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HOSPITALIZATIONS SLOWED BY SOCIAL DISTANCING GOVERNOR CUOMO REPORTS. WESTCHESTER NEW CASES SLOWING. GOVERNOR SAYS 4,000 VENTILATORS COMING FROM FEMA. CAN RAMP UP TO 14,000 ICU BEDS AS NEEDED. DISCUSSING MORE “ROLLING DEPLOYMENT” OF VENTILATORS WITH WHITE HOUSE.THANKS MEDICAL PROFESSIONAL VOLUNTEERS COMMITTED TO SERVE PRO BONO FOR BACKUP.HOSPITALS HAVE SUPPLIES THEY NEED AT THIS TIME. GOVERNOR CALLS COMPROMISE BILL A “TERRIBLE” BILL FOR NY STATE: NY AID CUT $17 BILLION to $3.8 Billion.WILL FIGHT FOR MORE . SAYS WITHOUT MORE FED $$ AID HE HAS NO IDEA ON HOW HE CAN FIX THE BUDGET SEES $10 TO $15 BILLION SHORTFALL IN STATE REVENUES.
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WPCNR ALBANY ROUNDS. March 25, 2020: In his daily Coronavirus Briefing completed 45 minutes ago a refreshed Governor reported the rate of hospitalizations rate in New York has slowed from doubling every 2 days to doubling every 5 days based on case monitoring over the last 4 days. This is significant, the governor said because it buys time, preventing the overwhelming of hospital facilities. Manual pdf

He reported hospital supplies have arrived and currently hospitals are in good shape, except for ventilators, which the governor said he is working with The White House to convince them to adopt a “rolling deployment” of the ventilators the nation has. He also pledged doctors and personnel from New York will go to other states to help as their coronavirus impact ramps up.
The Governor said a social distancing plan in New York City, was agreed to by Mayor DeBlasio and the City Council that will close select New York city streets to vehicular traffic opening them to pedestrians to space them out and warned that city playgrounds would be closed if organized sports, especially basketball were played.
He called the Senate Compromise Coronavirus Relief bill “a terrible for New York,” because the Senate cut New York aid from $17 Billion to $3.8 Billion. This would face New York with approximately a $30 Billion budget deficit (by WPCNR count) based on a present revenue loss of $15 Billion and a relief aid loss of $17 Billion that was to have been used to pay for the costs of fighting the virus.
Associated Press: $2 Trillion Coronavirus Relief Deal Reached. More Negotiations Today. Passage Expected Today
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WPCNR CORONAVIRUS UPDATE. Synopsis of Associated Press Report. March 25, 2020: The Associated Press reports that the Senate and White House have reached an agreement on a Coronavirus relief package expanding direct cash aid to displaced workers across the country, including $500 Billion aid to businesses, including hospitals with oversight.
President Trump is reported as not willing to force businesses to manufacture much needed ventilators and other medical supplies at this time and that he prefers lifting the social distancing policy in a week to get the economy moving.
However despite the announcement of a deal, there are still details to be haggled over today with a vote scheduled today. Then the President has to sign the bill.
The AP report may be read here:
Mayor of White Plains Brief Message Salutes the Cashiers, Clerks, Stock People Helping to Keep City Supplied in View of the Somber Future to Come
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WPCNR CORONAVIRUS REPORT. From the Mayor’s Office. March 24, 2020 8:15 PM:
Mayor Thomas Roach reported that there were 3, 891 Coronaviruses cases in Westchester County tonight, 997 of which were new.
He said there were 67 cases of coronavirus in White Plains, 12 of which are new. He thanked the clerks and emplouess continuing to serve in city markets for their heoric service.
25,665 NY CORNAVIRUS CASES. UP 4,790, DOUBLES EVERY 3 DAYS. GOVERNOR: “APEX” IN 2-3 WEEKS. “I WANT ACTION. WHERE ARE THE VENTILATORS.” DETAILS HOW GOVERNMENT CAN COVER THE NATION ON A PRIORITY BASIS IN 3-PART PLAN.
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In the clip below, the Governor details the Ventilator Gap.”
