The first case of COVID-19 in the U.S. state of New York during the pandemic was confirmed on March 1, 2020,[2] and the state quickly became an epicenter of the pandemic, with a record 12,274 new cases reported on April 4 and approximately 29,000 more deaths reported for the month of April than the same month in 2019.[7] By April 10, New York had more confirmed cases than any country outside the US.[8]As of August11,2023[update], the state has reported 131.3 million tests,[3] with 6,722,301 cumulative cases, and 79,960 deaths.[9]
New York had the highest number of confirmed cases of any state from the start of U.S. outbreak until July 22, 2020, when it was first surpassed by California and later by Florida and Texas.[10][11] Approximately half of the state's reported cases have been in New York City,[3] where around 40 percent of the state's population lives.
Despite the high number of reported cases in March and April, by May 7, New York had reduced the rate of increase of new cases to less than 1 percent per day, and since June 6 to less than 0.25 percent per day. Unlike many other states, New York did not see a spike or "second wave" in the daily new case rate during the summer months.[12][13] On June 17, Governor Andrew Cuomo announced that New York had the lowest infection rate in the United States.[14] In late September, New York began to see an uptick in cases, with over 1,000 new cases reported in a single day for the first time since early June on September 26.[15]
Government response to the pandemic in New York began with a full lockdown from March 2020 to April 2020, followed by a four-phase reopening plan by region from April 2020 to July 2020. Additional modifications to the plan were imposed in July as the state learned more about the pandemic and due to political pressure. In October 2020, a micro-cluster strategy was announced which shuts down areas of the state to varying degrees by ZIP code when cases increase.
As of September8,2022[update], New York has administered 41,044,869 COVID-19 vaccine doses, and has fully vaccinated 15,265,493 people, equivalent to 78 percent of the population.[19]
Origins
Genetic analysis confirmed that most cases of the virus had mutations indicating a European origin, meaning travelers flying to New York City from Europe brought the virus.[1] Americans visiting Italy in late February and returning to New York on March 1 were not asked by customs if they had spent time in Italy, even though the State Department had urged Americans not to travel to Italy on February 29 (the same day Italy reported 1,100 COVID cases).[20] According to statistical models, New York City already had 600 COVID-19 cases in mid-February, and as many as 10,000 cases by March 1.[21]
March 1, 2020, saw the first confirmed case of COVID-19 in New York State, a 39-year-old female health care worker who lived in Manhattan,[2] who had returned from Iran on February 25 with no symptoms at the time. She went into home isolation with her husband.[22]
On March 3, a second case was confirmed, a lawyer in his 50s who lived in New Rochelle, Westchester County, immediately north of New York City, and worked in Midtown Manhattan at a law firm within One Grand Central Place.[23] He had traveled to Miami in February, but had not visited areas known to have widespread transmission of the coronavirus. Two of his four children had recently returned from Israel. After first feeling ill on February 22, he was admitted to a hospital in Westchester on February 27, diagnosed with pneumonia, and released from isolation after testing negative for the flu.[24][25] Instances of panic buying in New York were reported after his case was confirmed.[26]
On March 4, the number of cases in New York State increased to 11 as nine people linked to the lawyer tested positive, including his wife, a son, a daughter, a neighbor, and a friend and his family.[27]
On March 6, eleven new cases were reported, bringing the state caseload to 33.[29] All the new cases were tied to the first community transmission case, the lawyer.[30] At the end of the day, an additional 11 new cases were reported by the governor, bringing the total caseload to 44, with 8 of the new cases in Westchester County, and 3 in Nassau County on Long Island.[31] Also on March 6, an article appeared in the New York Post stating that while Mayor de Blasio assigned responsibility for the lack of N95 masks and other personal protective equipment to the federal government, the city never ordered the supplies until that date.[32]
On March 7, GovernorAndrew Cuomo declared a state of emergency in New York after 89 cases had been confirmed in the state, 70 of them in Westchester County, 12 in New York City and 7 elsewhere.[33]
On March 8, the state reported 16 new confirmed cases and a total of 106 cases statewide.[34] New York City issued new commuter guidelines amid the current outbreak, asking sick individuals to stay off public transit, encouraging citizens to avoid densely packed buses, subways, or trains.[35]
On March 9, Mayor de Blasio announced that there were 16 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in New York City.[36] On March 10, Governor Cuomo announced a containment zone in the city of New Rochelle from March 12 to 25.[37]
On March 11, Cuomo announced that the City University of New York and State University of New York schools would be closed for the following week, from March 12 to 19. These college systems would move most classes to an online-based system starting March 19, and continuing through the rest of the spring semester. Dormitories remained open for students "who cannot return home for hardship reasons".[38] Also on March 11, a man in Monroe County tested positive, making it the first county in Western New York to have a COVID-19 case.[39] Officials said he flew into JFK from Italy, traveled on a Greyhound bus from Manhattan to Rochester, and arrived locally the morning of March 10. The bus continued on to Buffalo and Toronto.[40]
On March 13, Herkimer County saw its first confirmed case but declined to disclose the patient's location. The patient later was revealed to have been from the Mohawk/Ilion area, just south of Herkimer, the county seat.[43]
On March 14, the first two fatalities in the state occurred. An 82-year-old woman in Brooklyn with pre-existing emphysema died in the hospital.[44] A 65-year-old person with other significant health problems who had not previously been tested for COVID-19 died at their home in Suffern, Rockland County.[45] It was also announced that three people in Erie County tested positive for COVID-19.[46]Orange County, Dutchess County and Ulster County closed down all their schools.[47]
On March 15, the third fatality in the state was announced. A 79-year-old woman with underlying health issues died, who had been admitted to a New York City hospital.[48]
On March 16, Clinton County reported its first case, at CVPH Medical Center in Plattsburgh. No further information has been revealed about the patient.[49] Confirmed cases increased by 4,000 between March 22 and 23, which brought the total number of confirmed cases statewide to nearly 21,000.[50] 12,305 of these were in New York City.[51]
On March 24, Cuomo said, "The apex is higher than we thought and the apex is sooner than we thought." He warned there was not enough assistance from the federal government and that the state had 25,000 cases and at least 210 deaths.[52] 211 NYPD officers and civilian employees have tested positive for COVID-19. In total, 2,774 NYPD employees, 7.6 percent of the workforce, were sick.[53] There were approximately 4,000 positive cases in Westchester County by March 24,[54] and more than 15,000 confirmed cases by April 9.[55]
On March 26, 2020, Cuomo announced that the state would allow two patients to share one ventilator using a technique he called "splitting," where a second set of tubes would be added to the ventilator. COVID-19 patients need ventilators for between 11 and 21 days, while under normal circumstances patients usually only require them for three to four days. He also said the state was considering converting anesthesia machines to use as ventilators.[56] Between March 25 and March 26, there were 100 deaths statewide, with the number of hospitalized patients increasing by 40 percent in New York City.[57]
Researchers at Cornell University created an interactive map to visualize the spread of COVID-19 in New York State.[58]
On January 4, 2021, a confirmed case of a new, more contagious SARS-CoV-2 variant from the United Kingdom was reported in New York. The patient was a man in his sixties from Saratoga County in upstate New York, who had no travel history to the United Kingdom.[59] As of March 2, 2021, 286 sequences in the B.1.1.7 lineage have been detected in New York.[60]
On July 22, 2021, 31 out of 550 campers at sleep-away Camp Pontiac in upstate New York tested positive. All were under the age of 12, making them too young to receive a COVID-19 vaccine in the United States.[61]
After trying to purchase 200,000 N95 masks on February 7, 2020, the Office of Emergency Management learned that vendors were out of stock. Emergency provisions of masks and hand sanitizers did not arrive until early March. One medical supply vendor with standing city contracts said that the initial requests for protective gear from the Department of Citywide Administrative Services (DCAS) were bogged down by inefficient bureaucratic delays. One vendor said, "We'd send them a list of products we can deliver within 24, 48 hours," but on average it took 72 hours for the agency to place an order. He added "the city just moves so slow" when there was very high demand coming from hospitals and the private sector. According to the contractor, eight out of 10 supply orders could not be filled because DCAS did not pay on time, which a spokeswoman for New York City denied. The office of the comptroller approved 12 contracts with a total value of $150 million before the mayor's office took over the process on March 16. Mayor de Blasio said that the city might run out of supplies by April if the federal government did not send 3 million N95 masks, 50 million surgical masks, 15,000 ventilators, and 45 million surgical gowns, gloves, and face shields.[62]
One EMS worker expressed frustration at being asked to wear the less-effective surgical masks.[63] The police union filed a complaint on March 13 due to NYPD officers not being given masks and other protective gear. A spokeswoman called the Police Benevolent Association's complaint "empty rhetoric".[64]
New York gave a $69 million contract to a Silicon Valley engineer to provide 1,000 ventilators. The ventilators were never delivered. As of May 5, New York was seeking a refund. The engineer's name had been supplied by federal officials, and they had received it from volunteers in the office of Jared Kushner, senior advisor to President Donald Trump. According to the New York Times, it appears the engineer had not been vetted by anyone.[65]
Paramedic shortages
On March 28, 2020, The New York Times reported that the city's 911 emergency response system was "overwhelmed" due to the large number of coronavirus patients needing transport to the hospital. Dispatchers received more than 7,000 calls on March 26, a record since the September 11 attacks. Emergency workers had to decide which cases to prioritize, and some patients were being left at home without medical care. In addition, paramedics lacked sufficient protective gear.[66]
Testing
The private corporations responsible for testing had a limited testing capacity, and reached a bottleneck which made it increasingly difficult to conduct more tests per day. Backlogs for test results continued to increase in multiple states such as California, where it can take weeks to receive test results.[67]
