May 11, 2020.
Dear
Daniel,
Today
we enter a new phase of our battle against COVID-19. When we turn to
reopening our state we will rely on data, science and metrics to guide
us — as we have done all along. We will take a regional approach to
reopening and will rely on seven core metrics to inform when a region
is ready. The metrics require the infection, death and hospital rates
meet specific standards, that the hospital capacity is there if needed
and that testing and tracing are in place. (See the full criteria here.)
To
keep everyone up to date on where things stand by region we launched a
new regional
monitoring dashboard that will be updated daily. Additionally, our NY
Forward Reopening Plan, a clear and complete guide to reopening,
offers a detailed look at the path forward. Together we flattened the
curve and as we move into this next phase the same smart resolve,
coupled with our commitment to each other, will get New York through.
Photo of the Day: The cover of the NY
Forward book. Read it here.
Here's what else you need to know tonight:
1. The Finger Lakes, Southern Tier and
Mohawk Valley regions are ready to begin reopening on May 15th. The
regions have met all seven metrics required to begin phase one of the
reopening plan. Phase one includes reopening construction,
manufacturing, retail for curbside pickup, agriculture, forestry and
fishing.
2.
New York will reopen
certain low-risk business and recreational activities statewide on May
15th. This includes landscaping and gardening,
low-risk outdoor recreational activities (like tennis) and drive-in
movie theaters.
3. Regional "control rooms" have
been announced to monitor key data during the reopening process. The
groups will track the hospitalization rate, death rate, number of new
hospitalizations, hospital bed capacity, ICU bed capacity, testing and
contact tracing within its region. They will alert the state if any
metrics go in the wrong direction — serving as a kind of control valve
that will allow us to get people back to work and ease social isolation
without triggering renewed spread of the virus or overwhelming the
hospital system.
4. The number of total COVID
hospitalizations are dropping steadily. Total
hospitalizations fell to 7,226, from 7,262 the day before. The number
of new COVID hospitalizations dropped to 477, down from 521 the day
before. We are now at about the level we were when "New York on
PAUSE" when into effect.
Tonight's "Deep Breath Moment": Last week, Northwell Health discharged
their 10,000th recovered COVID patient. The Northwell system, one of
the largest in the state, has cared for nearly 13,000 COVID patients in
Long Island, New York City and Westchester hospitals since the
beginning of the pandemic.
If you were forwarded this email, you can subscribe
to New York State's Coronavirus Updates here.
Ever
Upward,
Governor
Andrew M. Cuomo
|
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire