INDIAN POINT NEARS END OF ATOMIC ERA IN WESTCHESTER. UNIT 2 SHUTS DOWN FOR LAST TIME PERMANENTLY

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WPCNR THE POWER STORY. From Entergy Corporation. April 29, 2020:


Control room operators at Entergy Corporation Indian Point Unit 2 will shut down the reactor Thursday as scheduled for the final time, after more than 45 years of producing clean, safe and reliable power for New York. The other operating unit at the site, Unit 3, is scheduled to permanently shut down by April 30, 2021.


“Over the last 45 years, thousands of dedicated professionals have operated Unit 2 at Indian Point – safely, securely and reliably,” said Chris Bakken, Entergy’s Chief Nuclear Officer. “We owe each of them our thanks for a job well done and for their commitment to the highest standards of professionalism.”


Announced in 2017, the shutdown of both operating units at Indian Point is pursuant to a settlement agreement with the State of New York and was the result of a number of factors, including sustained low current and projected wholesale energy prices that reduced revenues.


As part of its commitment to employees at Indian Point, the company has previously announced a plan to find a position within Entergy for those qualified employees who are willing to relocate. Currently, more than 40 employees from Indian Point have accepted offers to continue with Entergy in other locations.

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BEWARE! BUSINESS LOAN SCAMS

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. APRIL 29, 2020:

Important Warning About Loan Scams!
The Greater New York Chamber of Commerce is currently working with the U.S. Postal Inspection Service and the NYS Attorney General’s Office to crack down on the many emerging coronavirus loan scams.

Unfortunately, the high demand for loans and grants due to the COVID 19 pandemic has created a rash of fraudulent offers that involve paying for loan application assistance .

Please be advised that you do not need to pay for these services! The Greater NY Chamber has attorneys and economic development specialists available to assist you with the Small Business Administration’s Payroll Protection Program “PPP”, as well as NYS unemployment issues, tax questions, price gouging complaints and other loan/grant applications.

The bottom line is; if you have any questions or concerns about tax refunds, stimulus payments, loans, grants, unemployment or price gouging; please visit www.chamber.nycor contact me via email or call 914-730-2660.

Mark Jaffe
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A Thank You from Mayor Thomas Roach of White Plains for Social Distancing

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. April 29, 2020:

Dear Residents,
As we continue to work through this challenging time, I would like to thank you for the tremendous compliance we have had with social distancing and facial coverings requirements. Your efforts have made a difference and I urge you to keep it up!


I would be remiss if I didn’t also acknowledge the many, many White Plains residents who have contacted us to volunteer in some way — to offer your time, your resources, your expertise. There has always been a strong volunteer spirit in our community.

During this crisis that spirit has shown through in ways large and small.

Finally, I wanted to take a moment to offer my condolences to those residents who have lost a loved one. Such a loss is always hard, but now, because of isolation and quarantine requirements, it is even more difficult.

During this unprecedented time we have once again come together as a community and I have no doubt we will be stronger for it. 
Remember, we are standing together by staying apart.
With my sincere thanks,

Mayor Thomas Roach

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MEALS ON WHEELS REQUEST

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. APRIL 29, 2020:

     For over 40 years, Meals on Wheels of White Plains has been delivering hot and cold meals daily to residents who are unable to shop and cook for themselves.  We have encountered extraordinary obstacles and expenses but with our extraordinary volunteers we are continuing our service during the pandemic. 

Some of our regular donors have stepped up and sent added gifts without our asking, and we have heard from some new donors who have joined us to help. 

But one unusual piece of mail arrived this week. 

The letter, from a new donor, read, “At some point my stimulus check should show up, and the last thing I want is a check with Donald Trump’s name on it.  I know you need this more than I do.”    

Enclosed was her personal check for $1,200.

You don’t have to send that!  It can be $12.  You can help with a check to Meals on Wheels of White Plains, 311 North St., G-5, White Plains, NY  10605.  Or you may contribute on our website, www.mowwp.org .  

