New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo ordered non-essential businesses to keep 100% of their workforce at home and put in place stringent new restrictions on New Yorkers starting Sunday as the state grapples with the worst coronavirus outbreak in the U.S.
“When I talk about the most drastic action we can take, this is the most drastic action we can take,” Cuomo said at a press conference in Albany on Friday. Cases across the state surged by 2,950 overnight to 7,102, he said. ”This is not life as usual. Accept it. Realize it and deal with it.”
Cuomo acknowledged that the restrictions will force businesses to close and people to lose their jobs.
“I understand that … We’re all in quarantine now. We’re all in various levels of quarantine and it’s hard,” he said.
New York Mayor Bill de Blasio has been pushing Cuomo to issue a shelter-in-place order for New York City, where cases skyrocketed by more than 1,000 over a matter of hours on Thursday and more than half of the state’s cases are concentrated.
Cuomo didn’t call the new restrictions a “shelter-in-place” order, although many of them mirror what’s in place in other parts of the country where officials have put such an order in place.
“It is not a shelter in place order,” Cuomo said, adding that he doesn’t want to scare residents. “Shelter in place is used currently for an active shooter or a school shooter.”
When in public, individuals must practice social distancing of at least six feet, he said. Businesses that provide essential services, like grocery stores, pharmacies and banks, must implement rules that ensure employees and customers maintain at least six feet of space between each other, according to a slide presented at the press conference. Individuals should also limit use of public transit to when absolutely necessary. Individuals will also need to limit avoid outdoor activities, avoiding ones where they come into close contact with other people.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo.
Drew Angerer | Getty Images
“Outdoor recreation is a solitary recreational excercise. It’s running. It’s hiking,” Cuomo said. “It’s not playing basketball with five other people.”
Sick people shouldn’t leave their home unless they need to go to the doctor or hospital, he said. Young people should also practice social distancing and avoid contact with vulnerable populations, he said.
“These provisions will be enforced. These are not helpful hints. This is not if you really want to be a great citizen. These are legal provisions,” Cuomo said, adding that businesses will be fined for noncompliance but individuals won’t be sanctioned.
“We’re seeing an explosion of cases here in New York City,” de Blasio said at a press conference Thursday announcing new coronavirus cases across the five boroughs, including an inmate at Rikers Island. The number of cases is surging as the state ramps up its testing capability and detects previously unknown infections. “This number is, nonetheless, very, very painful.”
On Tuesday, de Blasio told New Yorkers to prepare for a “shelter-in-place” order in the coming days to contain the fast-moving virus. Cuomo has resisted, saying Wednesday that he wouldn’t approve one, worried it will cause people to panic, thinking officials were going to shut down the bridges and tunnels.
“I spent half my day knocking down rumors that we’re going to imprison people in their homes,” he said earlier Thursday.
De Blasio said he wants to model the city’s restrictions after ones adopted by Northern California officials earlier this week. San Francisco Bay area officials ordered some 7 million residents to “shelter in place” on Monday, prohibiting people from leaving their homes, except under “limited circumstances,” according to the order.
People who venture out are expected to remain six feet apart, wash their hands, cover their coughs or sneezes and abide by a number of other restrictions. Non-essential businesses across the state, including wineries and bars, will be closed. But essential services such as grocery stores, banks, pharmacies and cannabis shops will remain open.
Residents are allowed to walk their dogs or go for a run, so long as they maintain a distance of at least six feet from anyone they don’t currently live with, San Francisco health officer Dr. Grant Colfax said at a press conference Monday.
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