 18,825. Looking at the past three days, Cuomo said, a case could be made the state has passed the apex. On Friday, there were 1,915 new coronavirus hospitalizations: down from 2,253 Tuesday.

    There were 540 state COVID-19 deaths reported Friday, April 17,  including 36 from nursing homes. The number is down from 630 on Thursday and hit its lowest total this week. Net intubations have also gone down for a sixth straight day, decreasing by 48 from Thursday’s total.

    Cuomo said the state needs coordination and partnership from the federal government, in addition to money. Airlines and small businesses have to be funded, Cuomo said, agreeing with federal officials. He said state governments need funding, too, however.

    “When you fund a state government, you’re funding a state government to perform the functions you want us to perform, which is the reopening function,” Cuomo said at a news conference. “I get it. I’ll do it. But I need funding. When you fund a state government, you’re funding small businesses anyway. And you’re funding hospitals anyway. And you’re funding schools anyway. The Republican doctrine used to be limited government and states’ rights. I’m a good distribution mechanism to small businesses, hospitals and schools, because I know what’s going on in the state. But if you want us to reopen, we need funding.”

    Cuomo said he wants the state to reopen, but it must be done without the infection rate re-rising.

    “Everybody wants to reopen,” he said. “You don’t need to hold up a placard saying, ‘We want to reopen.’ Nobody wants to reopen more than me. Nobody wants to get the economy going more than me. Nobody wants to get on with life more than me and everybody else. We’re all in the same boat. We all the same feelings.”

    The infection rate has gone down, with NY PAUSE, social distancing and masks being responsible, Cuomo said. Testing will be key in knowing when and how fast to reopen, he said. Testing will reveal positive cases, which can then be traced to those the person who tested positive came in contact with, according to Cuomo. The people who test positive can then be isolated to prevent the spread. Thousands of people would be needed as “tracing investigators” in New York, Cuomo said.

    Over the past month, 500,000 tests were done, but Cuomo said  that’s only a fraction of what’s needed. He called for help from the federal government in regard to the testing supply chain, especially when it becomes international.

    “The more you test, the more information, the more you can reopen society,” Cuomo said.

    On Friday, the federal government sent 1,500,000 cloth masks to the state, Cuomo said, thanking them.

    Cuomo dug deeper into what it meant to systematize the testing process in the state. He noted that there are about 30 private companies in the state that manufacture a viable COVID-19 test, all of which are different and require different types of chemical “reagents” to process. These 30 companies are then selling these tests to the 301 labs/hospitals in the state, which can then begin the arduous process of testing everyone in the state. To get an idea of where the state was, Cuomo noted that he had reached out to 50 of the top labs in the state and asked them what it would take to double the testing output. “New York has already tested more people for COVID-19 than any other state or country in the world”,  he said.

    The labs all said that in order to begin doubling testing, they would need to have better access to the chemical reagents needed to complete the tests—hence the appeal Cuomo made to the federal government yesterday to secure more reagents from China. Since the federal government also regulates the 30 manufacturers of the test kits, that, Cuomo said, would also have to be eased to scale up testing, and it would also need to start funding New York State to ensure that the proper amount of testing was executed.

    Cuomo noted, with obvious dig at President Trump, when he said,  “The Republican doctrine used to be limited government and states’ rights.”

    The push for testing comes at a time when Cuomo has regularly noted a flattening of the curve in the state and has begun to map out the early stages of reopening the economy. This, of course, can’t happen just yet and is wholly contingent on getting the infection rate down further. As Cuomo has noted in the past, society at large won’t be able to return to normalcy until there’s a viable vaccine, which will likely take 12-18 months to produce. The infection rate is currently sitting at 0.9 percent, meaning that every person infected with COVID-19 infects a little less than a single person. The fear is, noted Cuomo, if businesses are reopened and large gatherings are allowed prematurely, that infection rate could skyrocket again.

    In answer to a question on people  demonstrating for reopening  in some States, Cuomo said that the emotion in the country is as high as he can recall, with the pandemic causing frustration, anxiety, fear and anger. There is no time for politics, however, Cuomo said.

    “How does this situation get worse and get worse quickly? If you politicize all that emotion. We cannot go there”, he said, in an obvious reference to Trump’s tweet calling upon  people to “liberate” their states from the lockdown.