Thanks!  Paul Schwarz, Board President MOWWP

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REOPENING COUNTIES GIVEN “CIRCUIT BREAKER” CONDITIONS THAT WOULD SUSPEND OPENINGS UNDERWAY UNTIL “OUTBREAK” IS CONTROLLED. NO PARKS, FESTIVALS, FAIRS, BEACHES POOLS CAN BE OPEN DURING REOPENINGS BECAUSE OF DENSITY. SCHOOL DECISION COMING THIS WEEK. HOSPITALIZATION RATE DOWN 100 TO 900 NEW CASES

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WPCNR Tuesday Governor Andrew M. Cuomo Coronavirus Briefing. By John F. Bailey. April 28, 2020:

The Governor said a number of counties have Coronavirus cases low enough to compare with less impacted states around the country at his briefing this afternoon at Upstate Medical College in Syracuse. Downstate New York was not one of them, yet.

Those counties the Governor showed on a map indicated the number of covid cases would be considered first for reopenings, however those counties wishing to open have to submit a 12-point plan of issues (described Monday) to be addressed, fulfilled, and submitted for state approval before any reopening.

An advisory board on reopenings is being formed of 30 business and community leaders to help craft and evaluate the efficacy of submitted county plans,

The new specifics added to yesterday’s presentation set 2 standards for any reopening county dictating when they must halt any reopening in progress and address a corona spread.

If hospitals in treating patients with Coronavirus or whatever medical situations went over 70% capacity (with 30%  of that capacity reserved to treat serious corona virus patients, this would dictate the county could not continue with the reopening.

The second signal to halt the county reopening would be triggered if the number of new cases indicated infections rose above 1 person to 1 person.

Either condition would  be a “circuit breaker,” Governor Cuomo called it, seeming to indicate perhaps any reopening breaching those hard stops,  would have to slow, stop and install previous efforts to corral the rapid growth of the corona disease again.

A decision on school policy, the Governor said, would be made at the end of this week. Asked about the plan for September, the governor said it was too far ahead to make a decision.

The Reopenings of New York planned will not be a return to a normal summer, either.

Governor Cuomo responding to the first question from a reporter at the “Q & A” asking if open festivals, fairs, waterpark facilities would be allowed, Governor Cuomo said “No they can’t.” Amplying that, the Governor said this included pools, waterparks and beaches, because they create “density.”

Melissa DeRosa, Executive Secretary to the Governor said the backlog of unemployment claims was down to 400,000, and a printing glich of 1,000,000 checks that stuck together while printing, had been identified and was being rectified.

It was announced that the Central New York region was going to have hospitals cleared to accept electoral surgery first, but the Capitol District, Western New York, and Downstate New York would not.



An advisory board on reopenings is being formed of 100 business and community leaders to help craft and evaluate the efficacy of submitted county plans, The members were announced late Tuesday afternoon:

