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Cuomo Warns U.S. as Virus Deaths in N.Y. Region Pass 2,300: Live Updates Cuomo Warns U.S. as Virus Deaths in N.Y. Region Pass 2,300: Live Updates
(about 1 hour later)
Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said on Wednesday that 391 people in New York State died of the coronavirus since yesterday, bringing the state’s total to 1,941 and the total for New York, New Jersey and Connecticut to 2,365. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said on Wednesday that 391 people in New York State died of the coronavirus since Tuesday, bringing the state’s total to 1,941 and the total for New York, New Jersey and Connecticut to 2,381.
As the crisis has grown more dire across the country, Mr. Cuomo’s briefings, which have become a daily staple of the national news and raised his political profile, have taken on a broader purview.As the crisis has grown more dire across the country, Mr. Cuomo’s briefings, which have become a daily staple of the national news and raised his political profile, have taken on a broader purview.
On Wednesday, the governor again emphasized the regional coordination between his state, New Jersey and Connecticut, before noting that the virus was spreading more rapidly in other states, including California, Michigan and Florida.On Wednesday, the governor again emphasized the regional coordination between his state, New Jersey and Connecticut, before noting that the virus was spreading more rapidly in other states, including California, Michigan and Florida.
And he urged Americans even in states that had not yet been hit hard by the virus to take it seriously. He cited projections from a group founded by the Gates Foundation that the death toll would reach 16,000 in New York and 93,000 nationwide.And he urged Americans even in states that had not yet been hit hard by the virus to take it seriously. He cited projections from a group founded by the Gates Foundation that the death toll would reach 16,000 in New York and 93,000 nationwide.
“This is not just New York,” he said. “If you believe these numbers — 16,000 deaths in New York — that means you’re going to get tens of thousands of deaths outside of New York. “This is not just New York,” he said. “If you believe these numbers — 16,000 deaths in New York — that means you’re going to get tens of thousands of deaths outside of New York.”
“So, to the extent people watch their nightly news in Kansas and say, well, this is a New York problem, that’s not what these numbers say,” he said. “It says it’s a New York problem today. Tomorrow, it’s a Kansas problem and a Texas problem and a New Mexico problem.”
Other highlights from the governor’s morning briefing in Albany:Other highlights from the governor’s morning briefing in Albany:
Confirmed cases: 83,712, up from 75,795.Confirmed cases: 83,712, up from 75,795.
New York City cases: 47,349, up from 43,139.New York City cases: 47,349, up from 43,139.
Currently hospitalized: 12,226, up from 10,929.Currently hospitalized: 12,226, up from 10,929.
In intensive care: 3,022, up from 2,710.In intensive care: 3,022, up from 2,710.
The latest projections for the state put the peak of the outbreak at the end of this month.The latest projections for the state put the peak of the outbreak at the end of this month.
Mr. Cuomo said that his brother, Chris, who has the virus, had the fever and the chills but was doing “fine enough.” He praised Chris, a CNN anchor, for hosting his show from his basement while sick on Tuesday night and showing people what the virus looked like. And he said that he had sent his brother a book: a beginner’s guide to bass fishing. Mr. Cuomo said that his brother, Chris, who has the virus, had a fever and the chills but was doing “fine enough.” He praised Chris, a CNN anchor, for hosting his show from his basement while sick on Tuesday night and showing people what the virus looked like. And he said he had sent his brother a book: a beginner’s guide to bass fishing.
At his briefing, Mr. Cuomo expressed frustration with those who continued to ignore social- distancing guidelines in New York City.At his briefing, Mr. Cuomo expressed frustration with those who continued to ignore social- distancing guidelines in New York City.
He insisted that the city’s police officers had “to get more aggressive” in enforcing the rules. Mr. Cuomo said that he was prepared to legally require social distancing if necessary, but that it was absurd that he would even have to consider that. He insisted that the city’s police officers had “to get more aggressive” in enforcing the rules. Mr. Cuomo said that he was prepared to legally require social distancing if necessary, but that it was absurd that even had to consider that.
“How reckless and irresponsible and selfish for people not to do it on their own,” he said. “I mean what else do you have to know? What else do you have to hear? Who else has to die for you to understand you have a responsibility in this?”“How reckless and irresponsible and selfish for people not to do it on their own,” he said. “I mean what else do you have to know? What else do you have to hear? Who else has to die for you to understand you have a responsibility in this?”
As a start, the governor said, all of the city’s playgrounds would be shut down. As a start, he said, all of the city’s playgrounds would be shut down.
