Cuomo says goodbye
/“The truth will come out in time, of that I am confident.”
Read More“These ten clemencies are another step on the long march towards a more fair, more just, more equitable, and more empathetic New York.”
Read More“As New York attempts to rebuild after the devastation of the COVID-19 pandemic, we cannot afford to spend $680 million a year locking people up with no benefit to public safety.”
Read More“It would be really nice to have a non-police officer witness describing what it was they saw from the sidewalk at the time of shooting.”
Read More“We are ready to bring New York City back fully on July 1.”
Read MoreWhen I first read Charlotte Bennett’s detailed account of the sexual harassment she endured from Gov. Cuomo, I didn’t feel empowered. I felt terrified.
Read More“Anybody and everybody should be able to wear whatever they want and walk their streets safely.”
Read MoreMore than 3/4 of New Yorkers arrested for low-level weed offenses were Black or Latino in 2020.
Read MoreSeldom does the association between food insecurity and the elderly population cross one’s mind on first thought.
Read MoreAt least 1,705 staff members and 1, 737 inmates have tested positive for COVID-19 in state prisons.
Read MoreBy David Brand
New York state has added Ozone Park to Queens’ yellow COVID precautionary zone after a rise in positive COVID-19 test rates over the past two weeks.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo said the increasing positive test rates in the neighborhood prompted the new designation, even as rates fell elsewhere in Queens. Cuomo on Wednesday removed school and business restrictions inside cluster zones in Central Queens and Far Rockaway.
“We are also adjusting the Queens map to add in the Ozone Park neighborhood, which has seen an uptick in cases,” he said. “So, Ozone Park becomes a yellow zone and that is what it looks like.”
Cuomo and state COVID-19 Task Force member Gareth Rhodes said the state could not point to a specific reason for the increase in positive cases in the neighborhood, except that it was located near neighborhoods already included in the state’s watch list. The existing yellow zone was redrawn to include Ozone Park, he said. There was no known super-spreader event, Rhodes said.
A large swath of the borough is now classified as a yellow “buffer” zone in the state’s three-tiered restriction system, where different colors apply to different sets of rules.
Inside red “cluster” zones, schools and non-essential businesses were forced to close for two weeks, while gatherings inside houses of worship were capped at 10 people. Inside orange “warning” zones surrounding the clusters, some nonessential businesses were forced to close and capacity in houses of worship was capped at 25 people.
In the Central Queens cluster zone, concentrated in Forest Hills and Kew Gardens, the rate is now about 2.5 percent, down from about 4.7 percent Oct. 6, Cuomo said. In the Far Rockaway cluster zone, the rate dropped from 3.7 percent to 1.8 percent.
Cuomo said COVID test positivity rates had dropped below 3 percent for 10 consecutive days inside both locations, allowing the state to loosen restrictions.
Mayor Bill de Blasio on Thursday praised efforts to drive down COVID-19 cases in Central Queens.
The state’s addition of Ozone Park to the yellow zone means the Department of Health and contract tracing corps will focus more resources in the area, de Blasio said.
“We'll get expanded outreach and testing into that area and we'll keep a close eye,” de Blasio said. “But overall, the situation in Queens we've seen some really good progress.”
The neighborhood lost a popular same-day testing site two weeks ago, the Queens Chronicle reported. Local leaders and Council candidates have called on the city and state to establish additional testing in Ozone Park.
Two weeks ago I fought to keep our #OzonePark testing center open at the library. I told @NYCHealthSystem, @NYCMayor and @NYGovCuomo that COVID would travel here and sadly I was right. We need a testing center back now. People need to have access to rapid testing.
— Felicia Singh for City Council (@FSingh_NYC) October 21, 2020
The COVID test positivity rate has dropped by nearly a third in Queens’ two cluster zones over the past week.
Read More“These clusters have to be attacked.”
Read More“My husband is a dialysis patient, a double amputee, and it’s hard to find a place that’s suitable for us and with this pandemic coming along it made it even harder.”
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