MEMBERS OF NEW YORK FORWARD RE-OPENING ADVISORY BOARD

 Quenia Abreu – President New York Women’s Chamber of Commerce  Elizabeth Alexander – President, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation  Vincent Alvarez – President, NYC Central Labor Council  Ajay Banga – CEO, MasterCard  Kathy Behrens – President, Social Responsibility & Player Programs, National Basketball Association  Bill Berkley – Chair, NYU  Albert Bourla – CEO, Pfizer  Elizabeth Bradley – President, Vassar College  Kyle Bragg – President, SEIU 32BJ  Heather Briccetti – President & CEO, The Business Council  Tory Burch – Executive Chair, Tory Burch LLC  Gerrard P. Bushell – former President and CEO of the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York (DASNY)  James Cahill – President, NYS Building and Construction Trades  Wellington Chen – Executive Director of Chinatown Business Improvement District  Mario Cilento – President, NYS AFL-CIO  Henry Cisneros – Siebert, Brandford, Shank & Co.  Dr. Katherine Conway-Turner – President, SUNY Buffalo State College  Steven M. Cohen – Former Secretary to the Governor  Stacey Cunningham – President, NYSE  Vijay Dandapani – President & CEO, Hotel Association of NYC  Sonya Del Peral – Nine Pin Ciderworks  Mylan Denerstein – Partner, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher  Alicia Fernandez Dicks – President/CEO, Community Foundation of Oneida and Herkimer  James Dolan – CEO, Madison Square Garden  Stacey Duncan – Executive Director, The Agency  Leecia Eve – Vice President of State Government Affairs, Verizon  Bill Ford – CEO, General Atlantic LLC  Jane Fraser – President, Citigroup  Adena Friedman – President & CEO, Nasdaq  Bea Grause – President, Healthcare Association of New York State  Jonathan Gray – President & COO, Blackstone Group  George Gresham – President, 1199SEIU  Horacio Gutierrez – General Counsel, Spotify  Sabrina HoSang Jordan – CEO, Caribbean Food Delights, Inc.  Maria Imperial – CEO, YWCA White Plains & Central Westchester  Shirley Ann Jackson – President, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute  Dr. Amarilis Jacobo – President, National Hispanic Dental Association  Jeremy Jacobs Jr – Co-Chief Executive Officer, Delaware North  Michele Johnson – YWCAs of Elmira – President of YWCAs NYS  René Jones – Chair & CEO, M&T Bank  Michel Khalaf – President & CEO, MetLife  Pat Kane – Executive Director, New York State Nurses Association  Gary LaBarbera – President, Building and Construction Trades Council of Greater New York  Mary Beth Labate – President, Commission on Independent Colleges and Universities  Kevin Law – President & CEO, Long Island Association, Inc.  Jon Ledecky – Co-Owner, NY Islanders  Kewsong Lee – Co-CEO, Carlyle Group  Randy Levine – President, NY Yankees  Mayra Linares-Garcia – VP of Public Affairs and Communications at Liberty Coca-Cola Beverages  Melanie Littlejohn – Chair, Board of Directors, CenterState CEO  Joanie Mahoney – Chief Operating Officer, SUNY ESF  Carl McCall – Former Chair, SUNY Board of Trustees; Former NYS Comptroller  Brenda McDuffie – President & CEO at Buffalo Urban League  Cheryl McKissack Daniel – President & CEO, McKissack & McKissack  Father Joseph McShane – President, Fordham University  Elizabeth Moore – General Counsel, Con Edison  Wes Moore – CEO, Robin Hood  Marc Morial – President & CEO, National Urban League  William J. Mulrow – Former Secretary to the Governor  John McAvoy – Chairman, President & CEO, Con Edison  Danny Meyer – CEO, Union Square Hospitality Group  Dr. Belinda S. Miles – President, SUNY Westchester Community College  Frankie Miranda – President & CEO, Hispanic Federation  Orinthia T. Montague – President, Tompkins Cortland Community College  Candice Niu – Executive Director, China General Chamber of Commerce  Ana Oliveira – President & CEO, The New York Women’s Foundation  Kim Pegula – President and CEO, Pegula Sports and Entertainment  Elizabeth Peralta – Executive Director, National Supermarket Association  Clotilde Perez-Bode Dedecker – President/CEO, Community Foundation for Greater Buffalo  Charles Phillips – Chair, Infor  Martha Pollack – President, Cornell University  Ted Potrikus – President & CEO, Retail Council of New York State  Ken Raske – President, Greater NY Hospital Association  Scott Rechler – CEO & Chairman, RXR Realty  Andrew Rigie – President, NYC Hospitality Alliance  Linda Brown-Robinson – President, Syracuse Onondaga NAACP  Lisa Rosenblum – Vice Chair, Altice  Jane Rosenthal – Co-Founder & CEO, Tribeca Enterprises  Steven Rubenstein – Chairman, Association for a Better New York  Bill Rudin – Rudin Management Company  Kevin Ryan – Co-Founder, MongoDB  Julie Samuels – President, Tech:NYC  Rob Sands – Chairman, Constellation Brands  Theresa Sanders – President of the Urban League of Long Island  Jaime Saunders – CEO, United Way of Greater Rochester  Diane Serratore – Executive Director, Help From People to People  Carlo Scissura – President & CEO, NY Building Congress  Leonard Schleifer – CEO, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals  Josh Silverman – CEO, Etsy  Lisa Sorin – President, Bronx Chamber of Commerce  Rob Speyer – President & CEO, Tishman Speyer  Ty Stone – President, Jefferson County Community College  Ken Sunshine – President, Sunshine Sachs  Steve Swartz – President & CEO, Hearst; Co- Chair, Partnership for NYC  Chandrika Tandon – Chair, Tandon Capital Associates  Elinor Tatum – Publisher and Editor in Chief, New York Amsterdam News  Crickett Thomas-O’Dell – Regional Director, Workforce Development Institute  Bill Thompson – Chairman, CUNY  Merryl Tisch – Chairman, SUNY  Erin Tolefree – Executive Vice President, Baldwin Richardson Foods  Elizabeth Velez – CEO Velez Organization & Chair, NY Building Congress  Fanny Villarreal – Executive Director, YWCA Syracuse Onondaga County  Dennis Walcott – Former NYC School Chancellor  John Waldron – President and COO, Goldman Sachs  Darren Walker – President, Ford Foundation  Peter Ward – President, NY Hotel & Motel Trades Council, AFL-CIO  Nicole Wegman – Senior Vice President, Wegmans  Anthony Welters – Executive Chairman, BlackIvy Group, LLC  Jim Whelan – President, Real Estate Board of New York  Jeff Wilpon – COO, NY Mets  Tren’ness Woods-Black – Sylvia’s Restaurant  Sheena Wright – President & CEO, United Way of New York City  Kathy Wylde – President & CEO, Partnership for NYC  Jo-Ann Yoo – Executive Director, Asian American Federation  Kristine M. Young – President, Orange County Community College  Lourdes Zapata – President & CEO at South Bronx Overall Economic Development Corporation

