Arab Times

More hospitals sought as ‘toll mounts’ in NY

Outbreak enters critical phase

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NEW YORK, March 28, (AP): New York’s battle to keep its hospitals from being overwhelme­d by the coronaviru­s outbreak is entering a critical phase, as officials race to get hospitals built and supplies in place before medical centers become completely overwhelme­d. Gov Andrew Cuomo ordered schools closed statewide for at least two more weeks. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said he’d consider fining people who ignore social distancing rules. Meanwhile, the outbreak is taking its toll on the state’s civil servants.

Here are the latest coronaviru­s developmen­ts in New York:

Bracing for worse

Speaking Friday at a convention center being converted into a field hospital, Cuomo said he’d seek federal help to build at least four more such temporary hospitals across New York City in the weeks ahead, each with 1,000 beds.

Every one of them will be needed, he said, to handle a crush of coronaviru­s patients that may require the state to nearly triple its current number of hospital beds.

More temporary hospitals are planned in the suburbs and a Navy hospital ship is due to arrive Monday in New York City.

Likening the effort to a wartime mobilizati­on, Cuomo told New York National Guard members providing logistical support at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center that they were on a rescue mission.

“You are living a moment in history. This is going to be one the moments they write about and talk about for generation­s,” he told guard members. “So I say, my friends, that we go out there today and we kick coronaviru­s’s ass.”

There are already more than 6,000 hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients in New York, with almost 1,600 in intensive care. The state has logged a nation-high of 519 deaths, and has more than 44,000 confirmed cases.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio gave his own grim warning later Friday, saying that Sunday, April 5 will be “a decisive moment for the city” in terms of having enough medical workers, supplies and equipment. “We need to make sure that we can get to that day ready to face the week after that, and the week after that as well. And right now, we’re not there,” said de Blasio.

Social distancing fines

At a a late afternoon briefing, de Blasio said that while a majority of New Yorkers seem to be observing rules requiring them to stay at least 6 feet away from any other people while in public, he would decide this weekend whether to institute fines of up to $500 to punish scofflaws.

Penalized

“I don’t want people to be penalized in a time of economic distress ... but I need people to listen,” de Blasio said.

Warm weather has continued to bring New Yorkers to city parks in droves.

The mayor also said that while most houses of worship had cancelled public services, some continued to hold communal gatherings.

If that continues this weekend, he said, police and building department officials will tell worshipers to disperse – and if they don’t, the religious organizati­ons may be fined and their buildings shuttered.

“You’ve been warned. You need to stop services. Help people practice their faiths in different ways,” he said.

Schools to remain shut

The governor ordered schools in New York state to remain closed for another two weeks until April 15. Cuomo two weeks ago had ordered schools closed through April 1 as part of the state’s effort to slow the transmissi­on of the outbreak.

New York City schools are closed through April 20, though officials say the city closure could last the rest of the school year.

“I don’t do this joyfully, but I think that when you look at where we are, when you look at the number of cases still increasing, it only makes sense to keep the schools closed,” said Cuomo, who added he would reassess closures closer to April 15.

Public servants felled by virus

The coronaviru­s outbreak is taking its toll on New York City’s civil servants.

Two people who helped keep New York moving during the crisis, bus operator Oliver Cyrus, 61, and train conductor Peter Petrassi, 49, were killed by the virus Thursday, according to their union.

Transport Workers Union Local 100 President Tony Utano called the two deaths in one day “a terrible and incredibly sad loss.”

He called transit workers “true heroes” for continuing to work during the pandemic and he demanded that transporta­tion workers be outfitted with protective masks.

A postal worker, Rakkhon Kim, 50, died Wednesday from COVID-19-related complicati­ons, according to the National Associatio­n of Letter Carriers. Kim had delivered mail for 23 years. He worked in the Bronx and lived in Northvale, New Jersey, according to the union. The New York Police Department announced two coronaviru­s deaths.

Giacomina Barr-Brown, a civilian employee who worked in a roll call office, died Thursday night in her home. Dennis Dickson, a department janitor, died earlier from complicati­ons of the disease.

“Everyone is feeling these losses deeply,” de Blasio said Friday, as he honored the public workers.

Sick

On Friday, 4, 111 NYPD uniformed employees were on sick report, accounting for 11.4% of the department’s uniformed workforce. Currently, 442 uniformed members and 70 civilian members have tested positive for the virus.

Assemblyma­n Brian Miller, who represents several upstate counties, tested positive for the coronaviru­s, Assembly Minority Leader William Barclay said Friday. The Republican, the state’s fourth known lawmaker to have tested positive, is being hospitaliz­ed. Trump doubts depth of crisis De Blasio tangled with Trump again Friday after the Republican president expressed doubts about the depth of the crisis in the city’s hospital system and its urgent need for more breathing machines.

“When the president says the state of New York doesn’t need 30,000 ventilator­s, with all due respect to him, he’s not looking at the facts of this astronomic­al growth of this crisis,” de Blasio, a Democrat, said on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

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