AT THE CLOSE OF THE “Q&A” SESSION WITH REPORTERS HE EXPLAINED THAT COMPANIES HAVE TOLD HIM THEY WOULD MAKE VENTILATORS BUT THEY NEED “CAPITAL” TO RETROFIT THEIR PLANTS TO MAKE THE VENTILATORS.
CUOMO EMPHASIZED “THE TIME IS NOW” FOR WASHINGTON D.C. TO PICK THE COMPANIES, FURNISH THE CAPITAL AND GET THEM PRODUCING FOR ALL THE NATION NOT JUST NEW YORK. CUOMO ALSO PROMISED TO SEND NY DOCTORS AND NURSES TO OTHER STATES TO HELP THEIR GROWING CORONAVIRUS INFECTION RATE.
GOVERNOR CUOMO AT MIDNIGHT: 3 WEEKS UNTIL “THE WAVE HITS.” VENTILATORS MAY BE SPLIT TO PROVIDE THE VENTILATORS THAT ARE NOT HERE YET. RESTARTING THE ECONOMY HAS TO BE THOUGHT OUT.
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WPCNR CORONAVIRUS REPORT. From the Governor Cuomo Press Office. March 24, 2020 8:35 A.M. EDT: Last night, Governor Andrew M. Cuomo was a guest on CNN’s Cuomo Prime Time to discuss New York’s plan to combat the novel coronavirus crisis. Here is an edited version of the program.
AUDIO is available here.
A rush transcript of the Governor’s interview is available below:
Chris Cuomo: What was your reaction to what the President said about I’m not looking at months, I’m not going to let the elephant jump off the ledge because of a cat, or whatever he said. We’re looking to open back up – surprised?
Governor Cuomo: I’m not surprised. The President is very concerned about the economy. The economy was doing well – the economy is now truly suffering. The consequences haven’t even been felt yet because not only have you stopped the revenue machine – you’ve increased the expense machine, okay?
So those two things are going to compound each other. So the President is very eager to get back to the economy. Everybody agrees this is an unsustainable situation. You can’t keep spending money and close down the economy and the President is eager to get it opened as quickly as possible.
I actually have a group that is working on the restart of the economy because I get it, too.
This is New York and we’re with the home of so much of this. So coming up with the plan to restart the economy is very important.
But this, you don’t want to – it’s a false choice to say public health or restart the economy.
Nobody’s going to make that choice, and by the way, if you have to make that choice, it’s public health. Because you cannot put a value on a human life. Nobody cares how long it takes to get the economy up and running if you actually saved lives.
But, Christopher, there is an art form here which is overlaying a public health strategy and an economic strategy.
In other words, what we did is, we just closed everything down as quickly as we could. Shut all the doors, border all the windows. There was no art to what we did, no nuance. Is there a public health strategy that says, “Look, you can start to bring young people back to work. You can start to test and find out who had the virus and who resolved from the virus, and they can start to go back to work.”
That’s how we’ll restart the economy with a smart public health strategy, because closing the door on everyone was only because we didn’t know better, right?
If you now look at it, it didn’t make any sense to close the schools, send my kids home with me or older people, or with grandmothers who were vulnerable to this virus. And young people were then maybe bringing it into the house.
We didn’t have any data or science to instruct us. But now you can come up with a smarter public health strategy that actually protects older people, lets younger people get back to work, and that can start the economic recovery. But it has to be that smart. It can’t be reactive. It can’t be emotional.
Chris Cuomo: This is the part I don’t get. From watching the coverage of what’s going on in the state, the rate of hospitalizations seems to be increasing, it seems like you’re just starting to feel what this enemy, what this war is really about. So how can people make sense and reconcile these two things, we’re getting close to figuring out how to open things back up at a time when it seems to be getting worse, and the idea that a month from today we may have the worst part of the capacity crisis and the president is saying he’s going to reopen things in a week or so? it doesn’t seem like those can go together.
Governor Cuomo: Yeah well, the so-called walk and chew gum. Do we have to think about restarting the economy? Do we have to plan for it? Yes.
Should we be thinking about a public health strategy that starts the economy? That to me is the art form for government in this situation. But what we’re looking at right now is this wave of increasing cases.
