New York Daily News

KNOCK IT OFF!

GOV: I’LL HALT REOPENING OVER SIDEWALK PARTIES

- BY ELLEN MOYNIHAN AND SHANT SHAHRIGIAN

Stir-crazy party animals may ruin the city’s planned reopening for the rest of us.

Areas including Manhattan and the Hamptons where businesses have been widely reported for violating social-distancing rules could see their reopening plans “reversed,” Gov. Cuomo threatened Sunday, even as Saturday marked the lowest number of new COVID-19 deaths in the state since the peak of the nightmare in April.

The state has received a whopping 25,000 complaints about establishm­ents that are serving customers and allowing drinking on the streets, he said, noting Manhattan and the Hamptons are “leading areas in the state with violations.”

“I am warning today in a nice way: consequenc­es of your actions,” Cuomo said at an Albany news conference, noting businesses can lose their liquor licenses for breaking social-distancing rules. “We have 25,000 complaints statewide. I’m not going to turn a blind eye to them.”

The threat came as social media have been flooded with photos of revelers congregati­ng in Greenwich Village, the Upper East Side and Hell’s Kitchen — areas that typically draw diners and drinkers. The images depict city residents letting off steam after nearly three months of lockdown orders in which bars and restaurant­s have been prohibited from serving customers on their premises.

Huge crowds were seen drinking outside bars at St. Marks Place through the weekend, with many people shunning masks and social-distancing rules tossed out the window. The throngs were so big, they spilled out into the street, forcing cars to drive by at slow speeds.

“It was pandemoniu­m,” resident Derek Karpel, 40, told the Daily News. “There are some people that are just stupid.”

But by Sunday afternoon, there were just a few small groups hanging out in the area, including Ellen Jordan, 38, and four masked friends who were drinking cocktails from plastic bags.

“You have to be careful if you’re having a million people on the street and they’re not actually wearing masks,” she observed. “If someone is getting superdrunk, the first thing that happens is the mask comes off.”

Cuomo voiced high dudgeon at the collapse of social-distancing guidelines.

“They are rampant and there’s not enough enforcemen­t,” he said of the violations. “I am not going to allow situations to exist that we know have a high likelihood of causing an increase in the spread of the virus.”

He chided both businesses and local leaders, saying, “Local government, do your job,” repeating the phrase for emphasis.

“If we have to close, then people are going to hold you accountabl­e,” the governor added.

Ongoing protests with thousands of New Yorkers have also drawn concern from authoritie­s, though they have shied away from accusing them of potentiall­y spreading the virus.

Mayor de Blasio has given vague answers when asked about social-distancing violations at bars and restaurant­s.

Asked about crowds outside establishm­ents in Hell’s Kitchen as protests roiled the city, Hizzoner told a reporter on June 2, “I’m a little confused [about] what you think was happening Saturday night in New York City.

“We will go back to enforcing on bars and restaurant­s as we were many times, very effectivel­y,” he added. “We’ll go back to that.”

Asked for comment on the

governor’s admonition, a City Hall spokeswoma­n suggested the city has things under control.

“We had social-distancing ambassador­s out all weekend distributi­ng masks and encouragin­g people to disperse after making their purchases,” she said in a statement. “These businesses are allowed to be open per the governor’s guidelines, and we don’t believe imprisonin­g people or taking away their livelihood is the answer.”

The governor’s reproaches came as Phase 1 of reopening — allowing constructi­on, manufactur­ing, wholesale trade and some retail curbside pickup — was underway in the Big Apple. De Blasio recently said Phase 2, featuring outdoor dining, could begin as soon as next month.

As the city reopens — and appears to calm down following massive, heated demonstrat­ions over the death of Minnesota man George Floyd — many New Yorkers have complained of police officers ignoring Health Department guidelines to wear masks in public.

Cuomo criticized such cops, saying, “It’s a very bad signal when you see police people who are not wearing a mask and not following the law.”

His press conference was not all doom and gloom.

There were 23 coronaviru­s deaths on Saturday, down from a high of 799 on April 8, according to state Health Department data, which excludes “probable” COVID-19 fatalities tracked by the city.

“This is really great news,” Cuomo said. “We breathe a deep sigh of relief today because of all the numbers we’ve been talking about, that’s the one number we can’t change.”

But an East Village resident voiced fear over the large crowds coming to his neighborho­od.

“These are the people who are spreading COVID,” said Nick Bankovic, 46. “If I were a cop and I saw this, I would go into the establishm­ent, go up to the manager and say we’re shutting you down for 30 days.”

 ?? OFFICE OF GOVERNOR ANDREW M. CUOMO ??
OFFICE OF GOVERNOR ANDREW M. CUOMO
 ??  ?? Cops check on crowd drinking outside a bar in Hell’s Kitchen, but Gov. Cuomo said Sunday he’d received 25,000 complaints and that not enough is being done to break up such sessions.
Cops check on crowd drinking outside a bar in Hell’s Kitchen, but Gov. Cuomo said Sunday he’d received 25,000 complaints and that not enough is being done to break up such sessions.
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 ?? MARK LENNIHAN/AP ??
MARK LENNIHAN/AP

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