The FDA approved New York state to authorize the state's 28 public and private labs to begin manual, semi-automated and automated testing for novel coronavirus, or COVID-19. The approval allowed the state to dramatically increase testing capacity to thousands of tests per day. The approval also extended to the Roche high-volume platform for testing. New York State's Wadsworth Lab developed a new, less intrusive test for COVID-19. The new test was done through a saliva sample and a self-administered short nasal swab in the presence of a healthcare professional. Additionally, health care professionals could self-administer the test without another health care professional present.[68]
All gatherings of less than 500 people ordered to cut capacity by 50%. All gatherings of more than 500 people ordered to cancel.[citation needed]
March 12, 2020
All SUNY campuses ordered to close within a week, and then shift to online for the remainder of the semester.[citation needed]
March 15, 2020
All New York City schools ordered to close until April 20.[citation needed]
March 16, 2020
Governor Cuomo orders the closure of Westchester, Nassau, and Suffolk County schools for at least two weeks. Cuomo coordinates with his counterparts in New Jersey and Connecticut to formulate uniform policies for shutdowns.[70]
March 18, 2020
Governor Cuomo signs executive order, mandating schools statewide close for at least two weeks until April 1st and pivot to remote instruction. The 180-day instructional requirement is waived.[citation needed]
March 20, 2020
State-wide stay-at-home order declared, effective 8:00 PM March 22. All non-essential businesses ordered to close. All non-essential gatherings canceled/postponed. 90-day moratorium issued for any residential or commercial evictions. [70]
March 25, 2020
Advisory issued ordering nursing homes to admit patients who test positive for the coronavirus.[71] This order was revoked on May 10, 2020.[72]
March 27, 2020
All schools statewide ordered to remain closed until April 15.[citation needed]
March 28, 2020
All non-essential construction sites ordered to shut down.[citation needed]
April 6, 2020
Statewide stay-at-home order and school closures extended to April 29.[citation needed]
April 9, 2020
List of businesses deemed essential expanded.[citation needed]
April 15, 2020
All individuals are ordered to wear face masks/coverings in public places where social distancing is not possible.[citation needed]
April 16, 2020
Statewide stay-at-home order and school closures extended to May 15.[citation needed]
May 1, 2020
All schools and universities ordered to remain closed for the remainder of the academic year.[citation needed]
May 7, 2020
Statewide four-phase reopening plan is first announced.[citation needed]
May 10, 2020
The March 25 advisory which ordered nursing homes to admit patients who test positive for the coronavirus is revoked.[citation needed]
May 14, 2020
Statewide state of emergency extended to June 13.[citation needed]
May 15, 2020
Phase 1 of reopening allowed for counties that met qualifications. Five counties met qualifications and began reopening on this date.[citation needed]
May 15, 2020
Drive-in theaters, landscaping/gardening businesses allowed to reopen state-wide (regardless of Phase 1 qualifications).[citation needed]
May 23, 2020
Gatherings of up to ten people allowed as long as social distancing is practiced.[citation needed]
June 8, 2020
New York City meets conditions for Phase 1, allowing the reopening of construction, manufacturing, agriculture, forestry, fishing, and select retail businesses that can offer curbside pickup.[citation needed]
June 15, 2020
Four-phase reopening plan is modified to allow non-essential gatherings of 25 people upon entry of Phase 3, and 50 people upon entry of Phase 4.[citation needed]
June 22, 2020
New York City meets conditions for Phase 2, allowing the reopening of outdoor dining at restaurants, hair salons and barber shops, offices, real estate firms, in-store retail, vehicle sales, retail rental, repair services, cleaning services, and commercial building management businesses.[citation needed]
July 6, 2020
New York City meets conditions for Phase 3, with the exception of indoor dining. Governor Cuomo announces casinos and movie theaters are to remain closed statewide as the state assesses the facts for a safe-reopening.[citation needed]
July 10, 2020
Malls allowed to open at 25% capacity for regions in Phase 4, with all patrons required to wear masks.[citation needed]
July 16, 2020
New restrictions on bars/restaurants only allowing alcohol to be served only to people ordering food.[citation needed]
August 7, 2020
Schools allowed to open in-person in the fall if certain conditions are met.[citation needed]
August 19, 2020
Ban on ticketed music events at bars and restaurants.[citation needed]
October 1, 2020
Exposure notification apps are added to notify users of potential exposure.[citation needed]
October 1, 2020
The previous ban on ticketed events at bars and restaurants is ruled unconstitutional.[citation needed]
October 6, 2020
Micro-cluster strategy is introduced, with the first micro-clusters being parts of Brooklyn and Queens.[citation needed]
November 12, 2020
Bars, gyms, and any other business with a liquor license must close by 10 p.m. (restaurants as well, except for curbside pickup). Household gatherings limited to ten people.[citation needed]
November 25, 2020
Previous restrictions on capacity through the micro-cluster strategy for places of worship is ruled unconstitutional.[citation needed]
December 8, 2020
Hospital bed capacity statewide is demanded to be upgraded by 25 percent.[citation needed]
February 10, 2021
Large capacity areas reopen at 10% capacity, effective February 24, with a negative PCR test within 72 hours or full COVID-19 vaccination status required to attend.[citation needed]
May 17, 2021
NY State follows CDC guidance on masks for fully vaccinated people, effective May 19.[citation needed]
June 13, 2021
All capacity restrictions lifted due to 70% of NYers getting at least one shot of the COVID-19 vaccine.[citation needed]