Mr. Cuomo said that he had spoken to Mr. de Blasio and Corey Johnson, the City Council speaker, about trying to enforce the social-distancing rules with the help of the police, but that the problem had persisted and more drastic action was necessary.Mr. Cuomo said that he had spoken to Mr. de Blasio and Corey Johnson, the City Council speaker, about trying to enforce the social-distancing rules with the help of the police, but that the problem had persisted and more drastic action was necessary.
The governor’s announcement came a day after the mayor closed 10 city’s playgrounds where people had continued to gather in crowds that violated social-distancing rules.The governor’s announcement came a day after the mayor closed 10 city’s playgrounds where people had continued to gather in crowds that violated social-distancing rules.
At around 5 p.m. that day, Sammy Frisz was pushing his giggling 22-month-old son on a swing at Mauro Park in Queens, when a city parks employees put a padlock on a nearby gate and told Mr. Frisz he had to leave through a different gate because the playground was being closed.At around 5 p.m. that day, Sammy Frisz was pushing his giggling 22-month-old son on a swing at Mauro Park in Queens, when a city parks employees put a padlock on a nearby gate and told Mr. Frisz he had to leave through a different gate because the playground was being closed.
Mr. Frisz, a municipal worker explained that a family friend who had died of the virus had already exposed Mr. Frisz, his wife and his son. They were three days into a 14-day self-quarantine.Mr. Frisz, a municipal worker explained that a family friend who had died of the virus had already exposed Mr. Frisz, his wife and his son. They were three days into a 14-day self-quarantine.
Mr. Frisz’s wife, who asked that her name not be used because of her job, said in a telephone interview that the closing of the playground would make it difficult for her to do her job.Mr. Frisz’s wife, who asked that her name not be used because of her job, said in a telephone interview that the closing of the playground would make it difficult for her to do her job.
“This is the last thing holding our sanity and our ability to keep our jobs together,” she said. “If we’re all cooped up in a little, tiny place, those of us with young children will go crazy, go bonkers, how am I supposed to work from home?”“This is the last thing holding our sanity and our ability to keep our jobs together,” she said. “If we’re all cooped up in a little, tiny place, those of us with young children will go crazy, go bonkers, how am I supposed to work from home?”
As the second month of the coronavirus outbreak begins and the nation braces for the worst of it, the virus’s toll in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut is already devastating.As the second month of the coronavirus outbreak begins and the nation braces for the worst of it, the virus’s toll in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut is already devastating.
Thirty-one days after the region recorded its first case — a Manhattan woman in her thirties who had traveled to Iran — the number of confirmed cases of the virus passed 100,000 today.Thirty-one days after the region recorded its first case — a Manhattan woman in her thirties who had traveled to Iran — the number of confirmed cases of the virus passed 100,000 today.
Deaths attributable to the virus, which have been climbing by an average of 30 percent each day for the past week, passed 2,000 with the reporting Wednesday of another 391 deaths in New York State and 91 in New Jersey. The death toll in the region stands at 1,941 in New York, 355 in New Jersey and 69 in Connecticut. Deaths attributable to the virus, which have been climbing by an average of 30 percent each day for the past week, passed 2,000 with the reporting Wednesday of another 391 deaths in New York State and 91 in New Jersey. The death toll in the region stands at 1,941 in New York, 355 in New Jersey and 85 in Connecticut.
In New York, the hardest-hit state in the country, the numbers of people hospitalized, on ventilators, testing positive, or dead of the virus have all begun to increase a little more slowly in recent days.In New York, the hardest-hit state in the country, the numbers of people hospitalized, on ventilators, testing positive, or dead of the virus have all begun to increase a little more slowly in recent days.
But they are still increasing every day, and officials expect it will be somewhere between a week and three weeks before the virus begins to ebb. But they are still increasing every day, and officials expect it will be several weeks before the virus begins to ebb.
Economic and public life in the region remain mostly shut down: schools are closed, most businesses are shuttered, traffic is scarce and ambulance sirens wail regularly. And there are no clear signs yet of when things might return to normal. Economic and public life in the region remain mostly shut down: Schools are closed, most businesses are shuttered, traffic is scarce and ambulance sirens wail regularly. And there are no clear signs yet of when things might return to normal.
“We’re all in search of the apex and the other side of the mountain,” Mr. Cuomo said on Tuesday. “But we are still headed up the mountain.”“We’re all in search of the apex and the other side of the mountain,” Mr. Cuomo said on Tuesday. “But we are still headed up the mountain.”