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COUNTY EXECUTIVE GEORGE LATIMER UPDATE ON CORONA VIRUS AND RECREATION POLICY LOOKING TO SUMMER

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WESTCHESTER COUNTY EXECUTIVE GEORGE LATIMER SPEAKING ON THE CORONAVIRUS SITUATION IN WESTCHESTER YESTERDAY. HE MAJOR CONCENTRATION OF POSITIVE COVID CASES WAS IN YONERS, MOUNT VERNON, NEW ROCHELLE AND NORTHERN PART OF COUNTY. SEE MAP BELOW.
THE WESTCHESTER COUNTY CONFIRMED CORONAVIRUS INFECTIONS BY LOCATION YESTERDAY
MR. LATIMER EXPLAINS HIS THINKING OF HOW THE COUNTY WILL SET RECREATION POLICIES FOR THE SUMMER IN HIS BRIEFING MONDAY
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GOVERNOR CUOMO WHAT UPSTATE NY COUNTIES HAVE TO BE DOING NOW TO PREPARE FOR “REOPENING.”

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THE RED ROOM TODAY: COMPLETE GOVERNOR CUOMO NEWS BRIEFING (Albany Feed)

“FLAT IS NOT GREAT. WE DON’T WANT TO SEE FLAT,” GOVERNOR REPORTS. 1,000 NEW HOSPITALIZATIONS SUNDAY.

15.1% HAVE TESTED POSITIVE FOR HAVING CORONA VIRUS IN WESTCHESTER-ROCKLAND IN ANTI-BODY TEST.

CORPORATIONS STEP UP TO BUY MILK AND TURN IT INTO YOGURT, CHEESE, FOR NEW YORK FOOD BANKS. HUNGER PROBLEM SOARING IN STATE. 200% increase in food bank demand in Westchester.

WPCNR MONDAY GOVERNOR ANDREW CUOMO BRIEFING.  By John F. Bailey. April 27, 2020:

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo reported the number of new Hospitalizations for Corona Virus was flat on Sunday, staying at 1,000 new hospitalizations a day. There were 337 deaths reported Sunday from the disease, in the news conference, he pointed out the number of deaths in New York City had been held to  ½% of the New York City population. He said the daily death rate “continued still tragically high.”

The Governor reported the second week of results of the ongoing anti-bodies survey,on 7,500 people tested at random that showed the percentage of persons by New York region who have had the coronavirus. 14.9% have tested positive in the 7,500 sampled across state the last two weeks. Here is the breakdown for the New York metropolitan area for percentage of persons with coronavirus antibodies:

Long Island-14% positive

New York City-24.7% positive

Westchester-Rockland- 15.1% positive

Rest of the State: 3.2%

He noted the Latino population has the most corona virus cases 10% higher, and he wants to find out why.

