The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Visitors now allowed at state hospitals

NYPD boss says ‘cut smartly’ as defund police drumbeat grows

- By The Associated Press

ALBANY, N.Y. » New York hospitals can now allow visitors at their discretion, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Tuesday.

Hospitals must follow state guidelines, which include timelimits on visits and requiring visitors to wear protective gear, Cuomo said. Visitors also will be subject to symptom and temperatur­e checks.

“Obviously we need to be careful,” the governor said.

Cuomo pointed to signs that the coronaviru­s is no longer spreading at an overwhelmi­ng pace in New York, which saw a peak of over 700 deaths a day in mid-April of people who tested positive for COVID-19.

Cuomo said 25 individual­s who tested positive for COVID-19 died Monday in hospitals and nursing homes.

The number of hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients continued to decline to roughly 1,500 Monday, and fewer than 2% of people who are getting tested for COVID-19 each day are testing positive.

“You want to talk about congratula­tions and something to celebrate, that is something to celebrate,” Cuomo said.

The governor announced the U.S. Open will be played in Queens from Aug. 31 to Sept. 13, but without fans in attendance.

He said the Capitol Region is entering the third phase of reopening Wednesday.

Still, the governor cautioned that a slightly higher percentage of New Yorkers are testing positive for COVID-19 antibodies in Long Island, New York City and some parts of upstate New York.

Cuomo was comparing a sample of antibody tests completed by May 1 to the latest survey of 12,000 individual­s as of June 13. Overall, about 13.4% of New Yorkers have now tested positive for antibodies, compared to 12.3% as of May 1.

“These are numbers that local communitie­s should pay heed to,” Cuomo said. “In New York City, it’s not good to see the number going up but it’s manageable.”

As chants of “defund the police” thunder at protests in the wake of George Floyd’s death, New York City’s police commission­er has found himself trying to avoid deep cuts to what has long been among the world’s best-funded law enforcemen­t agencies.

Over the last three months, the coronaviru­s crisis has dealt an estimated $9.5 billion blow to New York City’s budget, leading some elected officials to peer closely at police department funding.

That scrutiny only intensifie­d as pandemic lockdowns gave way to protests spurred by Floyd’s May 25 death in Minneapoli­s, with demonstrat­ions in New York marred by looting and violent clashes between officers and demonstrat­ors.

Last Friday, city council leaders joined the city’s elected fiscal watchdog and police reform advocates in calling for $1 billion in cuts to the nearly $6 billion police budget. Among the proposals: slashing overtime, trimming the number of officers from about 36,000 through attrition, and investing some of the savings in social services and communitie­s impacted by police misconduct.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Police Commission­er Dermot Shea acknowledg­ed the need for belt-tightening — but he cautioned against cuts that might compromise public safety.

“I think everyone has to cut. I think we’re going to be forced to do difficult things. We certainly get that,” Shea told the AP. “What concerns me is a moment in time and some rash judgments stepping in and taking the place of some well thought out conversati­ons about how to cut smartly.”

Shea said he is open to giving up some of the ancillary functions the NYPD has taken on over the years, such as school safety and traffic enforcemen­t, which together cost about $500 million, but he balked at proposals to reduce the headcount of uniformed officers and eliminate new recruiting classes at the police academy.

The police department’s budget has ballooned from about $3 billion in 2000 to nearly $5.7 billion in the current fiscal year.

Some of that increase has come from taking over policing functions from other agencies. In the mid1990s, the department absorbed the city’s then-separate housing and transit police department­s. In 1998 it took over school safety functions from the Education Department.

The Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks led to increased spending on special NYPD units, including counterter­rorism and intelligen­ce.

“It’s important to remember that these things were built up for a reason,” Shea said. “You take a look at our budget, it now encompasse­s many things that historical­ly were not under the purview of the police department.”

Shea, 51, has worked for the NYPD for nearly three decades, beginning as a patrol officer in the Bronx in 1991. He was later a precinct commander, ran the department’s statistica­l analysis system and led the detective squad before being sworn in as police commission­er in December.

As he grapples with the department’s books, Shea is also navigating the force through a series of major reforms.

On Monday, Shea said he was disbanding the department’s plaincloth­es anti-crime units, which had long been criticized for aggressive tactics. On Tuesday, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced the police department would be required to make body-camera video public within 30 days of an incident in which a weapon is fired.

Last week, Shea found himself fending off rumors that he was resigning over the department’s response to the unrest. Shea went on local television to deny the rumors. He told the AP: “I wouldn’t turn my back on this agency nor the people of New York City.”

He’s also dealing with what police unions claim is a morale crisis among officers, who are facing criticism like never before in their careers.

Shea suspended several officers without pay for acting violently toward protesters — including one officer hit with criminal charges last week for shoving a woman to the ground. Shea said the incidents, some of which were caught on video, pained him in part because they sullied the reputation of other officers who were out there doing the right thing.

“We are held to a higher standard,” Shea said. “It is my job specifical­ly to have a culture in this job where that is not tolerated.”

But Shea said he worries the recent turmoil will lead to a wave of retirement­s and that there won’t be new officers to fill the ranks. The police department canceled its April academy class because of the pandemic and the city council has floated the idea of axing the July class, too.

“It’s a pretty tough time to be in law enforcemen­t right now,” Shea said. “You can leave your house one day with the best of intentions, and you could wind up going to jail. And these are good, hardworkin­g people and that is always a part of law enforcemen­t. Every cop recognizes it, but it seems like those odds have tilted recently and that’s not lost on the membership.”

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