People in and around New York who have died of the virus include
a sociologist who walked every block of the city New Jersey’s health commissioner said on Wednesday that morgues at some hospitals were beginning to reach their capacity. The state is working on sending refrigerated trucks to some hospitals to hold the excess bodies, the commissioner, Judith Persichilli, said.
a fixture in Dizzy Gillespie’s band New Jersey reported at least 89 virus-related deaths in 24 hours, officials said, its biggest one-day increase so far.
a Holocaust survivor who saved dozens of Jewish families More than 22,000 people have tested positive for the virus, and in seven hospitals in northern New Jersey had to turn ambulances because of overcrowding.
a Staten Island school principal who ran the New York Marathon 38 times in a row “We’re beginning to feel the real stress and strain,” Ms. Persichilli said.
a judge who presided over the battles about the closing of a Brooklyn hospital Businesses are closed. Makeshift hospitals are popping up in parks. Parents are plugging into Zoom meetings as their children, sometimes a few feet away, remotely attend school.
an award-winning Off-Broadway actor Everyday life in the city has been upended by the coronavirus. To help you understand how, here is some data collected from the city’s toll-free 311 hotline:
a chef who elevated Indian cuisine More than 1,000 social distancing complaints in just two days. Hardly anyone had even heard of social distancing until a few weeks ago. On Saturday, March 28, the city’s 311 system recorded its first complaints about people failing to keep six feet from others. Two days later, daily complaints had climbed to 776.
an architect who saw buildings as a force for justice Bikes lanes are clearer. With car traffic way down, complaints about blocked bike lanes dropped from 1,259 in January to 838 in March and slowed to a trickle in recent days, sometimes fewer than 10 per day.
a longtime reporter for The New York Times Complaints about food workers jumped. In the first two months of the year, the 311 system logged 251 complaints about food workers, often that a worker was sick or touching food with their bare hands. In March, the number of such complaints jumped to 358.
and the head of a Brooklyn church who officials said was the nation’s first Roman Catholic priest claimed by the virus. More people are home and annoying their neighbors. The number of people complaining about “loud music” or a “party” at someone’s home jumped from 13,000 in February to nearly 17,000 in March. Complaints about loud televisions are also up, from 494 in February to 598 in March.
The true economic toll of all but shutting down New York City to stem the spread of the coronavirus may become clearer today, when April rent is due.
In just a month’s time, the lives of millions of New Yorkers have been turned upside down, with many losing jobs and worrying about paying their bills.
“It’s gotten to this point where I really cannot pay rent because doing so would jeopardize my ability to buy food or basically survive,” said Henry True, 24, a musician and freelancer who pays $600 a month for a bedroom in a shared apartment in Brooklyn.
There are about 5.4 million renters in the city. If a large share of them cannot make rent, landlords — especially smaller ones that operate on thin margins — will be unable to pay their own bills, property owners said.
The real estate industry is bracing for up to 40 percent of tenants to miss their April payments.
“I’m trying not to panic,” said Christopher Athineos, whose family owns nine buildings in Brooklyn. “In my lifetime and even my parents’ and grandparents’ lifetime, we have never seen anything like this.”
New York City officers shot a man early Wednesday who later told them he had tested positive for the coronavirus and wanted them to kill him, the police said.New York City officers shot a man early Wednesday who later told them he had tested positive for the coronavirus and wanted them to kill him, the police said.
The episode began around 4 a.m., when two officers answered a 911 call about a man with a knife at the corner of Zerega and Westchester Avenues in the Bronx, the police said.The episode began around 4 a.m., when two officers answered a 911 call about a man with a knife at the corner of Zerega and Westchester Avenues in the Bronx, the police said.
When the officers arrived, they encountered a man with a knife and what appeared to be a gun, the police said. The man menaced the officers and when he did not comply with their orders to drop the weapons, they shot him in the torso, the police said.When the officers arrived, they encountered a man with a knife and what appeared to be a gun, the police said. The man menaced the officers and when he did not comply with their orders to drop the weapons, they shot him in the torso, the police said.
The man, 55, was taken to Jacobi Medical Center in stable condition, the police said. He was in custody there on Wednesday, the police said.The man, 55, was taken to Jacobi Medical Center in stable condition, the police said. He was in custody there on Wednesday, the police said.
When officers interviewed the man at the hospital, he told them he had tested positive for the virus and hoped that they would kill him, Terence Monahan, the chief of department said.When officers interviewed the man at the hospital, he told them he had tested positive for the virus and hoped that they would kill him, Terence Monahan, the chief of department said.
“He said that he was looking to commit suicide by a police officer,” Chief Monahan said, adding that the man said he had learned he had the virus Tuesday night.“He said that he was looking to commit suicide by a police officer,” Chief Monahan said, adding that the man said he had learned he had the virus Tuesday night.
“He’s overweight, diabetic and he thought that he was going to die anyway,” Chief Monahan said the man told officers. “So he wanted the police officers to take his life.”“He’s overweight, diabetic and he thought that he was going to die anyway,” Chief Monahan said the man told officers. “So he wanted the police officers to take his life.”
The police have not confirmed that the man tested positive for the virus, officials said.The police have not confirmed that the man tested positive for the virus, officials said.
Coronavirus continues to spread through New York City’s homeless shelters, where it has now infected over 120 people and killed five men, city officials said Wednesday.Coronavirus continues to spread through New York City’s homeless shelters, where it has now infected over 120 people and killed five men, city officials said Wednesday.
People have tested positive in 68 different shelters. The virus has circulated most quickly in shelters for single adults, where dormitory-style quarters and shared bathrooms leave little room for distancing.People have tested positive in 68 different shelters. The virus has circulated most quickly in shelters for single adults, where dormitory-style quarters and shared bathrooms leave little room for distancing.
The city has set up four locations to isolate sick people and those exposed to them. As of Tuesday, 190 people were at those locations and a total of 38 people were in the hospital. Another 13 people living on the street or in unstable housing have tested positive. The city has set up four locations to isolate sick people and those who have been exposed to them. As of Tuesday, 190 people were at those locations and 38 people were in the hospital. Another 13 living on the street or in unstable housing had tested positive.
Businesses are closed. Makeshift hospitals are popping up in parks. Parents are plugging into Zoom meetings as their children, sometimes a few feet away, remotely attend school. For people in the New York area who have respirator-type N95 masks or other medical-grade surgical masks at home, there are several ways to get them to people who really need them right now: local medical workers
Everyday life in the city has been upended by the coronavirus. To help you understand how, here is some data collected from the city’s toll-free 311 hotline: Contact state agencies. In New York, the state Health Department has an online form that breaks down donated goods by category, including medical supplies. New Jersey residents are encouraged to use the state’s official donation portal. Connecticut residents with potential donations can also complete an online form.
More than 1,000 social distancing complaints in just two days. Try nonprofit groups. The Afya Foundation in Yonkers, N.Y., for example, is seeking donations of masks of all kinds.
Hardly anyone had even heard of social distancing until a few weeks ago. On Saturday, March 28, the city’s 311 system recorded its first complaints about people failing to keep six feet from others. Two days later, daily complaints had climbed to 776. Donate directly. If you know a medical worker personally, you can make direct contact to drop off medical masks. Priority should be given to emergency room doctors and other medical professionals who are likely to make contact with people who have been infected.
Bikes lanes are clearer. Use a website. At least two websites, NYC Mask Crusaders and Mask Match, are geared toward connecting New York residents with medical professionals who need crucial supplies.
With car traffic way down, complaints about blocked bike lanes dropped from 1,259 in January to 838 in March and slowed to a trickle in recent days, sometimes fewer than 10 per day.
Complaints about food workers jumped.
In the first two months of the year, the 311 system logged 251 complaints about food workers, often that a worker was sick or touching food with their bare hands. In March, the number of such complaints jumped to 358.
More people are home and annoying their neighbors.
The number of people complaining about “loud music” or a “party” at someone’s home jumped from 13,000 in February to nearly 17,000 in March. Complaints about loud televisions are also up, from 494 in February to 598 in March.
As The New York Times follows the spread of the coronavirus across New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, we need your help. We want to talk to doctors, nurses, lab technicians, respiratory therapists, emergency services workers, nursing home managers — anyone who can share what they are seeing in the region’s hospitals and other health care centers. Even if you haven’t seen anything yet, we want to connect now so we can stay in touch in the future.As The New York Times follows the spread of the coronavirus across New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, we need your help. We want to talk to doctors, nurses, lab technicians, respiratory therapists, emergency services workers, nursing home managers — anyone who can share what they are seeing in the region’s hospitals and other health care centers. Even if you haven’t seen anything yet, we want to connect now so we can stay in touch in the future.
A reporter or editor may contact you. Your information will not be published without your consent.A reporter or editor may contact you. Your information will not be published without your consent.
Reporting was contributed by Anne Barnard, Jonah Engel Bromwich, Luis Ferré-Sadurní, Michael Gold, Matthew Haag, Sarah Mervosh, Andy Newman, Azi Paybarah, Katie Rogers, Edgar Sandoval, Nate Schweber, Liam Stack, Matt Stevens, Nikita Stewart and Tracey Tully. Reporting was contributed by Anne Barnard, Jonah Engel Bromwich, Johnny Diaz, Luis Ferré-Sadurní, Michael Gold, Matthew Haag, Sarah Mervosh, Andy Newman, Azi Paybarah, Katie Rogers, Edgar Sandoval, Nate Schweber, Liam Stack, Matt Stevens, Nikita Stewart, Derrick Bryson Taylor and Tracey Tully.