He outlined what upstate Counties hoping to be cleared for opening should be doing now: developing policies in the following areas.

  1. Confirming they had fit the CDC standards for Reopening.
  2. Businesses (construction and manufacturing) they would reopen.
  3. Business practices the businesses selected would put in place to maintain social distancing, work practices, policies to avoid spread of the coronavirus
  4. Analysis of hospital capacity to handle increase in coronavirus cases
  5. Testing program: For the Disease, Auto-Body Testing.
  6. Tracing contacts of new coronavirus cases
  7. Isolation policies of new coronavirus cases.
  8. How they plan to bring back schools, transportation and introduce testing in those places
  9. Stage no large scale “nuisance” attractions (that would attract people coming into the area.
  10. Establish a Rapid Control Room to monitor the “Dials” of leading daily statistics the state uses to be aware of the disease progress. This “Control Room” would have to be a board of professionals “where everybody agrees on the numbers.”
  11. Finally the county plans would have to “fit in with the state standards,” and meet the state approval.

The governor announced the state had a very serious hunger problem, and that he was devoting $25 Million to store up food banks. He announced that  Cabrel and Chobani and three other organizations were going to purchase excess milk from New York farmers who have been dumping milk because they could not sell it. The rescued milk would be turned into milk products such as yogurt , sour cream, cheese and distributed to food banks. He requested philanthropies to help.

In the news release just out, he says, ” 200 percent increase in Westchester, 100 percent increase New York City, 40 percent on Long Island, 40 to 60 percent across Upstate New York. So we’re going to commit $25 million for emergency funding for those food banks. I’m also asking philanthropies to help.”

He said that testing would be extended to 1,000 firefighters and 1,000 police  in various counties.: “We’re going to be doing a survey of New York City fire department and New York City police department. This week, 1,000 and 1,000 respectively, just to find out again with the antibody testing, what is the infection rate. NYPD was out there every day and they paid a terrible toll. The attendance rate is now good again, many were out sick.

But we want to know exactly where those frontline workers are, if they have been infected, we want to make sure people are getting help and we want to know exactly what happened.

We’ll also be doing 3,000 healthcare workers, these are hospital staff, nursing staff, doctors who are in the emergency rooms, to find out their situation. And we’ll be doing 1,000 transit workers. These are the bus drivers, the train operators, who keep the public transit system working and we want to do testing to find out how they’re doing. “

The Governor said he was going to  discuss with Westchester County Executive George Latimer  the possibility of keeping the Westchester County Center extra beds available in the fall to fight a possible flu outbreak in the autumn or a return of the coronavirus.  The Governor said he would discuss keeping the Javitts Center open for use as a hospital backup facility for the same reason.

In closing his daily report, Governor Cuomo thanked Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear:

Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear stood up, said to his senior senator in the state, Mitch McConnell that Mitch McConnell was wrong on saying he wouldn’t provide funding to state and local governments and wrong in saying states should go bankrupt.

It is hard for a governor, especially Andy, who is a relatively new governor, to stand up to a senior official and speak truth to power. That is hard. Takes guts. Takes courage. And you don’t get that from a typical politician. So, it warms my heart to see an elected official who is not a typical politician. Thank you, Governor.”

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ABSENTEE BALLOTS ARRIVE FOR NOW CANCELLED PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY ABSENTEE BALLOTS FOR CONGRESSIONAL, ASSEMBLY PRIMARIES STILL SCHEDULED ON THE WAY BY END OF MAY. PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY CANCELLED BY STATE BOARD OF ELECTIONS

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2020. From the Westchester County Board of Elections./ New York State Board of Elections UPDATED April 28, 2020:

The New York State Board of Elections cancelled the Democratic Presidential Primary in New York June 23 yesterday.

The Democratic Primaries for the 17th Congressional District and 93rd Assembly District will be held as scheduled.

