New York Daily News

Gov: Eateries to stay open in bug hotspots

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND AND CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

Restaurant­s and other nonessenti­al businesses in New York City’s coronaviru­s hotspots will not immediatel­y be forced to shut down under a plan of attack outlined Monday by Gov. Cuomo.

Cuomo rejected part of Mayor de Blasio’s weekend proposal to shut down businesses in nine Brooklyn and Queens neighborho­ods by Wednesday, saying instead that state police would help step up issuing tickets for failing to wear masks in those areas and that a closure plan for businesses had to be refined.

“Too many local government­s are not doing enforcemen­t,” Cuomo said in a notso-subtle jab at de Blasio.

The governor went on to suggest that de Blasio is at fault for not stepping up enforcemen­t sooner.

“You have to ask the mayor,” he said when asked why he believes de Blasio has failed on enforcemen­t.

De Blasio shot back that the city has relied on “consistent” enforcemen­t and cited closures to yeshivas and stores as two examples.

“There’s been all sorts of enforcemen­t actions taken,” he said

On Monday, Cuomo also stepped up the timeline for closing schools in those neighborho­ods by a day. Both public and private schools will now close on Tuesday. De Blasio’s plan proposed Wednesday for that to happen.

Most of the targeted zip codes are in parts of southern Brooklyn with large Orthodox Jewish population­s, including Borough Park, Midwood, Gravesend, Bensonhurs­t and Sheepshead Bay.

The other zip codes are in Queens’ Far Rockaway and Kew Gardens neighborho­ods.

Rockland, Orange and Nassau counties are seeing COVID-19 spikes as well.

De Blasio said Monday the city would still prepare to shut down businesses in the Brooklyn and Queens hot spots by Wednesday, pending state approval of that part of his plan.

“Until there is a different plan, we are preparing to implement this plan,” de Blasio said. “The state is reviewing that right now and might come back with modificati­ons, but we’re going to be ready to move as early as Wednesday morning.”

That doesn’t seem likely based on what the governor said minutes earlier at a separate press conference.

Instead of shutting down non-essential businesses down right, Cuomo said the state will take over enforcemen­t of social distancing and face mask requiremen­ts in the nine hotspots.

The NYPD will still be responsibl­e for providing personnel to carry out the enforcemen­t and ticket violators, Cuomo said. The state will simply take over the reins for overseeing the effort.

The governor didn’t outright rule out shutting down businesses, though.

Instead, he said health authoritie­s will need to develop better data criteria for which businesses should potentiall­y shut down, as opposed to just looking at zip codes. Cuomo did not offer a timeline for when he’ll make an announceme­nt on potential business closures.

De Blasio said he “fully” expects “the state to act quickly,” but added that he and Cuomo are having an “ongoing conversati­on” on the matter.

 ??  ?? Restaurant in Borough Park, Brooklyn, can stay open for now.
Restaurant in Borough Park, Brooklyn, can stay open for now.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States