Gov. Hochul and the New York State Department of Health institute a universal mask mandate for all public and private schools for students, staff, and faculty in response to the emerging Delta variant.[citation needed]
Gov. Hochul announces a mask mandate for all indoor public places unless they implement a vaccine requirement, effective December 13.[74]
December 20, 2021
Gov. Hochul announced the Comprehensive Winter Surge Plan, which includes streamlined school testing regulations, new test sites, mask and home test distribution, and $65 million to compensate county governments for vaccination efforts and enforcing the mask-or-vaccine mandate.[75]
December 31, 2021
Gov. Hochul announces "Winter Surge Plan 2.0", which includes a requirement for SUNY and CUNY students to be vaccinated and boosted by January 15 in order to return to campus, and an extension of the mask or vaccine mandate to February 1.[76]
January 24, 2022
State Supreme Court Judge Thomas Rademaker rules the mask mandate for schools and public places unconstitutional under the state constitution, citing the Governor nor State Health Department had the legal parameters to implement such mandate without consent from the state Legislature.[77]
January 25, 2022
New York Attorney General Letitia James files a motion on behalf on the State Health Department, requesting the mask mandate remain in place for schools while the courts deliberated. Later on, a State Appellate Court Judge granted a stay in the state's lawsuit over the mask mandate, thereby once again re-affirming the mask requirement in schools.[77]
January 28, 2022
The mask-or-vaccine mandate for businesses and venues is extended to February 10. The school mask mandate remained in place indefinitely.[citation needed]
February 9, 2022
Gov. Hochul announces the lifting of the mask or vaccinate mandate, effective February 10. Masks were still required in schools, healthcare settings, nursing homes, correctional facilities, and public transportation.[78][79]
February 28, 2022
Gov. Hochul announces the rescinding of the universal mask mandate for schools, effective March 2. Individual school districts, towns, and localities can use their discretion to determine masking protocols based on their specific needs.[citation needed]
April 19, 2022
Gov. Hochul keeps the mask mandate for public transportation and transit hubs in effect despite a judge lifting the federal mandate.[citation needed]
September 7, 2022
Gov. Hochul announces the lifting of the mask mandate on public transportation and transit hubs, effective immediately.[80]
February 12, 2023
The New York State Department of Health allowed the mask mandate for healthcare facilities such as hospitals and nursing homes to expire, ending the final remaining statewide mask mandate in New York. Acting health commissioner James McDonald underscored that the pandemic was not yet over but was in a "transition" period, with masking requirements now left up to healthcare providers.[81]
Vaccination
On January 8, 2021, Governor Cuomo published an initial list of New Yorkers eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Groups 1A and 1B included essential workers, seniors aged 75 and above or living in nursing homes, and certain people with disabilities.[82] On February 14, 2021, the vaccination program was expanded to include other individuals with comorbidities for COVID-19.[83]
Starting March 10, 2021, people aged 60 and above could get vaccinated in New York State.[84]
Starting March 23, 2021, people aged 50 and above could get vaccinated in New York State.[85]
Starting March 30, 2021, people aged 30 and above could get vaccinated in New York State.[86]
Starting April 6, 2021, people aged 16 and above could get vaccinated in New York State.[86]
Starting May 13, 2021, people aged 12 and above could get vaccinated in New York State.[87]
As of September 27, 2021, healthcare workers in New York State were required to have had at least their first dose of the vaccine.[88]
Vaccinations in NY State Per Week (1st Vaccination) and Time Required from Start of Vaccination to Reach Herd Immunity[89]
Mass vaccination sites were opened in the state in provide faster and more equitable results.[92][93]
At the end of February 2021 the access to vaccination appointment slots remained complicated in NYS.[94][95] The governor of NYS and the mayor of NYC decided to let separate groups (e.g., Walgreens, medical groups, state or city vaccination campuses) manage their own vaccination schedules. This creates opacity in identifying potential available slots and applying in time to these spots. Phone lines to organize appointments were often not reachable. But Huge Ma,[96] a New York software developer, created an application that facilitates taking appointments for vaccines in NYS, turbovax.info,[97] which connected to multiple sites offering vaccination appointments.[98]
By the end of February 2021 there was a noticeable acceleration in the number of people getting vaccinated. In addition, the new J&J vaccine was approved on February 28, 2021. Its distribution was accompanied by longer overnight opening hours at Yankee Stadium, Javits Center and the NY State Fair Grounds.[99]
On December 20, 2021, Governor Hochul announced New York State would provide $65 million to county governments in part to finance booster efforts.[100]
The New York State Democratic presidential primary—along with special elections in the 27th congressional district; the 50th senate district; and the 12th, 31st, and 136th assembly districts—were originally scheduled for April 28. On March 13, 2020, Senator Skoufis proposed legislation to move these elections to June 23. The intent was to mitigate the spread of the coronavirus.[101][102] On March 28, the New York State Board of Elections and Governor Cuomo postponed the elections to June 23.[103][104][105][106] Subsequently, the Democratic presidential primary was canceled altogether, and most of the special elections were postponed until the general election in November.