The Westchester County Board of Elections advised WPCNR this morning that absentee ballots for the Presidential Primary June 23, and the 93rd NYS Assembly District (covering Scarsdale, White Plains, Harrison, Lewisboro, Bedford) now held by David Buchwald and the 17th Congressional District currently held by retiring Nita Lowey, will be mailed separately.

The Presidential primary ballot arrived over the weekend, and persons who have applied for the Assembly and Congressional primaries in June will receive their absentee ballots in late May.

Applications for absentee ballots are on the way to eligible voters from New York State by direction of Governor Andrew Cuomo, or you can request the applications for the assembly and congressional primary ballots by telephoning the Westchester County Board of Elections 914-995-2000 and pressing prompt 3 for absentee information, and request an application for an absentee ballot. Or you may write Absentee Ballot, Westchester County Board of Elections, 148 Martine Avenue, White Plains NY 10601

Benjamin Boykin, Chair of the Westchester County Board of Legislators advised of what you can expect from the State of New York mailing on the way:


On Friday, Governor Andrew Cuomo issued an Executive Order requiring the New York State Board of Elections to automatically mail all registered voters in New York a postage-paid application for an absentee ballot for the June 23 primary election.

Earlier in the month, the Governor had issued an Executive Order allowing all New Yorkers to vote by absentee ballot in the primary.

What voters will be mailed is an application for the absentee ballot, not the ballot itself.

The application will need to be filled out and returned in order for a ballot to be mailed to voters. Voters requesting the absentee ballot because they are affected by the COVID-19 pandemic or concern about contracting the virus should check the box for “Temporary illness.”

Voters may also download applications and return them to the Westchester County Board of Elections by mail, fax, e-mail or in person. Instructions can be found at https://citizenparticipation.westchestergov.com/voting/absentee-ballots

Please forward this e-news to family and friends who may be interested in this inf

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GOVERNOR CUOMO: ALL NUMBERS DOWN. “RELATIVELY GOOD. DESCENT OF CURVE CONTINUES. 14 STRAIGHT DAYS OF HOSPITALIZATION RATE DECLINES KEY TO REOPENING. DETAILED SCENARIO INDICATES LATE MAY FOR UPSTATE COUNTIES LATE JUNE EARLY JULY FOR NY METRO AREA.

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GOVERNOR ANDREW CUOMO COMPLETE BRIEFING: RECOVERY OF NY IS UP TO OUR BEHAVIOR. AFTER MAY 15 IF TREND CONTINUES UPSTATE COUNTIES OPEN FIRST — DETAILS INTRICACY OF NY METRO AREA OPENING. NO DECISION ON SCHOOLS YET. (Albany Feed)
THE REPORTERS’ Q & A.

WPCNR SUNDAY GOVERNOR ANDREW CUOMO CORONAVIRUS BRIEFING. By John F. Bailey, April 26, 2020 UPDATED 5:33 P.M. EDT:

The Hospitalization Rate declined to 1,000 new hospitalizations Saturday, Governor Andrew Cuomo said ALONG with all other key coronavirus statistics in the state. “To put it in focus, we had 367 deaths Saturday, which is horrific.”

The Curve of infections across the state declined to the level of March 1st, he said (when the New York spread of the disease began its rapid rise), hospitalizations declined, patients put on incubation were negative. The Governor said the current requirement to stay at home and closings statewide was in effect until May 15.

At that time, if Hospitalization Rate had been declining for 14 days, he said the state would begin the process oF reopening which would be begin with construction and manufacturing businesses  in yet-to-be-selected upstate counties with the lowest infection rates in the northern tier, North Country or central NY regions. He did not name how many counties could open, or when the openings might start.

