New York Daily News

COVID FIELD

City eyes Hart Island for mass burials as grim toll nears 3,000

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

New York is staying on pause.

Gov. Cuomo on Monday ordered nonessenti­al businesses and schools across New York to remain closed through the end of the month, as the coronaviru­s claimed another 599 lives in the Empire State overnight.

In his daily briefing from Albany, Cuomo said he’s extending his so-called “New York on PAUSE” executive order at least through April 29 in a drastic bid to slow the spread of the virus, meaning hundreds of thousands of nonessenti­al workers will remain unemployed for at least another 31⁄2 weeks.

“I know that’s a negative for many, many reasons. I know what it does to the economy, but as I said from day one, I am not going to choose between public health and economic activity,” Cuomo said.

The limited shutdown — which has brought the city that never sleeps to an eerie standstill — began March 22.

Cuomo’s “PAUSE” extension came as health officials reported that 599 New Yorkers died from COVID-19 between Sunday and Monday morning, bringing the state’s total death toll to 4,758 — accounting for nearly half of all fatalities in the U.S.

At least 130,689 New Yorkers have tested positive for the respirator­y virus so far, Cuomo said.

The city — which is bearing the brunt of New York’s outbreak — reported 68,776 confirmed cases as of Monday at 5 p.m.

At least 266 of the deaths recorded between Sunday and Monday evening occurred in the city, according to the Health Department, meaning 2,738 people in the five boroughs have now fallen victim to the virus.

Health officials have cauinfecti­ons tioned that the number of in the city is likely much higher than confirmed cases because many people can’t or won’t be tested.

Queens remains the city’s epicenter, with more than 23,000 confirmed cases and 876 deaths as of Monday morning.

Despite the depressing tallies, Cuomo, a proud Queens native, suggested health experts are seeing a light at the end of New York’s dark tunnel, with the daily death toll staying “effectivel­y flat” for the past two days.

“While none of this is good news, the flattening, the possible flattening of the curve is better than the increases we have seen,” Cuomo said.

The governor said the apparent plateauing is evidence that his social distancing directives are working.

“If we are plateauing, we are plateauing at a high level,” he said. “We have to continue the social distancing.”

Citing second waves of coronaviru­s in Hong Kong and parts of South Korea, Cuomo continued, “There is a real danger in getting overconfid­ent too quickly. This is an enemy that we have underestim­ated from day one and we have paid the price dearly.”

If their jobs allow it, New Yorkers can work from home under Cuomo’s “pause” orders.

Essential businesses, including grocery stores, pharmacies and hotels, will remain open, though many operate with limited hours and capacity.

While the new stay-athome orders are set to expire April 29, Cuomo could extend them again — and likely will — if the virus hasn’t receded by then.

As part of his aggressive effort to make New Yorkers stay inside, Cuomo said he was upping fines for violations of

social distancing protocols from $500 to $1,000.

“You don’t have the right to risk someone else’s life,” Cuomo said, reiteratin­g his grievance with young people seen gathering in large groups in city parks.

New York hospitals are overflowin­g with COVID-19 patients, and health care workers say they’re rapidly running out of emergency supplies like face masks and ventilator­s.

President Trump gave Cuonoon mo permission Monday afterto treat coronaviru­s patients onboard the USNS Comfort, a 1,000-bed naval hospital ship that arrived in New York last month.

“This means 1,000 additional beds staffed by federal personnel,” Cuomo tweeted after a phone call with Trump. “This will provide muchneeded relief to our overstress­ed hospital systems.”

The gargantuan floating hospital has so far only accommodat­ed noncoronav­irus patients to allow city hospitals to focus mostly on fighting the virus.

Nearly 17,000 people remain hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 diagnoses in New York, Cuomo said. At least 4,501 of them are in intensive care, he added.

Even though the hospitaliz­ation numbers are high, Cuomo said they are, like the death toll, increasing at a slower daily pace.

“Again, it would suggest an overall flattening of the curve,” he said.

With New York’s coronaviru­s apex seemingly approachin­g, health experts are trying to gauge which state could next become the country’s epicenter.

New Jersey, the secondwors­t-hit state in the nation, had nearly 38,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases as of Monday. Michigan and Louisiana are also seeing caseloads soaring by the day.

 ??  ?? Hart Island north of the Bronx (inset) could be used as temporary resting place for coronaviru­s victims as funeral homes get overwhelme­d.
Hart Island north of the Bronx (inset) could be used as temporary resting place for coronaviru­s victims as funeral homes get overwhelme­d.
 ??  ?? As coronaviru­s continued to cause misery and test health care workers to the max, Gov. Cuomo announced Monday he is extending his “New York on PAUSE” order through April 29.
As coronaviru­s continued to cause misery and test health care workers to the max, Gov. Cuomo announced Monday he is extending his “New York on PAUSE” order through April 29.
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