Gulf Times

State governors mull May 1 reopening

- Reuters

Governors of about 20 US states spared the worst of the coronaviru­s pandemic may start reopening their economies by President Donald Trump’s May 1 target date, a top US health official said yesterday, as fresh data illustrate­d the economic and human toll brought by the crisis.

Robert Redfield, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said the agency was prepared to assist those states in the process of lifting restrictio­ns aimed at controllin­g the spread of the virus.

“There are a number of states — 19, 20 states — that really have had limited impact from it. So I think we will see some states that are — the governors feel that they’re ready — we’re poised to assist them with that reopening,” Redfield said in an interview with ABC.

States and local government­s have issued “stay-athome” or “shelter-in-place” orders affecting about 94% of Americans to curb the spread of Covid-19, the respirator­y illness caused by the virus.

The restrictio­ns have battered with US economy, with mandatory business closures aimed at curbing the pathogen’s spread leaving millions of Americans unemployed.

With evidence that the outbreak is slowing in hard-hit states like New York, political leaders have engaged in an acrimoniou­s debate over when to try to reopen the economy without paving the way for a deadly second wave of infections.

Fresh government data released yesterday gave another glimpse at the economic damage.

Retail sales dropped by 8.7% in March, the government reported, the biggest decline since tracking began in 1992.

Consumer spending accounts for more than twothirds of US economic activity.

In addition, output at US factories declined by the most since 1946 as the pandemic fractured supply chains.

Economists believe the economy entered recession in March.

“The economy is almost in free fall,” said Sung Won Sohn, a business economics professor at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles.

The US death toll — already the world’s highest in the world — has surged relentless­ly.

The number of US deaths stood yesterday at 28,700, according to a Reuters tally, with more than 610,000 confirmed coronaviru­s cases.

On Tuesday, the number of US deaths rose to a singleday high.

Governor Andrew Cuomo of New York, the state considered the US epicentre of the pandemic, said 752 died there in the previous day — down slightly from the previous day but still high — even as hospitalis­ations declined.

“We need to build a bridge toward a reopening of the economy,” Cuomo told a news briefing. “We are going to a different place — a new normal.” Healthcare workers have faced unique health threats while working on the front lines trying to tackle the pandemic.

Reuters has identified more than 50 nurses, doctors and medical technician­s who have died after being diagnosed with Covid-19 or showing symptoms of it. At least 16 were in New York state. “The emergency room is like a war zone,” said Raj Aya, whose wife Madhvi Aya — a physician’s assistant in Brooklyn — was one of the healthcare workers who died in New York.

But in one sign of ebbing hospitaliz­ations, staffing agencies that have deployed thousands of healthcare workers in recent weeks to jobs in New York City and other hot spots have said some of them are no longer needed.

Demand for “travel nurses” had jumped during March and early April in New York, New Orleans and other cities.

Anthony Fauci, Trump’s top infectious diseases adviser, said the ability of states to reopen would largely depend on regional issues, including population density and other factors.

States would at a minimum need to identify and isolate coronaviru­s patients and conduct extensive contact tracing or else risk a surge in cases, he said.

“There is going to be a great deal of variabilit­y,” Fauci told NBC in an interview aired yesterday.

“It probably would be a rolling entry into it,” with some states keeping shelter-at-home restrictio­ns in place and others relaxing them.

In New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio yesterday announced a $170mn initiative to feed residents in need.

He also directed supermarke­ts and grocery stores in the most populous US city to require their customers to wear face coverings while shopping.

Muriel Bowser, the mayor of Washington, DC, extended the public health emergency for the US capital through May 15 and required masks for hotel workers and guests, people using taxis or rideshares and food sellers.

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