The News Release from the Governor’s press office added this detail:

  • Phase one will include opening construction and manufacturing functions with low risk.
  • Phase two will open certain industries based on priority and risk level. Businesses considered “more essential” with inherent low risks of infection in the workplace and to customers will be prioritized, followed by other businesses considered “less essential” or those that present a higher risk of infection spread. As the infection rate declines, the pace of reopening businesses will be increased.
  • The region must not open attractions or businesses that would draw a large number of visitors from outside the local area.
  • There will be two weeks in between each phase to monitor the effects of the re-opening and ensure hospitalization and infection rates are not increasing.
  • This plan will be implemented with multi-state coordination, especially in downstate New York. The plan will also coordinate the opening of transportation systems, parks, schools, beaches and businesses with special attention on summer activities for downstate, public housing and low-income communities, food banks and child care.
  • The phased re-opening will also be based on individual business and industry plans that include new measures to protect employees and consumers, make the physical work space safer and implement processes that lower risk of infection in the business. The state is consulting with local leaders in each region and industry to formulate these plans.”

 The counties SELECTED FOR OPENING would be monitored for two weeks to see if the spread of the virus which the governor said would likely happen, but the infection rate would have to contained below the one person infecting 1.2 other person ration, because that very slight increase would cause an outbreak. Currently the downstate New York Metropolitan area has a 1 person with the virus infecting .8 of a person contrasted to the upstate average of .9 a person, the governor said, reviewing the ways spread is increased.

The Governor did not say what would be done if there was an outbreak in infected counties. After the upstate counties selected for opening performance was evaluated there would be more analysis of the highly vulnerable downstate New York Metropolitan area.

This could possibly mean a Westchester-New York City-Nassau-Suffolk Openings in mid to late June, (but the Governor did not give a possible date, that is purely made by WPCNR looking at the calendar.) The Governor also noted that large events attracting many people would have to be curtailed, distanced or continue to be not allowed to avoid spiking an outbreak, but those big festivals are part of the analysis of all factors in the NY Metro area opening.

On the issue of Schools reopening, the governor said many districts are contemplating summer school to make up for lost time in their districts.  The Governor alluded to the computer learning at home as very innovative, that was used to keep learning going, but summer is being considered by districts. He said there had not been a decision on when schools would be reopened, or when school budgets might be voted on or how. 

He went into these details on how the New York Metropolitan area would reopen: Businesses would be allowed to open first on a city need basis and the businesses’ abilities to redesign work spaces, schedules and technology use to maintain safe social distancing within the firms. Last businesses to open would be hospitality, restaurants and hotels, because they presented the most problems with spreading the diseases. All businesses opening would have to submit a plan how redesigning, reimaging how their workers will work in a reimagined environment to keep coronavirus from flaring up again.

He told the story of the L train tunnel that opens tomorrow in Manhattan, and how that was built in less than 15 months because New York did it differently.

 Governor Andrew M. Cuomo announced that the innovative L tunnel project is complete – six months earlier than the original proposal that would have shut down service, and three months ahead of the new innovative plan announced in January 2019, after the Governor convened a panel of engineering experts who determined a disruptive total shutdown was unnecessary. Completion came through under budget, saving more than $100 million in project costs. Beginning Monday, April 27, L train service will resume its previous service schedules with adjustments under the MTA Essential Service Plan. 

The governor said he had no problem with professional sports teams playing a season if there were no fans in the stands. He suggested they work out a way to earn revenue without ticket sales to fans (no spectators in the stands) make a deal with players to lower their contracts, and receive payments presumably from media fees for the games He said he had talked to sports owners about this possibility and declined to name them.

He said he was looking into acquiring dairy products now being disposed of by NY farmers, which he said was because schools had stopped purchasing dairy for their food programs ( because schools are closed). Governor Cuomo is seeking to have the product now being destroyed being purchased by the state for food progrms across the state to bolster the food programs now helping feed families in need due to the coronoavirus chaos.

He observed the anxiety of the public and the need to deal with the “coronavirus toxicity” toll on New York lives. He said domestic violence was up statewide, and employment issues, bills due, taking care of children, lack of ability to socialize has created tremendous personal problems which would have to be dealt with by the services sector and charitable organizations and professionals.

He said as reopening comes, it is up to how New Yorkers behave that will determine whether reopening is successful and the virus does not return.

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HOSPITALIZATIONS “SLIPPED DOWN” TO 1,100. GOVERNOR HOPES THEY WILL DECLINE TO 400-500.

