NEW “TOXIC SHOCK” DISEASE POSSIBLY RELATED to CORONAVIRUS IN CHILDREN IS BEING INVESTIGATED. GOVERNOR SAYS CONSTRUCTION, MANUFACTURING COMPANIES WILL REPOPEN IN UPSTATE REGIONS QUALIFYING. DOWNSTATE TOO SOON TO CALL. NUMBERS NOT THERE.

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WPCNR GOVERNOR ANDREW M. CUOMO FRIDAY CORONAVIRUS BRIEFING. By John F. Bailey, May 8, 2020 UPDATES IN BLACK BOLD TYPEFACE :

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo announced a “Toxic-Shock” like disease killed a 5 year old child Thursday in New York, who had been suffering from the corona virus. The Governor listed the symptoms above. The Governor said the State Health Department is investigating.

THE GOVERNOR’S COMMENTS ON THE NEW CHILD ILLNESS DISCOVERED

The Governor commented that though coronavirus infection statistics were going down they were going down much slower than they went up. He attributed that to a continuing new hospitalizations rate of approximately 600 a day, he commented on earlier this week.

“We would have liked to see a steady sharp decline in these numbers, (the decline) is more of a flattening out as numbers continue to drop,” the governor said. He said Thursday saw 216 New Yorkers die from coronavirus, which has been the trend this week.

He said “We are in control. There is a science to this, contrary to politics and emotion. You can pull up the records of countries who reopened, and now have had to do a 180 degree turnaround. I don’t want to see 100,000 more people die. Facts make the decision. If we make a wrong move, more people will die. Let’s get through it without any further loss of life.”

The Governor is now concentrating on how to lower the vast proportion of infections in black and Latino neighborhoods. He said, from his address: “When you look at the new cases and where they’re coming from in the state, it’s clear that a majority of the new cases and a disproportionate number are coming from minority communities. 21 zip codes with the highest rate of hospitalization – 20 have greater than average black and/or Latino populations. So, this is something that we’re focused on and we’re going to address and we will address immediately. We will have more information on this in the next couple of days.

In the “Q. & A,” the governor said upstate regions would likely be allowed to reopen for construction and manufacturing, but felt the numbers for the downstate region were not going to be there..

The “Q. & A.” brought reporter questions on the unemployment checks situation.

Melissa DeRosa, Secretary to the Governer said the state was “trying to build a plane while trying to fly it,” because the automatic telephone system crashed due to 1.6 million unemployment claims in 3 weeks. Last year the state only processed 300,000 in twelve months. She repeated for about the umpteenth time to the reporters, who always raise this question, that 3,000 people had been hired to get through the backlog. She said 1.6 Million million claims had been processed in 7 weeks.

The governor with a huge grin, remarked to reporters in a few weeks reporters would be asking about persons who received checks who were not entitled to them, the state should take the time to check them.

There were no questions on nursing homes. There were questions on the new illness being investigated.

The Governor confirmed 2,938 additional cases of novel coronavirus, bringing the statewide total to 330,407 confirmed cases in New York State. Of the 330,407 total individuals who tested positive for the virus, the geographic breakdown is as follows (DOWNSTATE REGIONS IN BOLD FACE. WESTCHESTER HAS TOPPED 30,995 CASES, ROCKLAND IS NOW AT 12,349 CASES, NASSAU, 37,812; SUFFOLK, 36,223; NYC, 18,713:

CountyTotal PositiveNew Positive
Albany1,38436
Allegany350
Broome3644
Cattaraugus590
Cayuga520
Chautauqua400
Chemung1301
Chenango1050
Clinton745
Columbia3042
Cortland290
Delaware630
Dutchess3,27744
Erie4,255119
Essex311
Franklin171
Fulton1032
Genesee1691
Greene1991
Hamilton50
Herkimer762
Jefferson662
Lewis100
Livingston1005
Madison2493
Monroe1,73547
Montgomery641
Nassau37,812219
Niagara60517
NYC181,7831,567
Oneida62011
Onondaga116954
Ontario1043
Orange9,40274
Orleans12113
Oswego722
Otsego670
Putnam1,0748
Rensselaer38013
Rockland12,34969
Saratoga38814
Schenectady5587
Schoharie450
Schuyler70
Seneca460
St. Lawrence1876
Steuben2251
Suffolk36,223331
Sullivan1,03918
Tioga992
Tompkins1311
Ulster1,42913
Warren1996
Washington20111
Wayne791
Westchester30,905197
Wyoming732
Yates201
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EVICTION PROTECTION EXTENDED TO AUGUST 20 BY GOVERNOR. FORECLOSURE BAN ON WAY FOR LANDLORDS. FIRST RESPONDERS HAVE LOWER INFECTION RATE THAN GENERAL POPULATION.(MASKS WORK!) FOOD NETWORKS REINFORCED WITH $$$ BULKED UP WITH MONEY. FOOD WASTE ADDRESSED. SUPPLY SUSTAINED