On April 27, 2020, the Board of Elections changed its decision, and cancelled the Democratic presidential primary outright, by removing several candidates who suspended their campaigns from the ballot.[107][108][109][110] The decision was first criticized by supporters of presidential candidate, Senator Bernie Sanders, who hoped to secure additional convention delegates, which would allow greater influence in the Democratic Party's platform. Other critics of the decision cited reduced voter turn out for down-ballot races, which unfairly benefits incumbent candidates. New York State Democratic Party Chair, Jay Jacobs, stated "our motivation right now is to avoid what happened in Wisconsin, where we in this situation are holding a primary that asks poll workers, many of them senior citizens, to risk their health for no particular purpose."[111] Despite this move 42 of 62 New York counties, roughly 68% of counties in the New York State, would remain open for voting due to Congressional and State elections. At the time New York was the only state to cancel its presidential primary.[112][113][114]
The decision was overturned on May 5 by Federal District Court Judge Analisa Torres in New York's Southern District, when presidential candidate Andrew Yang filed suit against the Board of Elections, asserting that the decision violated the 1st and 14th Amendments to the United States Constitution. Judge Torres stated "...the Democratic Commissioners' April 27 Resolution removing Yang, Sanders, and eight other Democratic presidential candidates from the ballot deprived them of associational rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution."[115][116][117]
An appeal was filed by the Board of Elections with the US Court of Appeals, Second Circuit. On May 19, it was ruled that the presidential primary could proceed as planned. The Board of Elections Co-chair, Douglas Kellner, said the Board would not pursue further appeals.[118][119]
Absentee voting
On March 22, 2020, Attorney General Leticia James called for automatic absentee voting in the New York Democratic presidential primary.[120] Cuomo later announced that he would investigate if his recently expanded executive powers would allow him to expand absentee ballot access.[121] On April 9, by executive order of the Governor, all New York State residents were granted the right to apply for an absentee ballot using the state's online absentee ballot application in order to facilitate safe voting in the primary elections. As stated in the order, all voters would be required to "check the box for 'Temporary illness or physical disability' with no requirement for in-person signature or appearance to be able to access an absentee ballot."[122] In an effort to ease barriers to access, Cuomo announced on April 24 that postage paid absentee ballot applications would be mailed to all registered voters in the State. Voters can still apply for a ballot online, or opt to vote in person.[122][123]
Filings for independent nominations to petitions were postponed beginning March 31, 2020.[124] On April 25 special elections were cancelled for the 50th senate district, and the 12th, 31st and 136th assembly districts, as well as the QueensBorough President and New York City Council District 37. These vacancies were filled in the November General Election. The 27th Congressional district special election was not cancelled.[122]
Effect on communities
Lack of enforcement of self-quarantine policies
Self-quarantines for persons who tested positive or were symptomatic were not enforced due to a lack of resources. Several New York City area nurses expressed concerns that patients were not complying with self-quarantine guidelines, due to financial necessity or fear of losing their jobs. A New York State Nurses Association board member expressed concern that low-income patients who share rooms with other individuals may not be able to effectively self-isolate at their residences.[125]
Implementation in Hasidic communities
Implementing social distancing was difficult in some communities dominated by Hasidic Jews. On March 19, 2020, the Orange County village of Kiryas Joel, home to 25,000 Satmar Hasidim, closed all 100 of its synagogues, as well as schools and mikvot, despite the centrality of religious observance in the community. It was estimated that 25–28 percent of its residents had tested positive, including the community's 73-year-old spiritual leader, Grand Rebbe Aaron Teitelbaum.[126][127] On March 27, the county reported that Kiryas Joel, within the town of Palm Tree, had 234 confirmed cases, the most of any municipality in the county.[128]
Some reports suggested that the Hasidic community was generally slow to implement measures designed to slow the spread of the virus. This reportedly led to one antisemitic incident. On March 23, 2020, a car dealership near Kiryas Joel refused to service a resident's car, telling him he had the virus.[129]
An Orthodox Jewish physician, Vladimir Zelenko, who saw patients at his offices in both Kiryas Joel and Monsey, another predominantly Hasidic community in nearby Rockland County, claimed that the real infection rate in Kiryas Joel was much higher. This was disputed by local authorities. Zelenko, who had to self-isolate since he was missing a lung, said in daily YouTube videos that his office treated 500 patients (mostly in Kiryas Joel) for COVID-19, using the combination of hydroxychloroquine, azithromycin, and zinc sulfate, which in some trials yielded positive results in reducing symptoms. Zelenko claimed that 90 percent of the Hasidic community would become infected; the county's health commissioner and the village's emergency services department disputed that, pointing out that it was based on nine positive results out of 14 samples.[129]
By April 9, Palm Tree had reported 428 cases, maintaining its lead among Orange County's municipalities, a lead it lost a week later.[130] Leaders of the surrounding towns and villages repeated an earlier call by county executive Steve Neuhaus for the town to be declared a containment zone as the area of New Rochelle where a cluster had been identified a month earlier had been, a request denied at that time by Cuomo since the stay-at-home order for the entire state was more restrictive. The Orthodox Jewish Public Affairs Council had responded to such pressure by calling on local leadership to "stop scapegoating Jews of KJ when the problem is clearly widespread, and worse, everywhere in [the] county."[131]
On October 12, Hasidic activist and City Council candidate Heshy Tischler was arrested for inciting a riot and unlawful imprisonment. Hundreds marched through the neighborhood of Borough Park, burning masks, chanting "Jewish Lives Matter" and attacking passersby.[132]
Police and crime
At the beginning of March 2020, prior to the confirmation of the first case of COVID-19, and the onset of the coronavirus pandemic in New York City, a 20 percent spike in crime for the first two months of 2020 was reported.[133] After movement in the city became restricted, New York City Police CommissionerDermot Shea stated that the pandemic had curtailed crime.[134] At the end of March, Shea said that crime had decreased sharply during the epidemic (other than car theft, which increased markedly), though there was concern that domestic violence was not being reported.[135][136] As of April 8, 2,103 uniformed members and 373 civilian members had tested positive for the virus while 13 had died.[137]