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GOVERNOR CUOMO’S SATURDAY BRIEFING ON THE CORONA VIRUS TODAY (Albany Feed)

5,000 PHARMACIES CLEARED TO DO COLLECT TESTS OF HOSPITAL WORKERS, ESSENTIAL WORKERS, LABS WILL EVALUATE TESTS.

WPCNR SATURDAY GOVERNOR ANDREW CUOMO CORONAVIRUS BRIEFING. By John F. Bailey. April 25, 2020:

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo in his daily briefing, reported the number of new hospitalizations Friday declined to 1,100, which he described as “slipping down, relatively good news.”

In the news conference, he said he hoped to see it get down to 500 to 400 hospitalizations a day. Wednesday, Governor Cuomo said he hoped the flat new hospitalization rate this week, averaging 1,300 a day, would go down to a manageable level “to where we can control it.”

The governor said today all other trending of the coronavirus treatments continued on the way down and the curve was continuing its downward trend of new cases. He announced he was expanding testing significantly to essential workers, hospital workers most involved at four public hospitals taking the most covid-19 cases would be first to be tested, followed by Transit, Police, Firefighters, then essential public workers as previously described.

TODAY’S NEWS CONFERENCE IN ALBANY IN THE RED ROOM

Asked in the news conference if any reopening planned was going to be a staged opening of a series of manufacturing first, the Governor referred the reporter back to his previously announced, specific phasing sequence of the New York Reopening. The plan in forsees the first organizations to be opened would be evaluated on their ability to control the workplace environment to avoid igniting  a new spread of the disease. Openings of the most covid-secure environments to the least Covid-Secure and how those businesses and organizations with more potential to spread coronavirus in present modes could be made to be more coivid-secure.

Dr. Marcus and Dr. Zimmerman who appear with the Governor on the briefing panel said that they had no demographic profiles of persons requiring hospitalization that have been admitted to hospitals, because that demograhical information comes later. The governor pointed out that the patient would have no idea where they contracted the virus either.

Melissa DeRosa, Secretary to the Governor said the 7 states (New Jersey, NY, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Delaware, Pennsylvania and Massachussetts) were creating unique reopening plans for their states, and coordinating them with each of the other states so as not to create openings that worked for both their unique states without afflicting other states’ opening negatively. Governor Andrew Cuomo said that his task force on designing the rolling reopening he introduced Tuesday, was coordinating with upstate counties hammering out how that would work.

The governor dealt with the lament of persons who have told the Governor “I Can’t take this anymore.” The Governor said he “got that,” but urged persons tired of the 6 weeks of staying in their homes, limiting congregating and maintaining social distance, no school, no work, no paychecks, that their actions have saved lives through their 56 days of sacrifice, which he said is a small price to pay to save lives.

His last words to the reporters today, “Wear masks.”

Finally, the Governor confirmed 10,553 additional cases of novel coronavirus, bringing the statewide total to 282,143 confirmed cases in New York State. Of the 282,143 total individuals who tested positive for the virus, the geographic breakdown is as follow (With NY Metropolitan Counties Highlighted in BOLDFACE):

CountyTotal PositiveNew Positive
Albany89994
Allegany354
Broome25119
Cattaraugus456
Cayuga478
Chautauqua270
Chemung10324
Chenango917
Clinton541
Columbia14011
Cortland283
Delaware587
Dutchess2,660143
Erie2,773170
Essex242
Franklin141
Fulton6132
Genesee14114
Greene10717
Hamilton30
Herkimer560
Jefferson591
Lewis90
Livingston5814
Madison12115
Monroe1,28586
Montgomery467
Nassau33,7981,033
Niagara34412
NYC155,1134,640
Oneida36441
Onondaga66425
Ontario829
Orange7,973818
Orleans7515
Oswego576
Otsego6010
Putnam885266
Rensselaer22123
Rockland11,0911,000
Saratoga32042
Schenectady431134
Schoharie3312
Schuyler70
Seneca3618
St. Lawrence15612
Steuben20433
Suffolk31,368762
Sullivan68961
Tioga7131
Tompkins1265
Ulster1,166190
Warren13210
Washington11330
Wayne6512
Westchester27,231598
Wyoming5714
Yates165
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