The Day

24-hour subway service returning to NYC

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— New York City's subway will begin rolling all night again and capacity restrictio­ns for most types of businesses will end statewide in mid-May as COVID-19 infection rates continues to decline, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Monday.

City subway service will return to 24-hour operation on May 17 after being closed for cleaning during overnight hours since the early days of the coronaviru­s pandemic last year, the Democratic governor said.

Capacity restrictio­ns on businesses — including restaurant­s, offices, beauty salons, gyms — will be lifted in New York and its neighborin­g states of New Jersey and Connecticu­t on May 19, Cuomo said.

Businesses in New York will still be required to operate in a way that guarantees that unvaccinat­ed people can keep 6 feet of social distancing space, even after the occupancy limits go away, the governor said.

New York City's subways, famous for all-night operation, were shut down between 1 to 5 a.m. on April 30, 2020, so trains and stations could be disinfecte­d. The change was also intended to make it easier to remove homeless people from trains where many had been spending the night. The overnight closure was scaled back to 2 to 4 a.m. in February.

Cuomo's announceme­nt came the day after Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer called for the resumption of around-the-clock subway service.

“The city that never sleeps is slowly — but surely — living up to its name again and waking up from the COVID-19 pandemic, but so should the subway system, and ASAP,” Schumer, a New York Democrat, said at a news conference Sunday.

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