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WPCNR THURSDAY GOVERNOR ANDREW M. CUOMO CORONAVIRUS BRIEFING. By John F. Bailey, May 7, 2020:

This morning, Governor Andrew M. Cuomo extend until August 20 the moratorium on evictions for non-payment of rent in New York State, and allowed persons unable to pay rent to use their security deposits (with landlords) to draw down against the rent, with ability to pay the security used later.

GOVERNOR CUOMO ON EXTENDING RENT PAYMENT GRACE PERIOD TO AUGUST 20 (New York Medical College Feed)

In the “Q. & A”, Governor Cuomo in response to a question said the state is working for a moratorium on foreclosures of banks on landlords who have protested that nonpayment of rent affects their abilities to pay their mortgages.

The Governor dealt with steps to help farmers and fund food banks purchasing power

He also announced efforts to avoid farmers destroying food for lack of buyers on the face of the accelerated demand Food Banks are facing. He detailed how the state is spending $25 Million to purchase food for Food Banks who are seeing unprecedented demand from persons needing food. He encouraged philanthropic organizations to contact the state to aid the Food Banks in purchasing enough food to feed the growing public demand (up 200% in Westchester alone).

Governor Cuomo said the state’s $25 million Nourish New York Initiative has purchased food and products from more than 2,100 New York farms and provided support to nearly 50 food banks, soup kitchens and food pantries to date.

Within the next week, more than 20,000 households across the state will receive Nourish New York products. First announced by the Governor on April 27th, the Nourish New York Initiative provides relief by purchasing food and products from Upstate farms and directs them to the populations who need them most through New York’s network of food banks. The state is also asking any philanthropies or foundations that would like to help the state’s food banks to contact COVIDPhilanthropies@exec.ny.gov.

The Governor said the coronavirus rates of decline were continuing on all leading indicators of the disease slowdown in infections. He said total hospitalizations was down to 8,600, net hospitalizations were down and the 3-Dqy average was down. Deaths were steady with another 231 New York dead from the virus yesterday. New hospitalizations were down.

He reported  that 27,000 essential employees who were on the front lines were tested for antibodies, and results showed what he called “amazingly good news,” than that of the general population, noting that masks and sanitizers work. The essential workers average 7% infecttions behind the average 14% rate of infections in the general population.

  • 6.8 percent of health care workers in Westchester County tested positive for COVID-19 antibodies, compared to 13.8 percent of the general population in Westchester County
  • 12.2 percent of health care workers in New York City tested positive for COVID-19 antibodies, compared to 19.9 percent of the general population in New York City
  • 11.1 percent of health care workers on Long Island tested positive for COVID-19 antibodies, compared to 11.4 percent of the general population on Long Island
Comparing New York which is flattening the curve at a sustained rate, he pointed out the rest of the nation is rising in infections.

He said the New York Policy would be to prevent deaths as much as possible, and not reopen until deaths had declined well below the 231 a day rate.

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66% OF NEW INFECTIONS HOSPITALIZATIONS (last three days)WERE STAYING IN THEIR HOMES. HALF ARE OVER 50. GOVERNOR TAPS GOOGLE for NEW COMMUNICATIONS in the “NEW NORMAL” FOR BUSINESS.

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GOVERNOR CUOMO RELEASES RESULTS OF 3 DAYS OF NEW HOSPITALIZATIONS AND 66% OF THEM CAME IN FROM THEIR HOMES. (Nassau County Feed)

WPCNR WEDNESDAY GOVERNOR ANDREW M. CUOMO COVID BRIEFING. By John F. Bailey May 6, 2020:

The state effort to fInd out more about who is getting new covid-19 hospitalizations which continued at 600 new hospitalizations Tuesday produced a surprise.

