New York Daily News

Just a matter of time before indoor dining is nixed: mayor

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND

Indoor dining will end and gyms will be forced to close within a matter of weeks, Mayor de Blasio predicted Thursday, a day after he ordered schools closed indefinite­ly due to a surge in coronaviru­s cases.

“It’s not if, it’s when,” he told reporters at a Thursday press briefing. “We’re talking a week or two before we’re in that orange zone status. I’m sorry to say that, but that’s the blunt truth.”

De Blasio based his forecast on COVID-19 measures that continue to climb and on conversati­ons with Gov. Cuomo about state metrics used to designate areas as yellow, orange or red zones based on infection rate.

Assigning an orange status to the city would trigger the closure of indoor dining at restaurant­s and bars and gyms — all of which have struggled financiall­y during the pandemic. State COVID rules dictate the orange status be assigned if a city’s positivity rate, averaged over seven days, hits 3% for more than 10 days in a row.

The city and state keep separate measures of coronaviru­s statistics, which has caused confusion. The city’s testing data is based on when

COVID tests were taken, while the state relies on the date of results. The closure of city schools, which began Thursday, is based on the city data.

Key city COVID measures continued to climb just a day after de Blasio made the controvers­ial decision to shutter schools.

The daily number of people testing positive for the virus averaged out over seven days hit 1,255 on Thursday — more than double the city’s acceptabil­ity threshold of 550 and up from the 1,212 cases reported the day before. The metric the city relies on to determine whether to close schools also climbed slightly, with the COVID positivity rate climbing from 3.00% to 3.01%.

Since announcing school closures, de Blasio has offered few specifics about the city’s plan to reopen them. Ramping up testing will be central to the effort to strengthen standards, but it is not entirely clear whether the numbers that now trigger closures will remain the same.

De Blasio seemed to suggest in an interview on 1010 WINS that he is open to basing closures on individual school positivity rates rather than the citywide numbers now in place

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