New York

NJ Sets Single-Day Record; Cuomo Suggests NYC Adjust School Shutdown Threshold

Six northeast U.S. governors are having an “emergency summit” on COVID-19 this weekend

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New Jersey reported a new record number of coronavirus cases: 4,395. For perspective, the former record was set back on April 17 with 4,391. Ida Siegal reports.

What to Know

  • NYC parents are preparing for a shutdown of schools as the citywide positivity rate nears 3%; Gov. Cuomo advised the city look at adding additional factors to the shutdown threshold for schools
  • New Jersey reported 4,395 new virus cases on Saturday, setting a single-day record for the state
  • Six northeast U.S. governors are having an “emergency summit” on COVID-19 this weekend as the virus continues to spread throughout the region

Six northeast governors are having an "emergency summit" on COVID-19 this weekend as multiple states report record high virus cases and additional restrictions feel all but certain in an effort to curb the spread throughout the region.

New Jersey and Pennsylvania, two of the six summit states, reported new record case totals on Saturday, higher than any single-day numbers counted back at the pandemic's first peak in the spring.

The record count in the Garden State followed four straight days of more than 3,000 new cases. The latest single-day virus total rose to 4,395 cases, surpassing the previous high by four cases, state records show. Currently, the number of daily tests conducted in New Jersey is three times the volume performed back in the spring. The state data also shows 2,000 people were hospitalized in the state on Friday -- less than a third of the state's record at the end of April.

New COVID restrictions went into effect in New Jersey, some of them mirroring limits that Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced would be imposed in New York a day later, as the Garden State's governor seeks to beat back what he has described as a "devastating" recent increase in viral numbers.

Bar seating is banned completely (congregating upright within bars is already probibited), while bars and restaurants must halt indoor service from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. That includes casinos, though gaming can continue 24/7. Restaurants can place tables closer together than 6 feet, but only if they're separated by barriers. Outdoor dining and takeout aren't affected.

The governor didn't establish new limitations on indoor dining outside the curfew hours; he also has left the current 25 percent capacity caps in place. Most of the spread has been linked to social gatherings, from weddings to parties to small groups in private homes, as well as indoor sports at the K-12 level.

In New Jersey's largest city of Newark, which has seen its positivity rate soar beyond double the increasing statewide number, Mayor Ras Baraka has already taken steps beyond what Murphy has done statewide as it relates to mandatory curfew, sports, senior housing, religious services and non-essential businesses.

After Newark's more intense restrictions, another city in the Garden State has gone beyond the state's new measures as well. East Orange is ordering all non-essential businesses to close by 8 p.m. as part of what the mayor is calling a "Tough Love" shutdown.

Murphy said Thursday he would sign an executive order giving municipalities and counties the option to regulate operating hours of nonessential businesses after 8 p.m., as Newark has done, but any local actions must comply with state rules.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said the group of governors will discuss potential coordination of restrictions on restaurants and bars, as well as interstate travel and quarantine rules. Several states have passed new restrictions this week, including New York's 10 p.m. curfew for bars and restaurants and a ban on gatherings over 10 people in private residences.

“We believe we’re going to have to be taking additional steps,” Cuomo said, though he said he doesn’t expect any major changes to existing rules over the weekend.

Cuomo said he expects infection rates will keep increasing in New York and nationwide as the holiday season begins.

New York has reported more than 45,700 new coronavirus cases in the past 14 days. The state is reporting an average of 4,163 new cases per day over the past seven days. That’s nearly double the rate 11 days ago and quadruple where things stood at the end of September.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo made the suggestion on Saturday that New York City include data from the testing of students and staff in its decision whether or not to close schools citywide. Adam Harding reports.

“You cannot take this rate of increase and survive pending the arrival of a vaccine,” Cuomo said.

With new restrictions taking effect across the tri-state area and New York City schools poised to shut down, the anxiety is familiar to millions of people who once again find themselves concerned about their children and their livelihoods.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio told parents Friday to be prepared for the city's school system to end all in-person learning instruction as soon as Monday if the spread of the virus continues to accelerate.

The Democrat has said he will close school buildings if 3 percent of coronavirus tests conducted in the city over a seven-day period came back positive. As of Saturday that rate dipped slightly to 2.47 percent -- down from Friday's 2.8 percent -- but was expected to rise as additional test results were returned, the city's health commissioner tweeted.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who has intervened on closure matters in the past, opted not to in the case of New York City schools. He reiterated Friday that he had left local school decisions up to local school districts, provided any given district's thresholds fall within the parameters set by the state. By Saturday, he suggested the mayor and school leaders look at adding additional factors to the shutdown threshold for schools.

Businesses, such as gyms, bars, restaurants, across New York State are not happy with the new curfews, Chris Glorioso reports.

“Since the 3% was set we have become more sophisticated and have more capacity than we did at that time,” he said on a morning conference call.

Cuomo argued that school-specific testing of students and staffers was introducing new data into the equation and should be taken into account. The New York governor said he spoke by phone with Mayor de Blasio to suggest such an adjustment.

“Add to your calculus a positivity rate in the school, because if the school is not spreading the virus, or if the school has a much lower positivity rate than the surrounding area, then the school is not part of the problem -- and you could argue keeping the children in the school is part of the solution," he added.

De Blasio's 3 percent is well below the 9 percent mark Cuomo set for closure and the 5 percent mark he set for the initial reopening a few months ago. That said, he'd prefer to have them open for now, and urged the mayor and the teachers union to consider a higher threshold in the future.

The city is preparing to close all school buildings if the rate crosses the threshold over the weekend, de Blasio said.

“I want to urge parents to have a plan ready that they can put into effect as early as Monday,” de Blasio said during his weekly talk on WNYC radio. “Parents should have a plan for the rest of the month of November.”

Calls to keep schools open in the city were echoed by New York City Council Speaker Corey Johnson, who on Friday released a statement in support of avoiding a citywide school shutdown.

“Our City is in a dangerous position right now with rising COVID rates. But we owe it to students and families – and all New Yorkers who care about the future of this city – to try everything we can to keep schools open to provide in-person services while also prioritizing safety and equity. This is especially important for families who rely on our government to be the great equalizer," Johnson's statement read, in part.

JURY SELECTION SUSPENDED

New York state courts are suspending jury selection and one county has halted its counting of absentee ballots as coronavirus cases rise.

Chief Administrative Judge Lawrence Marks said in a memo Friday that jury selection in New York’s state court system will stop Monday, though ongoing criminal and civil trials will continue to their conclusions.

He said no new grand jurors will be selected and future bench trials and hearings will be conducted by video until further notice.

New York resumed jury trials on Sept. 9 in counties outside of New York City after halting them statewide in March because of the pandemic. In the city, civil and criminal jury trials began again on Oct. 26.

VOTING COUNTING HALTED

In central New York, Onondaga County has stopped counting absentee ballots because a staff member was exposed to COVID-19.

Onondaga County Elections Commissioner Dustin Czarny said Friday that the counting process was postponed until further notice, and his office was arranging to secure ballots.

Voters in the county, which encompasses the city of Syracuse, submitted about 52,000 absentee ballots in the November election. At least 30,000 remained uncounted as of Thursday. The results stand to decide a competitive seat in the state Senate's 50th District.

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