The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Cuomo looks to ‘turn the page’ as suburbs reopen

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NEW YORK » The suburbs north of New York City eased outbreak restrictio­ns and the trading floor of the New York Stock exchange reopened for the first time in two months as the state focused more intently on restarting its economy.

After weeks of declining deaths and hospitaliz­ations, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said it was time to focus on relaunchin­g New York City’s moribund economy.

The Democratic governor laid out a plan that included accelerati­ng major infrastruc­ture projects and tackling transmissi­on of the virus in the hardest-hit neighborho­ods after ringing open the Stock Exchange.

“We’re going to turn the page on COVID-19, and we’re going to start focusing on reopening,” he said during a briefing at the exchange.

The mid-Hudson Valley, including the city’s northern suburbs, on Tuesday became the latest region of New York state to begin slowly phasing in economic activity. Long Island was expected to follow Wednesday, which would leave New York City as the only region awaiting the start of reopening.

Cuomo said the state will direct outbreak-fighting resources to 10 city ZIP codes that account for many of the new hospitaliz­ations. Those cases are coming from mostly lower-income and predominan­tly-minority neighborho­ods, he said.

Citing the need for infrastruc­ture spending to boost the economy, Cuomo announced accelerate­d time lines for improvemen­t projects at the city’s Penn Station and LaGuardia Airport. He said the state would need help from the federal government for other projects and that he planned to travel Wednesday to Washington and meet with President Donald Trump.

Statewide hospitaliz­ation rates continue to decline with about 200 new cases a day. The number of deaths reported Monday dropped to 73, the lowest number since late March.

“In this absurd new reality, that is good news,” Cuomo said.

The largely suburban counties north of New York City entered the first phase of the state’s four-part reopening process Tuesday after meeting criteria for reopening including declining deaths and hospitaliz­ations linked to the coronaviru­s.

The region now easing restrictio­ns includes Westcheste­r County, the area where New York’s first major outbreak of the virus happened in early March.

There have been more than 1,300 deaths so far in Westcheste­r County and nearly 500 in the nearby Rockland County. Both of those suburban counties have had more fatalities per capita than Manhattan, where restrictio­ns are expected to stay in place at least into June.

New York City has hired 1,700 contact tracers who will monitor people infected with the virus and reach out to their close contacts, Mayor Bill de Blasio said Tuesday.

“This is a huge new piece of the puzzle,” de Blasio said at his daily coronaviru­s briefing. “This is when we go on the offensive and we put in place something that really changes our whole fight against the coronaviru­s.”

Under Cuomo’s guidelines, the city would need 2,500 contact tracers to enter the first phase of reopening its economy. De Blasio said he expects to meet that target in the first two weeks of June.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A worker wears protective equipment at The Loop fashion and shoe store as businesses slowly begin to reopen after social distancing restrictio­ns shuttered storefront­s nationwide Tuesday in Yonkers, N.Y.
JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A worker wears protective equipment at The Loop fashion and shoe store as businesses slowly begin to reopen after social distancing restrictio­ns shuttered storefront­s nationwide Tuesday in Yonkers, N.Y.

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