In early April, the state's Division of Criminal Justice Services reported that crime had dropped considerably since late February, both in the city and state compared to the same period the year before. In the city, combined felony and misdemeanor arrests were down 43 percent, with the rest of the state recording a 69 percent drop. Cuomo praised the drop as a result of social distancing, since it helped keep hospitals and first responders free to deal with the pandemic.[138]
Tensions over city residents relocating to rural areas
Some residents of New York City and its inner suburbs who own, or can afford to rent, property in rural areas upstate or on eastern Long Island aroused local resentment for doing so during the pandemic. Steve McLaughlin, executive of Rensselaer County, east of Albany, asked Cuomo to issue an order banning all non-essential travel upstate from the city, after city residents booked all available local lodging. Seven of 51 cases the county had as of April 2 were city residents, and the county feared it did not have sufficient healthcare infrastructure to handle a large outbreak; McLaughlin issued an order requiring any recent arrivals from the city to quarantine themselves for 14 days, during which law enforcement would check on them regularly.[139]
Similarly, Greene County, in the Catskills just south of Albany, posted on its website a letter asking people to refrain from traveling there, especially from New York City or Westchester. "There is no hospital in Greene County," wrote the chairman of the county legislature. "This limits our ability to serve a large number of people requiring higher levels of care for COVID-19 patients and other illnesses." The legislatures of neighboring Delaware and Sullivan counties made similar requests.[140]
In the Hamptons, on the eastern end of Long Island's South Fork, a longtime summer destination for city residents, rental rates quadrupled as the population nearly doubled. While many year-round residents were aware that the towns' economy depended on seasonal residents, they believed their resources were stretched to the limit.[139]
New York renters and homeowners
Cuomo initially announced a state moratorium for both residential and commercial evictions on March 20, 2020. This moratorium was an attempt to prevent evictions during the height of the COVID-19 public health emergency.[141] He then signed the Tenant Safe Harbor Act, which had passed the New York State Senate and New York State Assembly on May 27, into law on June 30.[142] The Tenant Safe Harbor Act gave an additional layer of protection to tenants experiencing financial hardship during the public health emergency, as it prevented courts from ever evicting on the basis of non-payment that accrued or came due during the COVID-19 period.[142] Previously, a tenant who was unable to pay rent could be evicted on the basis of non-payment as soon as the moratorium ended.[142] On September 28, Cuomo announced the Tenant Safe Harbor Act would be extended and expanded through January 1, 2021.[141]
In addition to the Tenant Safe Harbor Act, Cuomo signed the COVID-19 Emergency Eviction and Foreclosure Prevention Act of 2020 into effect on December 28.[143] This piece of legislation further safeguards New York renters and homeowners and ensures they can remain in their homes.[144] The Act suspends residential eviction and residential foreclosure proceedings until May 1, 2021, and allows renters and homeowners to submit a declaration of hardship.[144] The Act also prevents credit discrimination, and negative credit reporting due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[143]
On March 17, four members of the Brooklyn Nets, including Kevin Durant, were confirmed positive for COVID-19.[154]
A little over a month later, NYSPSHSAA announced that Sections 8 and 11, which cover all of Long Island's high schools, had voted to cancel all spring high school and middle school sports seasons. "It was not an easy [decision] to make," said Section 11 executive director Tom Combs, "however, in what the world is experiencing at this time, it is the most reasonable and prudent decision to make." The other nine sections of the state, in areas which in some cases were not experiencing the pandemic so severely, had not made decisions yet and were still planning for the possibility of a short spring season at the end of May and in early June. Championships for any spring sports, were they to be held, would likely have to be moved to other locations since they had been scheduled to be played on Long Island;[155] on April 27, they were canceled.[156]
At the beginning of May, when Cuomo announced that the remainder of the school year in the state was canceled, all remaining contingency plans for spring high school sports statewide were canceled as well.[157]
In mid-May, Cuomo announced that horse racing statewide and auto races at Watkins Glen International in Schuyler County may resume, with no spectators allowed, at the beginning of June.[158] The NASCAR race weekend scheduled for Watkins Glen International in August was cancelled due to New York's 14-day quarantine requirement for out-of-state travelers coming from states with a high rate of COVID-19 cases; this includes North Carolina and Florida, where many drivers and teams in NASCAR are based. The race weekend at Watkins Glen International was replaced by the road course at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida.[159]
On June 20, Cuomo announced that the Yankees and the Mets baseball teams would move from conducting spring training in Florida to New York. The Yankees would be at Yankee Stadium and the Mets at Citi Field. Cuomo added that, "[...] we've determined it's possible for the Yankees and the Mets to safely conduct spring training in the state this year and are thrilled to begin reopening America's national pastime right here in New York."[160]
On July 24, Governor Cuomo virtually officiated the start of the Mets home opener at Citi Stadium against the Atlanta Braves with no fans in attendance.[161]
On July 31, the Yankees held their home opener game at Yankee Stadium against the Boston Red Sox with no fans in attendance.[162][163]
On August 31, the 2020 US Open (tennis) kicked off with various safety precautions and void of spectators due to COVID-19, for the first time in the tournament's history.[164]
Impact on outdoor recreation
The ban on large gatherings meant that the annual "First Cast" ceremony at the Junction Pool, a popular fly fishing spot, in the Sullivan County hamlet of Roscoe, marking the April 1 opening of trout season, could not be held. The season still opened and the state's Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) encouraged anglers to take to the state's streams as long as they continued to practice social distancing. Many stores in Roscoe that catered to them were nevertheless closed and limited to filling orders online.[165] Anglers in Central New York reported that day that they were able to easily maintain social distancing while in the waters of Ninemile Creek, a practice necessary to the sport in any event since it prevented them from getting their lines tangled with each other. They appreciated the opportunity to get outside on a day with good weather for fishing and forget the pandemic, and some told the Syracuse Post-Standard they had good catches as well.[166]
