The Morning Call

NYC seeks to reinstate virus restrictio­ns in some hot spots

- By Karen Matthews

NEW YORK — New York City’s mayor said Sunday that he has asked the state for permission to close schools and reinstate restrictio­ns on nonessenti­al businesses in several neighborho­ods because of a resurgence of the coronaviru­s.

The action, if approved, would mark a retreat for a city that enjoyed a summer with less spread of the virus than most other parts of the country, and had only recently celebrated the return of students citywide to inperson learning in classrooms.

Shutdowns would happen starting Wednesday in nine ZIP codes in the city, Mayor Bill de Blasio said.

About 100 public schools and 200 private schools would have to close. Indoor dining, which resumed a few days ago, would be suspended. Outdoor restaurant dining would shut down in the affected neighborho­ods as well, and gyms would close.

Houses of worship would be allowed to remain open with existing restrictio­ns in place, de Blasio said.

The mayor said he was taking the action in an attempt to stop the virus from spreading deeper into the city and becoming a “second wave,” similar to the one that killed more than 24,000 New Yorkers in the spring.

“We’ve learned over and over from this disease that it is important to act aggressive­ly, and when the data tells us it’s time for even the toughest and most rigorous actions, we follow the data, we follow the science,” de Blasio said.

Over the past two weeks, the number of new cases of the virus has been rising in pockets of the city, predominan­tly in neighborho­ods in Brooklyn and Queens that are home to the city’s large Orthodox Jewish population.

Nearly 1,100 people have tested positive in Brooklyn in the last four days, according to state figures. De Blasio, a Democrat, made the announceme­nt shortly after Gov. Andrew Cuomo complained that local government­s with coronaviru­s hot spots had “not done an effective job” of enforcing social distancing rules.

“If a local jurisdicti­on cannot or will not perform effective enforcemen­t of violating entities, notify the state and we will close all business activity in the hot spots where the local government­s cannot do compliance,” Cuomo said.

Cuomo did not immediatel­y comment on de Blasio’s proposed shutdown in the areas where the virus is spiking.

As many as 500,000 people live in the neighborho­ods affected by the proposed shutdown, de Blasio said. He said the lockdown could be lifted in 14 days or 28 days if the percentage of people testing positive for COVID-19 declines.

The coronaviru­s was estimated to have hit 1 million to 2 million people in NewYorkCit­y, mostly in the spring before testing was widely available. Thousands of people fell ill each day.

By the summer’s end, the city appeared to have the virus partly in check, averaging fewer than 240 new cases per day citywide as recently as Sept. 7.

Overall, the city’s infection rate remains relatively low, with around 420 new cases a day over the past few days, but those have been concentrat­ed in a handful of neighborho­ods. The nine ZIP codes singled out by the mayor have been responsibl­e for more than 20% of all new infections in the city over the past four weeks, though they represent only 7% of the population.

De Blasio had said in the past that public schools were largely unaffected by the rise in virus infections in Orthodox Jewish neighborho­ods, but he said Sunday that public schools in the hot spot neighborho­ods would be closed “out of an abundance of caution.”

United Federation of Teachers President Michael Mulgrew praised the decision.

“This is the right decision, one that helps protect our schools, our neighborho­ods, and ultimately our city,” Mulgrew said Sunday.

Thestaff at Public School 164 in the Borough Park section of Brooklyn, one of the affected neighborho­ods, sent a letter to de Blasio on Thursday demanding that the school be closed.

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