The Governor said 66% of  new hospitalizations came from their homes where they were living. “This was a surprise,” the Governor said. “They were not first responders, working in dense environments, riding transit systems, they were from their homes (where they lived).”

The governor said the survey found the majority of persons Covid-19 positive having to be hospitalized were over fifty years of age. 34% of persons in the over 50 group were from 50 to 70 years of age.

The governor said this seemed to suggest persons in their homes should limit gatherings, particularly of children and friends coming to socialize, or if doing so be sure to wear a mask. He strongly said, the lesson that persons who were staying home and lead in new hospitalizations ;

“Much of what you can do to not catch the virus comes down to what you are doing in your home. Your personal behavior is the determining factor in whether you get the disease. This is not a group (persons staying at home) we can target with this infection. It’s really about personal behavior.”

The Governor reported a new hotspot in Oneida County, a vegetable farm which has “dozens” of cases. He pointed out that it was not vegetables that were the problem, it was the “density” of the environment.

A reporter in the Q & A asked about the status of software for tracing, and the Governor reported progress on a system being tested in Nassau County with the aid of the Bloomberg Tracing Team. The Governor took us through it.

In other news made during the “Q & A” with media, the Governor announced a software system now being tried in Nassau County was the first step in the tracing system Michael Bloomberg, the information dissemination pioneer, creator of Bloomberg Radio and former Mayor of New York City, that would analyze tracing results and enable swift overlays of how new infections were spreading in counties across New York State.

Dr. Howard Zucker, Commissioner of Public Health in New York State, said the Center for Contagious Diseases is now analyzing antibody testing results to determine if persons with antibodies are immune to catching the virus again, but a conclusion has not been reached.

The Governor introduced by telephone Eric Schmitt, founder of Google who has agreed to analyze New York systems technologies to prepare technical communication advances for the state and businesses.

The Briefing concluded with the Governor recognizing today as National Nurses Day.

In the Q. & A. session with the media, Governor Cuomo in a question about absentee ballots being distributed, made clear that Board of Elections were responsible for disseminating the absentee ballots for Democratic and Republican primaries, but it is unclear if they are to distribute them to school districts, too. The Governor said that no Board of Elections in the state has contacted his office about this being a problem.

White Plains School district to send out Absentee Ballots to 33,000. Must be received by 5 PM June 9 to be counted.

In the city of White Plains the school budget and elections now designated by the governor to take place June 9, would be conducted by absentee ballots. All registered voters (about 33,000) are supposed to be sent the ballots.

The district has presumably never had to send out 33,000 absentee ballots before, The district does send out 33,000 budget information notices.

Dr. Joseph Ricca, Superintendent of Schools for the White Plains City School District told WPCNR in an interview this afternoon, the school district is working hard on printing the 33,000 absentee ballots, and postage paid reply envelopes to get them sent out in time. to be returned by the day of the vote. (There will be no polling places to go to. The only way to vote is by absentee ballot.)

“The ballots must be received by 5 PM on the budget vote date June 9, otherwise they do not count,” Dr. Ricca said. He anticipated the ballots being sent out a week ahead of the vote, but was not sure. On the absentee ballot will be the YES NO vote on the School Budget proposed for 2020-2021, and two school board candidates running unopposed.

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GOVERNOR CUOMO: SUBWAYS SHUT DOWN FOR NY CLEANING TONIGHT 1 AM TO 5 PM. PROGRESS DOWN THE CURVE TO NY REOPENING CONTINUES. “UP TO THE PRESIDENT TO BE REASONABLE MAN HERE OR ELSE FUNDING THE STATES IN RED WILL NOT PASS.” ANNOUNCES GATES FOUNDATION TECHNOLOGY CURRICULUM FOR THE NEW NORMAL.

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DOWN THE NUMBERS GO: GOVERNOR CUOMO SHOWS THE VERY POSITIVE DECLINE IN ALL THE LEADING CORONAVIRUS INDICATORS.