DEC announced on April 7 that the state's spring wild turkey hunting season in May, and the youth turkey weekend at the end of April, were still going on. It advised hunters, in addition to the usual hunting safety practices, to continue social distancing while hunting and take other measures, such as buying supplies online and hunting close to home. Hunters were further advised to share blinds with other hunters only if they lived in the same residence, and to hunt alone where possible.[167]
Park closures and use restrictions
On April 7, 2020, Rockland and Sullivan counties closed their parks for two weeks. Residents had been making heavy use of them during the lockdown, making it difficult to enforce social distancing.[169][170] A week later the Palisades Interstate Park Commission (PIPC) closed Nyack Beach and Rockland Lakestate parks in Rockland County; local and county government officials had urged the move since the parks had grown crowded with visitors on recent warm days after the county and its towns closed their own parks. "While this is a tough call it is the right thing to do short term," said county executive Ed Day, who said the decision would be reviewed in two weeks.[171]
On April 9, Cuomo removed golf courses, boat launches and marinas from the list of essential businesses allowed to remain open, forcing all courses in the state of New York to close until at least April 29.[172] The move was a result of New Jersey and Pennsylvania having ordered courses to close, resulting in crowding at New York's courses near borders with those states. On April 18, Empire State Development modified that order to allow courses to open as long as no employees such as caddies were on the course, meaning golfers must carry their own bags and cannot use carts;[173] three weeks later that order was again modified to allow the use of carts as a reasonable accommodation for disabled golfers, per the Americans with Disabilities Act.[174]
The Rockland County park closures were supplemented April 24 by the PIPC's closure of all roads through Bear Mountain and Harriman state parks, where the Anthony Wayne Recreation Area was serving as a testing site, save Seven Lakes Drive, and exits that led to those roads from Palisades Interstate Parkway, in not only Rockland but neighboring Orange County. Trail shelters were also closed, although backpackers were still allowed to set up camp within 300ft (91m) of the shelters. Permitholders were still allowed to boat on the parks' lakes; sales of new permits were suspended through May 7.[175]
In Ulster County, parking lots at Minnewaska State Park Preserve in the Shawangunks were limited to 50 percent of capacity to prevent overcrowding. All recreational activities within the park other than foot travel and motorless bicycling were prohibited, including climbing and bouldering. Restrooms within the park were closed as well.[176]
In the Catskill Mountains, DEC announced April 5 it was closing the trail and viewing platforms at Kaaterskill Falls in Greene County, which also attract many hikers to a small space.[178] All fire towers on state land in the Catskill Park were closed.[179] DEC also suspended overnight camping at easily accessible and popular locations around the state, and stopped issuing permits for backcountry camping by groups larger than 10, or for more than three days.[180]
New York City's Department of Environmental Protection, which operates the reservoirs of the city's water supply system, announced that recreational boating season on its four Catskill reservoirs, which normally begins May 1, would be postponed to May 23. Fishing from rowboats and the shoreline was still permitted.[181]
Statistics
Initially, under Governor Cuomo, New York counted only those COVID-19 deaths that occurred in hospitals, nursing homes, and adult care facilities. This excluded people who died at home or in other locations. Following Cuomo's resignation, beginning on August 24, 2021, New York began using the death certificate data provided to the CDC, which includes deaths in any location within the state. This increased New York's death toll by nearly 12,000; the newly totaled number of deaths up to that point was 55,395.[182]
Following a USA Today article in early April suggesting the states could release demographic breakdowns of victims, New York published information on the age of those who had died of COVID-19. Nearly two-thirds of the dead were over 60 years old. It also included a breakdown by county, information that in some cases differed with that released by the individual county health departments.[186] Later data showed that 61 percent of the dead were men, that 86 percent had underlying health conditions such as hypertension and diabetes that are known to increase the possibility that COVID-19 will be fatal,[187] and that African American and Latino patients in the state outside of New York City accounted for a greater share of the deaths from the disease than their share of the overall population (data from New York City was not available at the time).[188] Demographics of COVID-19 fatalities continue to be updated on the state's COVID-19 tracker websiteArchived May 10, 2020, at the Wayback Machine .
Graphs
Note: As the New York State Department of Health is not reporting data in compliance with CDC recommendations,[189] the below charts use only data validated by Johns Hopkins University.[190]
Daily cases
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org.
Daily deaths
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org.
Note: Per NYDOH, the spike for June 30 in the above chart is due to a comprehensive accounting of current and retrospective data, provided by nursing homes and adult care facilities. These data capture COVID-19 confirmed and COVID-19 presumed deaths within these facilities. These data do not reflect COVID-19 confirmed or COVID-19 presumed positive deaths that occurred outside of the facility. This number includes retrospective data from reporting that dates back to March 1, 2020.[191]
Total cases
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org.
Total deaths
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org.
Andrew Mark Cuomo is an American politician, lawyer, and former government official who served as the 56th governor of New York from 2011 to 2021. A member of the Democratic Party and son of former governor Mario Cuomo, Cuomo previously served as the attorney general of New York from 2007 to 2010.
The COVID-19 pandemic in California began earlier than in some other parts of the United States. Ten of the first 20 confirmed COVID-19 infections in the United States were detected in California, and the first infection was confirmed on January 26, 2020. All of the early confirmed cases were persons who had recently travelled to China, as testing was restricted to this group, but there were some other people infected by that point. A state of emergency was declared in the state on March 4, 2020. A mandatory statewide stay-at-home order was issued on March 19, 2020; it was ended on January 25, 2021. On April 6, 2021, the state announced plans to fully reopen the economy by June 15, 2021.
