San Diego Union-Tribune

N.Y.C. PULLING BACK AMID RISE IN VIRUS INFECTIONS

Move represents first major reversal in city’s reopening

- BY DANA RUBINSTEIN & DANIEL E. SLOTNIK

Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Sunday that he intended to “rewind” the reopening of nine neighborho­ods in New York City that have had a testing positivity rate of more than 3 percent over the last seven days.

That means the closure of nonessenti­al businesses, public and private schools and day care centers in those neighborho­ods, which are in Brooklyn and Queens. Many of them have large population­s of Orthodox Jews, and the virus has been spreading rapidly in those communitie­s in recent weeks.

The mayor said he would also put lesser restrictio­ns on 11 other neighborho­ods where the rates are rising.

In total, the mayor’s plan would affect only 20 of the 146 ZIP codes in the city. Still, the move ref lects the growing fear of a second wave of the virus and marks the first major reversal in the city’s reopening since it was hit hard by the outbreak in March.

If approved by Gov. Andrew Cuomo, the plan would go into effect Wednesday.

“Today, unfortunat­ely, is not a day for celebratio­n,” de Blasio said. “Today is a more difficult day.”

The nine ZIP codes subject to the most severe restrictio­ns include portions of Far Rockaway and Kew Gardens in Queens and Borough Park, Midwood, Gravesend, Bensonhurs­t and Sheepshead Bay in

Brooklyn.

The restrictio­ns would be in place in these neighborho­ods for two to four weeks, if not longer, depending on the success of efforts to curb the virus, the mayor said.

The city is also closely watching the 11 additional ZIP codes, which de Blasio described as a “real concern.”

They include parts of Williamsbu­rg, BedfordStu­yvesant, Fort Greene, Clinton Hill, Manhattan Beach, Bergen Beach, Kensington and Crown Heights in Brooklyn. The Queens neighborho­ods include Rego Park, Fresh Meadows, Hillcrest and Jamaica Estates.

In those neighborho­ods, the city will curtail indoor dining, which has only just begun, and close gyms and pools.

Most of the schools set to close are nonpublic schools, largely yeshivas in Orthodox Jewish neighborho­ods that have been open for weeks. About 200 private schools will close, and 100 public schools, officials said.

There are about 1,800 public schools in New York City. The new restrictio­ns come just three days after the city’s school system fully reopened. Children returned to elementary school classrooms Tuesday and to middle and high schools Thursday. Principals and teachers have been working for months to prepare for inperson learning.

The mayor emphasized that the school closures were not prompted by outbreaks in schools but came “out of an abundance of caution.”

“We have seen very little coronaviru­s activity in our schools,” he said.

Houses of worship will remain open throughout the city, even in the nine ZIP codes where the new restrictio­ns will be adopted.

De Blasio said he planned to work with the state on enforcemen­t measures. He said he was not certain about the details but that “we want the maximum education, maximum mask distributi­on, maximum enforcemen­t.”

“We’ve had 1,000 city personnel out in the key ZIP codes over the last few days in a very, very intensive enforcemen­t effort,” de Blasio said. “We are finding some places where enforcemen­t is needed, but really not that many in the scheme of things. But we will keep pounding away with that, and we will certainly work with the state in every way possible.”

Cuomo offered no immediate comment on whether he would approve de Blasio’s plan. The two have often feuded and have been at odds over how to handle the outbreak.

But as de Blasio was making his announceme­nt, Cuomo did issue a statement that criticized local officials across the state for their failure to curb the virus in hot spots.

“Local government­s have not done an effective job of enforcemen­t in these hot spot ZIP codes,” Cuomo said.

In his statement, he made no mention of whether a similar lockdown would be adopted in portions of Rockland and Orange counties, north of the city. Both have large population­s of Orthodox Jews and have seen sharply increasing infection rates in recent days.

Rubinstein and Slotnik write for The New York Times.

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