WPCNR TUESDAY GOVERNOR ANDREW CUOMO CORONAVIRUS BRIEFING. By John F. Bailey. May 5, 2020:

The coronavirus infections continue on the way down, Governor Andrew Cuomo announced today, most notably new hospitalizations dropping 50 to  650. The Governor has said previously he would like new hospitalizations to drop to 400-500 before any reopening which he said was going to be a serious possibility after the New York Pause order expires May 15.

The Governor announced New York Subways would shutdown nightly at 1 AM to 5 AM tonight, two days earlier than he predicted last week.  Workers will find transportation available for them at stations, via bus, van, uber or Lyft, free.

Governor Cuomo renewed his call for the congress to pass a funds bill to reimburse states,  like New York, California, New Jersey, Massachusetts, and other states with revenues depleted by economic shutdowns and stay-at-home orders. He said “ You have a national crisis. Nothing iss going to happen unless President Trump has to be the reasonable man here or they will not pass it and he will have failed the nation as a leader. ”

The Governor explored an issue he said is not being discussed about the need to reopening, and that is the cost of human life.  He  argued strongly for a measured, controlled reopening carefully measured as he introduced Monday, pointing out that Washington D.C. is doubling its estimtes of how many Americans will die with the present possibilities of 31 states reopening this week. The governor said the estimate of $60,000 Americans dying was now judged to be going up to 136 million Americans,  The Governor said, “the coronavirus doesn’t kill Democrats and Republicans. It kills Americans.”

He advocated for a new approach to education, announcing that the Bill and Melinda Gates  Foundation was developing a techmology based learning program for New York Education bases on more efficient means to using technology to teach at home.

He announced that the state would be creating some television spots promoting wearing a mask featuring real New Yorkers at the suggestion of his daughter Mariah Cuomo whom the Governor acknowledged has not felt he has been communicating well to get the importance of wearing a mask across to New Yorkers will head up the project. A contest will be staged for 30-second ad submissions featuring mask-wearers. The Governor’s daughter will not be paid.

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COUNTY EXECUTIVE ANNOUNCES NEW TESTING EFFORTS .ENDORSES OPEN RECREATION-MASKED, THINKS MORE MASK UP THAN DO NOT. DEATH RATE GOING DOWN.

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GEORGE LATIMER LIVE ON TAPE IN HIS MONDAY AFTERNOON BRIEFING ON CORONAVIRUS WATCH (Westchester County Feed)

WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Department of Communications. April 5, 2020 UPdated with Video (above):

George Latimer, the Westchester County Executive announced the death rate of coronavirus patients in the county is declining at about 20 deaths a day, bringing the total to 1,101 deaths due to COVID-19 in the county, and that contagious cases had dropped to 5,700, 50% less than a month ago.

He also announced the county was going to test for antibodies in first responders at the newly opened Westchester County Center facility. He announced he would expand testing into nursing homes, assisted living facilities and other facilities of group residences. He said he intended to keep parks open and emphasized Westchester residents had to social distance and wear masks, and observed there was to his observation more compliance with masking rules in parks he went to this weekend.

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White Plains Deputy Chief Edward Ciocca, 1958-2020

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WPCNR MILESTONES. May 4, 2020 From his family :

Edward John Ciocca, Deputy Chief of the City of White Plains Fire Department, died May 1, 2020. He was 62. Edward was born April 28, 1958 in White Plains to JoAnn MacDonald Ryan and the late Adelmo Ciocca.

Chief Ciocca was a 35 year veteran and third generation firefighter.  His grandfather, Edward J. MacDonald, was White Plains Fire Chief and later the city’s Commissioner of Public Safety.  His father, Adelmo Ciocca, served as Deputy Chief.

Hired May 1985, Ed was assigned to firefighter Group 4 until his promotion to Lieutenant, September 1991.  He led Fire Prevention for several years and in July 1999, was promoted to Deputy Chief.

Edward was kind to everyone he met. He was a source of strength and inspiration for all who knew him, and his presence lit up every room he entered. He was a principled leader and dedicated public servant.  Edward was a beloved father and son who treasured family and emphasized its importance.  Ed was a sports enthusiast, and an ardent fan of the Oakland Raiders and the Chicago Blackhawks.  He enjoyed attending games with his family.