I just got off the phone (approximately 9:15 PM)with a new projection model that New York City was seeing double the number of cases every two and a half days, that can take your breath away. That curve they keep talking about, that we have to flatten the curve, flatten the curve, that’s not a curve, Christopher.
That is a wave. That is a tsunami. That’s the scene in The Perfect Storm where George Clooney is trying to go up the wave and he gives the boat all the gas he can to try to get over the top of the wave, and the wave crashes over him. The wave is going to crash over our health care system. It will crash anywhere from 10 days to three weeks.
Chris Cuomo: From now?
Governor Cuomo: It is going to overwhelm the health care system and where we’re going to feel it most, we can scramble and create beds. We’ll have a staff problem because staff are getting sick, and we’re doing everything we can to find reserve staff.
We won’t have the equipment, and we won’t have the ventilators. I have been saying for weeks, we need 30,000 ventilators. I’ve been saying it publicly,
I’ve been requesting it from the federal agencies, HHS, Secretary Azar sent 500 ventilators, we need 30,000 ventilators. If you don’t have the ventilator, a person who needs the ventilator will die without the ventilator. It’s a respiratory disease. And we’re not getting the ventilators. I’ve been saying, institute the darn Federal Procurement Act –
Chris Cuomo: So why do you think he doesn’t do it?
Governor Cuomo: Command companies to produce –
Chris Cuomo: Why wouldn’t he do it?
Governor Cuomo: Their theory is, companies are voluntarily saying I want to help, I want to help, I want to increase production. General Motors is saying, I’ll get into the ventilator business, that’s all well and fine and it is a nice thing, corporations are doing great things.
But you can’t, you can’t manage an operation on this ad-hoc basis of people saying, yeah I’m really going to give it a go. Order the ventilators, pay for the ventilators, say this is how much I need, this is where I have to go—
Chris Cuomo: Why wouldn’t he do it?
Governor Cuomo: Because their theory of operation is public-private partnership. You’ve seen them at press conferences, Peter Navarro, companies are coming forward and saying they’ll do it anyway. We don’t have to order them because they’re doing it. It’s a totally different theory of operating.
Chris Cuomo: We’re back with the Governor of New York, Andrew Cuomo. You talked about ventilators right there at the end of the first block, Governor. They gave us 500, we need tens of thousands. What do you do?
Governor Cuomo: We need 30,000. First what I do is I say to Secretary Azar, look at the first word in the name of the department you run, it’s called health and human services, focus on health. You look at the projections in New York, you look at the hospitalization rate, look at how many people are going to an ICU, how many have to be vented and tell me how we save these lives without the 30,000 ventilators.
Second, we’re trying to buy the ventilators all across the globe, everyone’s competing against everyone else and that’s why the federal government should step up and do it. Third, we’re going to try an untested technology where we split the ventilator tubes. In other words, normally it’s one ventilator to one person. Is there a way to take that ventilator, which is essentially a pump, and split it?
Chris Cuomo: You’re the mechanic, do you have enough power in the pump to split it?
Governor Cuomo: You have enough power in the pump to split it, yes. But can you split that ventilator into two tubes for two patients, three tubes for three patients? They’re trying things like this in Italy. The tricky thing is, the ventilator has a set pressure and normally you regulate the pressure to that patient’s lungs. My lung capacity is better than your lung capacity, so the ventilator would have to give me more oxygen than it would have to give you. How do you put two people on that same ventilator? So we’re working through that. But this is a real stretch, Chris, because you don’t have the number of ventilators.
Chris Cuomo: Drug therapies, the president seems to have faith in them. They’re all over the internet, the antimalarial drug, that people are getting better, even in this country. You put any stock in any of that at this point?
Governor Cuomo: I put hope. We have three drugs we’re looking at. The hydroxychloroquine that the President it talking about – that comes in tomorrow (today). We’re going to start that right away in the New York City hospitals – the President expedited the FDA approval.
We have a second drug that New York State is working on developing, that actually tests the plasma of people who had the virus, extracts the antibodies and injects those antibodies into someone who’s dealing with the virus.
And the third drug is testing the blood to see if you had the virus and have the antibodies and have resolved, that would let you know you had it, you’re immune by most probability and you can go back to work.
