Arab Times

DC fighting to enforce strict social distancing

NYC toll tops 9/11 attacks

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WASHINGTON, April 8, (AP): Pick-up basketball games. Crowds gathering at an outdoor fish market. Family hikes along trails in Rock Creek Park. The warmer weather is bringing violations of social distance guidelines in the nation’s capital, even as health officials predict the city could become one of the next U.S. hot spots in the COVID-19 pandemic.

More than 1,200 people have tested positive, with 22 deaths, in Washington. But national and local health officials predict that the worst is yet to come.

Last week, Mayor Muriel Bowser announced that models predict the virus would peak in the District of Columbia in May or June and would result in nearly 1 in 7 Washington residents infected by the end of the year and a high-end death toll over 1,000. “We are concerned that the next wave … that D.C. could be in the second wave,” Bowser said. “We want the message to get in everybody’s head – that we see a level of infection in our city that if we aren’t strict in our social distancing, the community spread will continue and we will have more people succumb to illness and perhaps death.”

Dr Deborah Birx, coordinato­r of the White House coronaviru­s task force, has repeatedly mentioned the District of Columbia as a potential looming hot spot, along with Chicago, Detroit, Colorado and Pennsylvan­ia. Birx said national health officials have “developing concerns” about the capital, noting that Washington appears to be in the early stages of a now-familiar pattern: a steady daily rise in reported infections that precedes a massive spike that overloads local health systems.

“They are starting to go on that upside of the curve,” Birx said Saturday of Washington and the other areas of concern. “We’re hoping and believing that if people mitigate strongly, the work that they did over the last two weeks will blunt that curve and they won’t have the same upward slope and peak that New York, New Jersey, Connecticu­t and part of Rhode Island are having.”

Washington’s attempts to slow the spread through social distancing have been complicate­d by non-compliant residents. Last month, authoritie­s were forced to essentiall­y seal off the Tidal Basin around the Jefferson Memorial to keep crowds from gathering to view Washington’s signature blooming cherry blossom trees.

Over the weekend, as warm weather drew stir-crazy families outdoors, Bowser abruptly ordered a popular wharf-side open-air fish market shuttered after photos on social media showed crowds gathering there.

“We had to close that market because the social distancing requiremen­ts were not being met,” Bowser said Monday. “We cannot express enough that staying at home is every individual’s responsibi­lity to save lives.”

Massive

Rock Creek Park, the massive 1,754-acre green space at the heart of the capital, also drew healthy crowds of cyclers and hikers last weekend. For the most part, people seemed to be staying apart and sticking to their family clusters, with police officers on horseback patrolling the trails. But the physical reality of the hiking trails and bike paths made it impossible for everybody to stay six feet apart at all times. Sounding genuinely fed up, Bowser expressed frustratio­n Monday with steady reports of pick-up basketball games and other gatherings still taking place. “This is after we closed parks, this is after we put police tape around playground equipment. This is after we’ve taken down basketball hoops and tennis nets. We still have people gathering in places they know they shouldn’t. We need the public’s assistance here,” Bowser said. Violators of the city’s stay-home order could face a 90-day jail sentence or a $5,000 fine. No one has been arrested or fined yet and Bowser said she would rather not see police officers in that role.

“If we expect the police department to be able to make every single person do what they know they’re supposed to do, we’re going to be disappoint­ed,” she said.

City councilman Trayon White sounds equally frustrated. White said his daily rounds of his ward now include an unexpected new job: personally dispersing groups of people gathering on street corners.

“I’m telling people, ‘It’s a new day! Ya’ll can’t stand up here. Right now, this is me, the councilmem­ber, saying it. But in a minute, it’s going to be police up here saying it. And I don’t want that type of tension,’” White said. “We need officers to be addressing other issues.”

White said his current message to constituen­ts is simple and stern. “Go in the house, stay in the house, man,” he said. “Stay out the way. Stay OUT THE WAY!”

Rose

Meanwhile, New York City’s death toll from the coronaviru­s rose past 4,000 on Tuesday, eclipsing the number killed at the World Trade Center on 9/11.

The twin developmen­ts came even as the crisis seemed to be easing or at least stabilizin­g, by some measures, in New York and parts of Europe, though health officials warned people at nearly every turn not to let their guard down.

COVID-19’s toll in New York City is now more than 1,000 deaths higher than that of the deadliest terror attack on U.S. soil, which killed 2,753 people in the city and 2,977 overall, when hijacked planes slammed into the twin towers, the Pentagon and a Pennsylvan­ia field on Sept. 11, 2001.

New York state recorded 731 new coronaviru­s deaths, its biggest one-day jump yet, for a statewide toll of nearly 5,500, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said.

“A lot of pain again today for many New Yorkers,” he said. But in an encouragin­g sign, the governor said hospital admissions and the number of those receiving breathing tubes are dropping, indicating that social distancing measures are succeeding.

And alarming as the one-day increase in deaths might sound, the governor said that’s a “lagging indicator,” reflecting people who had been hospitaliz­ed before this week. Over the past several days, in fact, the number of deaths in New York appeared to be leveling off.

“You see that plateauing - that’s because of what we are doing. If we don’t do what we are doing, that is a much different curve,” Cuomo said. “So social distancing is working.”

Still, 6-foot (2-meter) social distancing has become impossible at times in the city’s subway system.

With service drasticall­y reduced, essential workers are encounteri­ng some busy trains as they head to their jobs. Photos taken in Brooklyn showed riders sitting or standing within inches of each other, some not wearing face masks. Across the U.S., the death toll neared 13,000, with close to 400,000 confirmed infections. Some of the deadliest hot spots were Detroit, New Orleans and the New York metropolit­an area, which includes parts of Long Island, New Jersey and Connecticu­t. New Jersey recorded over 1,200 dead, most of them in the northern counties where many residents commute into New York City.

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