Besides his mother JoAnn Ryan (William) of White Plains, Edward is survived by his daughter Brianna Ciocca of Elmsford; his partner Maureen Nestor Brown of Ossining; two sisters Kim Treacy (Darren) of Fishkill; and Tracey Bonaro (James) of Clifton Park; and nieces Michelle Carpenito and Alyssa Bonaro, nephews TJ Carpenito and Jarrod Bonaro, and great nephew Christopher Mende.

In lieu of flowers donations to the White Plains Hospital Endo ICU Nursing.

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GOVERNOR CUOMO LIFTS PAUSE MAY 15. REGIONS MEETING STANDARDS CAN OPEN. NO REGION MEETS STANDARDS NOW. NEW HOSPS RATE DOWN TO 700

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GOVERNOR ANDREW M. CUOMO’S ANNOUNCEMENT THAT PAUSE AT PRESENT TIME WILL NOT BE EXTENDED. REGIONS THAT MEET CRITERIAS MAY OPEN. TWO WEEKS TO COMPLY
GOVERNOR CUOMO SHOWS ALL REGIONS ARE NOT YET READY, SUGGESTING OPENINGS MAY NOT BE SIMULTANEOUS (ROCHESTER FEED)

WPCNR MONDAY GOVERNOR ANDREW CUOMO UPDATE. By John F. Bailey. May 4, 2020: UPDATED WITH LATEST CORONAVIRUS CASES BY COUNTY, 7:15 PM EDT:

With the New York State New Hospitalizations Rate descending by 200 persons in two days to 700 Sunday, Governor Cuomo announced May 15 when the New York Pause (now in effect) expires, after that date New York Regions could reopen provided the had opening plans that met 10 State Required conditions.

If there is a reversal in coronavirus decline, and numbers go up but average down over a three-day moving average, it looks like the state should not have trouble meeting the 14-day of downward trend required by the Center for Contagious Diseases. The governor went into specifics behind the CCD standard for reopening.

In a news release just in from the Governor’s Office at 3:20 P.M., the CCD standards were summarized with their unique new details:

  • New Infections: Based on guidelines from the CDC, regions must have at least 14 days of decline in total net hospitalizations and deaths on a 3-day rolling average. In regions with few COVID cases, the region cannot exceed 15 net new total hospitalizations or 5 new deaths on a 3-day rolling average. In order to monitor the potential spread of infection in a region, a region must have fewer than two new COVID patients admitted per 100,000 residents per day.
  • Health Care CapacityEvery region must have the health care capacity to handle a potential surge in cases. Regions must have at least 30 percent total hospital and ICU beds available. This is coupled with the new requirement that hospitals have at least 90 days of personal protective equipment stockpiled.
  • Diagnostic Testing Capacity: Each region must have the capacity to conduct 30 diagnostic tests for every 1,000 residents per month. The state is rapidly expanding capacity statewide to help all regions meet this threshold.
  • Contact Tracing Capacity: Regions must have a baseline of 30 contact tracers for every 100,000 residents, and additional tracers based on the projected number of cases in the region. The state is currently building an army of contact tracers with Mayor Bloomberg to meet the needs of each region statewide.

Governor Cuomo outlined the specifics of which businesses would open first, and laid out the 10 standards regions had to have businesses and organizations to comply with before opening any region.

Businesses before any reopening after May 15, must have these precautions in place and specifics approved by the state. Governor noted they need to get working on these Reopeners now.
GOVERNOR PUTS THE ONUS ON THE BUSINESSES–CHART AT END SHOWS MID-HUDSON REGION HAS THREE OF 7 STANDARDS UNMET AS OF TODAY: 14 DAY DECLINE IN HOSPITAL DEATHS/, NEW HOSPITALIZATIONS 2 PER 100,000) , TRACERS NOT IN PLACE.

He noted there were two weeks to May 15, for regions to get their plans to reopen to the standards to be considered for reopening.

GOVERNOR RECAPS WHICH OPEN FIRST.

The Governor warned that any region reopening that exceeded the 1.1 Outbreak Indicator (1 person positive infect 1.1 persons with the coronavirus) would have to shutdown the reopening and go back to a Pause.

THE FIRST QUESTION IN THE “Q & A” ASKED ABOUT MASKS AND THE GOVERNOR REEMPHASIZED THE NECESSITY, THE MORALITY OF WEARING A MASK IN DIRECT, BLUNT TERMS ABOVE AND BELOW

He emphasized during the “Q. & A.” with reporters that wearing a mask was compulsory because the state is in a State of Emergency and that towns, cities and counties should enforce no-maskers with sanctions and penalties.