Chris Cuomo: So there’s hope, but again that all takes time, and there’s empiricism in that and testing and protocols – Tony Fauci has talked about that. I would actually like to take a turn on that quickly. What is this straight talk on what it’s like working with the White House right now. I’ve heard you be deferential to the White House and say, look, we’re trying it, we’re doing it. It seems like your needs are not decreasing, at the kind of rate you need them to deal with a tsunami. What is the reality of dealing with the White House, straight talk?
Governor Cuomo: Yeah, I always do straight talk, and I would disagree with your use of the word deferential, but it’s your show. I’ve been clear with the White House. I have an immediate problem on the equipment for this wave that is happens – PPEs, gowns, masks, most important are the ventilators. And there has been no response. There has been no response.
That’s why I said right here, looking at the camera on your show, to Secretary Azar, he has to be responsible here. Tell me where I get 30,000 ventilators, because, Christopher, people will die who need a ventilator, they will be mostly elderly, they’ll have an underlying illness, that’s true.
But some can be younger like Anderson Cooper’s show showed us, you can have an underlying illness, be recovering from cancer, be younger, you’ll need a ventilator and won’t get it.
We’re trying this splitting mechanism, but we shouldn’t be here. Just order a company to produce the darn ventilators. And when we get to two weeks and you have people in hospitals who are dying because we don’t have ventilators, that’s going to be a national tragedy.
We’ll try all the drugs, I’m trying everything else, we’re working on every level, but if it comes down to having the ventilators, and you have them or you don’t.
Chris Cuomo: What is the day like now? How is it managing a situation like this, I’m not talking emotionally, I’m just saying in terms of the daily activities, what is this like?
Governor Cuomo: Well, this is 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, and look, I’ve been in the federal government, I did disaster work, all across this country, all across the world, we did disaster recovery as you know. I’ve been in this state, handled everything in this state.
The hours don’t matter.
It’s the consequence here, it’s the consequence here, Christopher, the numbers are big. And it’s life and death.
And if they are anywhere close to right on these projections of how quickly these numbers are going to grow, the number of people who we’re going to lose can easily be in the thousands.
And god forbid we say, we could have saved them if we had the right equipment.
That’s what keeps me up at night. And that’s why I’m as strident as I am about these ventilators and the urgency of the ventilators and the equipment.
Because it literally is life and death, you see it coming, it’s two weeks, three weeks, four weeks down the road, but it’s coming, that wave is coming.
Chris Cuomo: What do you say to the people on the, ah, we misjudged it, the numbers aren’t going to be that bad, this was too much preparation.
Governor Cuomo: Yeah, they’re wrong,
they’re going to be wrong, because people will die and the numbers will be inarguable.
Look, I don’t make any political decisions on this. This is all follow the science, follow the numbers, follow the health professionals. You look at those numbers increasing every day, doubling every 2 1/2 days, just look at the trajectory, dot, dot, dot, dot, connect the dots, right? And then you tell me that anyone is over hyping this situation.
Chris Cuomo: Let me ask you something, why do you think New York is getting so much attention right now. People have such a spotlight on you that they’re watching your pressers every day. What do you think it’s about personally?
Governor Cuomo: I think it’s because New York, we have this density, we are the gateway to the world. The disease came here, the disease is growing here faster than anywhere else. So just on the numbers, New York is the epicenter.
Chris Cuomo: what was the right move that you’ve made so far and what was a wrong move you made? What have you learned on your level?
Governor Cuomo: The best decision was closing everything down. which politically may have terrible consequences, but so what, it was the right thing to do. That’s what pop (Mario Cuomo)taught us, you do the right thing, closing everything down was the right decision.
Chris Cuomo: What have you learned in terms of what you could have handled better sooner, because that seems to be the lesson is that states were listening to what was seen from the federal level, what is the lesson for how to prepare for the next wave that you’ll do differently?
Governor Cuomo: Every disaster has its own little hidden trick in it. This one was medical capacity, medical equipment and these ventilators. I did not see, no one saw these ventilators coming, and the urgency of ventilators, how many we have in this country and how many we can make.