The COVID-19 pandemic in Massachusetts was part of a pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in the U.S. state of Massachusetts. The first confirmed case was reported on February 1, 2020, and the number of cases began increasing rapidly on March 5. Governor Charlie Baker declared a state of emergency on March 10. By March 12, more than a hundred people had tested positive for the virus. Massachusetts experienced a first wave of COVID-19 that peaked in late April 2020, with almost 4,000 people hospitalized with the disease, and a rolling seven-day average of 2,300 new confirmed cases and 175 confirmed deaths a day. A second wave began in the autumn of the same year and peaked in January 2021, seeing higher daily case numbers but fewer deaths and hospitalizations than the first wave. There was a smaller third spike of increased cases and hospitalizations in March and April 2021, which resulted in significantly fewer deaths than the first two waves. A fourth wave began in July and August 2021. Another wave occurred in the winter of 2021 to 2022, coinciding with the emergence of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in the state, and exceeding the peak number of cases in any previous wave. As of January 13, 2022, Massachusetts was experiencing a rolling average of 13,314 new confirmed cases and 43 confirmed deaths per day.
The COVID-19 pandemic reached Colorado on March 5, 2020, when the state's first two cases were confirmed. Many of the early COVID-19 cases in Colorado occurred in mountain resort towns such as Crested Butte, Aspen, and Vail, apparently brought in, and sometimes taken home, by international ski tourists.
On March 1, 2020, the U.S. state of Florida officially reported its first two COVID-19 cases in Manatee and Hillsborough counties. There is evidence, however, that community spread of COVID-19 first began in Florida much earlier, perhaps as early as the first week of January, with as many as 171 people in Florida who had shown symptoms now identified with COVID-19, prior to receiving confirmation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. By March 11, the CDC saw evidence to conclude that community spread of the virus had occurred within the state.
The first confirmed case of the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. state of Connecticut was confirmed on March 8, although there had previously been multiple people suspected of having COVID-19, all of which eventually tested negative. As of January 19, 2022, there were 599,028 confirmed cases, 68,202 suspected cases, and 9,683 COVID-associated deaths in the state.
The COVID-19 pandemic in Hawaii affected all aspects of life in the state, demolishing its economy, closing its schools and straining its healthcare system, even though it experienced far less spread than other US states.
The COVID-19 pandemic was confirmed to have reached the U.S. state of Montana on March 14, 2020. As of June 4, 2021, the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services (MDPHHS) has reported 112,260 positive cases and 1,632 deaths in the state.
The COVID-19 pandemic reached the U.S. state of New Jersey with the first confirmed case occurring in Bergen County on March 2, 2020, and testing positive on March 4. As of January 11, 2022, 1.63 million cases were confirmed in the state, incurring 26,795 deaths.
The COVID-19 pandemic was confirmed to have reached the U.S. state of North Carolina on March 3, 2020.
The COVID-19 pandemic was confirmed to have reached the U.S. state of Tennessee on March 5, 2020. As of June 5, 2022, there are 2,023,815 confirmed cases, 26,103 deaths, and 12,825,885 reported tests.
The first case relating to the COVID-19 pandemic in Idaho was confirmed on March 13, 2020, when a Boise woman tested positive. As of February 15, 2023, there have been 517,540 confirmed cases and 5,389 deaths within Idaho, while 975,583 people have been fully vaccinated.
The COVID-19 pandemic in Minnesota is part of an ongoing pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in the state of Minnesota. The first confirmed case was reported on March 6, 2020. Governor Tim Walz declared a state of emergency on March 13.
The U.S. state of West Virginia reported its first confirmed case relating to the COVID-19 pandemic on March 17, 2020, becoming the last state to do so. The patient had shown symptoms for several days prior. On March 29, 2020, the state reported its first COVID-19 death.
The first case of the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City was confirmed on March 1, 2020, though later research showed that the novel coronavirus had been circulating in New York City since January, with cases of community transmission confirmed as early as February. By March 29, over 30,000 cases were confirmed, and New York City had become the worst-affected area in the United States. There were over 2,000 deaths by April 6; at that stage, the city had more confirmed coronavirus cases than China, the UK, or Iran. Bodies of the deceased were picked up from their homes by the US Army, National Guard, and Air National Guard.
The following is a timeline of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States during 2020.
The following is a timeline of the COVID-19 pandemic in Massachusetts.
The government of Texas's initial response to the COVID-19 pandemic in the state consisted of a decentralized system that was mostly reliant on local policies. As the pandemic progressed in Texas and throughout the rest of the country, the Texas government closed down several businesses and parks, and it eventually imposed a statewide stay-at-home order in late May. Then, between May and June 2020, the state government initiated a phased reopening, which was viewed as controversial. The reopening was phased back in June and July 2020 following a new surge of COVID-19 cases in the state. In March 2021, as COVID-19 vaccines began to be administered throughout the U.S., the Texas government reopened the state again.
The government of New York state initially responded to the COVID-19 pandemic with a stay-at-home order in March 2020. As the pandemic progressed in New York state and throughout the rest of the country, the state government, following recommendations issued by the U.S. government regarding state and local government responses, began imposing social distancing measures and workplace hazard controls.
The following is a timeline of the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City.
↑ B.1.1.7 Lineage Report. Alaa Abdel Latif, Karthik Gangavarapu, Emily Haag, Nate Matteson, Julia L. Mullen, Ginger Tsueng, Mark Zeller, Chunlei Wu, Andrew I. Su, Laura D. Hughes, Kristian G. Andersen, and the Center for Viral Systems Biology. outbreak.info. Accessed March 2, 2021.
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