THE WRAP-UP: GOVERNOR CUOMO CHALLENGED LOCAL GOVERNMENTS TO PERFORM AND CREATE PLANS THAT WORK.

Finally, the Governor confirmed 2,538 additional cases of novel coronavirus, bringing the statewide total to 318,953 confirmed cases in New York State. Of the 318,953 total individuals who tested positive for the virus, the geographic breakdown is as follows:(WITH WESTCHESTER, NYC, PUTNAM, DUTCHESS, ULSTER, NASSAU, SUFFOLK NUMBERS IN BOLD FACE:

CountyTotal PositiveNew Positive
Albany1,28729
Allegany350
Broome3347
Cattaraugus530
Cayuga510
Chautauqua371
Chemung1261
Chenango1001
Clinton682
Columbia2134
Cortland280
Delaware621
Dutchess3,13145
Erie3,80292
Essex290
Franklin161
Fulton842
Genesee1594
Greene1543
Hamilton30
Herkimer631
Jefferson631
Lewis90
Livingston852
Madison21766
Monroe159529
Montgomery560
Nassau36,965185
Niagara49319
NYC175,6511,320
Oneida55061
Onondaga97119
Ontario961
Orange9,01548
Orleans970
Oswego671
Otsego670
Putnam1,02613
Rensselaer33715
Rockland12,09570
Saratoga3674
Schenectady5358
Schoharie450
Schuyler70
Seneca450
St. Lawrence1781
Steuben2191
Suffolk35,077222
Sullivan97625
Tioga900
Tompkins1290
Ulster1,35413
Warren1924
Washington1882
Wayne761
Westchester30,097213
Wyoming690
Yates190
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GOVERNOR MOVES TO REQUIRE ALL NY HOSPITALS TO HAVE 3 MONTH SUPPLY OF PPE

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. May 3, 2020:

 Today, joined by New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy, Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont, Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf, Delaware Governor John Carney, Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo and Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker, we announced a joint multi-state agreement to develop a regional supply chain for personal protective equipment, other medical equipment and testing. 

Rather than competing state against state for equipment and supplies, we will now coordinate our purchasing power. We will also identify American suppliers, especially suppliers within our states, who can scale to meet the demand. States are strongest and have more buying power when we work together and it’s important that we jointly locate and purchase much-needed supplies. 

Here’s what else you need to know tonight: 

1. The Department of Health will require each hospital to have a 90-day supply of PPE on hand. The Personal Protective Equipment supplies must be able to last for 90 days at the highest rate of use. This common-sense requirement will help ensure our hospital systems are prepared in the event of a potential second wave of the virus. 

2. Reminder, you MUST wear a mask or face covering in public when social distancing cannot be maintained. Reports of crowded parks and public spaces are unacceptable. We need to act responsibly. Warm weather doesn’t mean the rules no longer apply. 

3. The number of hospitalizations continue to fall. Yesterday, total hospitalizations fell to 9,736, showing consistent decline over the past week. However, infections remain high and the virus is still spreading. Visit covid19tracker.health.ny.gov to see the latest data. 

4. Remember to respond to the Census. Every New Yorker can now respond to the Census. Responding to the Census is safe, easy and can be done online from the comfort of your own home. Let’s make sure every New Yorker is counted. Complete the Census today at my2020census.gov

Tonight’s “Deep Breath Moment”: Albany shop Yamaguchie has shifted from making crafts to making face masks using 3D Printers and other supplies, all on a donation basis. You can go to their shop on Lark Street and pick up a mask and leave a donation — the store uses the donations to buy more material to make more masks. I stopped by the store on Saturday. If you were forwarded this email, you can subscribe to New York State’s Coronavirus Updates here. 

Ever Upward, Governor Andrew M. Cuomo

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GOVERNOR ANDREW CUOMO AND 6 NORTHEAST GOVERNORS POOL PURCHASE POWER FOR $5 BILLION PURCHASE OF VAST PPE/MED EQUIPMENT, PLAN FOR FUTURE OUTBREAKS.