So that I don’t think anyone saw. I was watching China, and it was inevitable what was happening in China was going to happen here. There was no theory that their immune systems were different than ours. we started very early on, Christopher, I started very early on, getting ready, preparing, blowing the whistle, blowing the horn, making the case, the ventilators, not having the ventilators and not being able to get the ventilators and the PPE equipment, which the federal government could help us with. That is the greatest frustration in all of this.
Chris Cuomo: Well you got to get it right, because there’s going to be another wave, right? If you look at the models, it goes down and comes back. Not to use 1918 as a go to, but that was the huge miss in that situation. So how do you get to where you need to be, where people don’t live through this a second time the same way?
Governor Cuomo: Yeah, I’m old but I wasn’t here in 1918, but you’re right.
The medical capacity, you know we have a health care system that is basically a private health care system.
They have private economics. They have capacity that they can sell. They don’t build beds as backup beds. They don’t build additional ICU beds for a public health emergency. These are expensive beds, it’s expensive real estate, so they don’t have a backup public health equipment stockpile that’s worth anything, or a backup medical capacity. That has to change. That has to change.
Westmed: Virtual Visits Now in Place
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With the rise of COVID-19 cases in our local area, Westmed is working hard to stop the spread of the virus while ensuring you remain connected with your health care team. We are rescheduling most elective procedures and non-essential office visits at this time, but we do not want that to prevent you from accessing care when you need it. That is why we now have Virtual Visits available for nearly every primary care service and medical specialty that we offer. Keep reading for information on how to get started.
PRIMARY CARE & SPECIALIST VIRTUAL VISITS
Most of the Westmed primary care or specialty physicians are now offering Virtual Visits in order to ensure the continuity of your care during this uncertain time. It’s convenient, safe and helps you stay connected to your care provider when you can’t get into the office.
What Specialties Offer Virtual Visits:
- Primary Care: Internal Medicine, Pediatrics and OB/GYN
- Medical Specialties: Orthopedics, Dermatology, Gastroenterology, Weight Management & Nutrition, Allergy and many more
Here’s How to Get Started:
- Call your Westmed provider’s office, just as you would for an in-person visit, and request a “Virtual Visit” at a date and time that is convenient for you.
- You will receive an email with your appointment date, time and instructions on how to get set up for your Virtual Visit on your mobile device or desktop.
- To save time, you can download the instructions for getting set up with Virtual Visits here.*
*Your provider may use an alternative telehealth platform, like Zoom or Skype, to conduct your visit and will send you appropriate instructions if either of these alternative platforms are to be used for your visit.
Most insurance carriers provide coverage for Virtual Visits, but check with your insurance directly if you have any concerns regarding coverage. If you have questions or concerns about COVID-19, you may consider scheduling a Virtual Visit with your provider to discuss them further.
VIRTUAL URGENT CARE VISITS
You can also access Urgent Care services through an on-demand Virtual Visit. Common conditions we treat through Urgent Care Virtual Visits include:
| • Cold | • Urinary Tract Infections | |
| • Allergies | • Rash | |
| • Sinus Infection | • Minor Cuts & Scrapes |
Westmed is here to help you get through this challenging time. Our goal today and into the future remains keeping you and your family safe and well. Visit our regularly updated Coronavirus (COVID-19) Informationpage and be sure to stay up to date by calling into our Public Health Announcements hotline at (914) 831-4149.
GOVERNOR CUOMO ON COPING WITH THE ISOLATION AHEAD AND ITS UNEXPECTED BENEFITS
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MAYOR THANKS POLICE, DOCTORS, NURSES, FIREFIGHTERS AS “TRUE HEROES” KEEPING SERVICES GOING AND ALL WE ASK IS YOU STAY HOME.WESTCHESTER NUMBERS RISE. WHITE PLAINS CASES, 55.
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WPCNR CORONAVIRUS REPORT. From the Mayor’s Office. March 23, 2020:
In Mayor Tom Roach’s nightly telephone report to White Plains at 6:50 this evening, the Mayor says there are now 2,894 coronavirus-infected patients in Westchester, up 1,021 from yesterday, and 55 coronavirus cases in White Plains. The Mayor said 15,000 have been tested in Westchester and the number of cases of coronavirus positives will continue to grow as tests continue.
He said the County Center was being analyzed by Army Corps of Engineers personnel and on its way to becoming a backup hospital for the county.
He praised employees of police, fire, and city employees who continue to provide services to the city which have not been interrupted. He praised doctors and nurses working around the clock. “They are the true heroes, and all they ask is for you (the residents of the city) to stay home.”
He
“News” Network Calls for Eliminating “Social Distancing” to Save the Economy.
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WPCNR NEWS & COMMENT. By John F. Bailey. March 23, 2020:
Opinions expressed the last two days on a “news ‘network” astound me.
I cannot let this go.
The network in some of their programs promoted the idea that the nation should not “socially distance” themselves to prevent spread of the coronavirus is the single most irresponsible series of statements by a news organization I have ever heard.
It’s poppycock. It’s propaganda. It’s unapologetic sensationalism. It’s dangerous.
The comments made set a new low in ignoring facts and reporting uninformed opinion as intelligent thinking. It’s stupid thinking. It’s Goebbelsesque
The figures on the spread of the coronavirus in New York in Governor Andrew Cuomo’s news conference today betray the mantra that the cure (social distancing) can’t be worse than the disease.
The facts released today by Governor Cuomo show social distancing has limited the death tolls from the disease in New York state, lowered the rate at which persons with the coronavirus have had to be hospitalized in a week. Had the governor not done this at the beginning of last week we’d be more infected by now. More so, hospitals would be jammed with persons wanting to be tested. We’d be in chaos today.
What would the geniuses at this network have done? They’d just criticize Mr. Cuomo for not doing anything.
At last look:
China stopped the spread of the virus in China by exactly social distancing and shutting down the vast area in Wuhan that was the epicenter of the disease. So did South Korea.
For a national “news” organization to say social distancing should be stopped to save the economy, with thousands returning to their homes from spring break. With teachers afraid to teach. Does Fox want to open the nation’s schools? The lack of thinking on this network is breathtaking.
In New York, the Governor’s distancing request has worked in Westchester County if we suspended it now, New York City would let everyone back out on the streets, open traffic, open theatres movies, and the exponentially fierce spread of this disease would rally. Had the governor not invoked social distancing, closing businesses, New York would be in worse condition than it is right now.
Every school of journalism, every other news organization in the country should condemn this behavior by this charade of a news organization. They have every right to broadcast it.
But they have to, at long last look at the facts, instead of following their tradition that the facts are wrong.
Corporations who advertise on this “news” network that sponsor the programs where this poppycock was spewed out, should pull their ads.
Taking away money is the only message media corporate barons in their carpeted crags in concrete canyons feasting on gullible citizens who believe them, understand. Oh they understand that, all right.
Governors trying to save the citizens of their states should condemn this reckless highly partisan sabotage of progressive response. Struggling to get people to social distance, not congregate in groups, and not touch, should condemn this as a group. Will they?
Commentators and news anchors with any sense of what is right should report on this propaganda gaffe, no, outrage! Passing for responsible editorializing.
I compare this Mickey Mouse commentary put forth, to the vast members of the liberal press in the 1930s opposing America’s entry into World War II, who ignored the anti-semitism in Germany, and the State Department that ignored warnings of Adolf Hitler’s plans for the Jews. Only Walter Winchell wrote consistently about this threat.
Perhaps Fox would like to run video of hospitals jammed with patients, strong young people dying because they played basketball in parks, schools without teachers because children they teach carried the coronavirus to school.
Perhaps they might show how really awful getting coronavirus is like this video from the woman in England who put this out on her facebook page.
It is an irresponsible act by that network that if listened to and taken even the least seriously is seditious, “incitement of resistance to or insurrection against lawful authority.”
The corona virus is headed across the country if social distancing is not followed. The highly paid talking heads can’t see that on the stories they carry from around the world: Italy, Iran, France, England, Spain? Please.
Of course let the persons who made these comments throw away their masks, hug colleagues go to parties and conventions. I want to see that if social distancing is lifted by the President. The very least is he should give states the choice on the policy. A Pontius Pilate decision.
That network has done a seriously stupid thing.
President Trump, do not listen to them, they know not what they say.