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GOVERNOR ANDREW M. CUOMO, LEFT with clockwise: Governors Lamont, Murphy, Carney, and Wolf in Conference Call this afternoon, announcing their Buying Consortium
VIDEO OF THE COMMENTS OF THE 4 GOVERNORS JOINING GOVERNOR CUOMOON ZOOM TODAY, AND THE GOVERNOR’S CLOSING COMMENTS (Governor’s NEW YORK OFFICE FEED)

WPCNR SUNDAY GOVERNOR ANDREW M. CUOMO CORONAVIRUS BRIEF. From the Governor’s Office. May 3, 2020:

Regional Supply Chains Will Help Realize Better Pricing, Delivery and Reliability of PPE and Medical Equipment for States. AGGREGATEE SUPPLYIES BY 7 STATE NEEDS

New York Governor Andrew M. Cuomo, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy, Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont, Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf, Delaware Governor John Carney, Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo and Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker today announced a joint multi-state agreement to develop a regional supply chain for personal protective equipment, other medical equipment and testing.

While the states will continue to partner with the federal government during this global and national public health crisis, they will also work together to identify the entire region’s needs for these products, aggregate demand among the states, reduce costs and stabilize the supply chain.

The states will also coordinate policies regarding the inventory of PPE each state’s health care infrastructure should have to be prepared for a possible second wave of COVID-19. The states will also coordinate policies on what supplies local governments should have on hand for their First Responders, and if any requirements regarding PPE for the non-for-profit and private sector are needed.

The states will then seek to identify suppliers within the country, region or state who can scale to meet the demand of the entire region over the next three months. The goal of this approach is to decrease the potential for disruptions in the supply chain for PPE and medical equipment, including sanitizer and ventilators, and testing, and promote regional economic development.

In addition, the states are discussing how to collectively explore emerging technologies on an ongoing basis to take advantage of the potential associated with alternative methods of production for existing products and innovation that would lead to more effective and/or less expensive alternatives. For example, 3D Printers may represent an attractive alternative to manufacturing certain personal protective equipment and medical products.

“The COVID-19 pandemic created a mad scramble for medical equipment across the entire nation – there was competition among states, private entities and the federal government and we were driving up the prices of these critical resources,” Governor Cuomo said. “As a state and as a nation we can’t go through that again. We’re going to form a regional state purchasing consortium with our seven northeast partner states to increase our market power when we’re buying supplies and help us actually get the equipment at a better price. I want to thank our neighboring states for their ongoing support, generosity and regional coordination on these important efforts.”

Governor Murphy said, “Our states should never be in a position where we are actively competing against each other for life-saving resources. By working together across the region, we can obtain critical supplies as we begin the process to restart our economies, while also saving money for our taxpayers. This concept is at the heart of the regional approach we’ve established.”

Governor Lamont said, “With global supply chains continuing to experience a major disruption due to the pandemic, combining the efforts of our states into a regional purchasing initiative will help our states obtain needed PPE and other medical equipment without competing against each other. I’ve long been advocating for the federal government to get involved because pitting all 50 states against each other to compete for these supplies has never made any sense. Partnering with our neighbors helps make our purchasing power stronger and more dependable.”

Governor Wolf said, “By working together we can combine our strengths to build the capacities we all need. We can exploit our market size to encourage producers to make what we need, we can exploit our financial strength to give that encouragement added weight, and we can exploit the great research institutions and the brainpower in our region to increase our chances of success. I look forward to working with my fellow governors—and my neighbors-to build a strong regional supply chain.”

Governor Carney said, “We need a consistent approach for moving our states out of this crisis, and that includes ensuring a sufficient supply of PPE and tests. I’m thankful for this coordination with my fellow Governors in the region. We’ll be better positioned to continue tackling this crisis working together with the states around us.”

Governor Raimondo said, “Our healthcare workers should never have to worry if we have enough PPE to keep them safe. Over the past two months, we’ve been scouring the earth for supplies and have worked hard to meet the demand on the frontlines. We know that, in order to safely reopen the economy, we need a long-term supply of PPE for all critical infrastructure workers. I look forward to continuing to collaborate with states across the region in order to build and maintain a steady, reliable and affordable supply of PPE.”

Governor Baker said, “Massachusetts looks forward to working with other states to identify more options for PPE procurements for our health care workers and public safety personnel.”

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