Press Release: Amid Ongoing COVID-19 Pandemic, Governor Cuomo Outlines Additional Guidelines for When Regions Can Re-Open
State Will Monitor Four Core Factors to Determine if a Region Can Re-Open: Number of New Infections, Health Care Capacity, Diagnostic Testing Capacity and Contact Tracing Capacity
Outlines New Safety Precautions Each Business Must Put in Place Upon Re-Opening
More Than One Million New Yorkers Have Been Tested for COVID-19 to Date
New York's National Guard Has Made Nearly 300,000 Testing Kits to Collect Samples
Announces Special Enrollment through the Marketplace will Remain Open Through June 15, 2020
Confirms 2,538 Additional Coronavirus Cases in New York State - Bringing Statewide Total to 318,953; New Cases in 45 Counties
Amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today outlined additional guidelines for when regions can re-open. The state will monitor four core factors to determine if a region can re-open:
- 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 Capacity: Every 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 also outlined which industries and businesses can open in each phase of the state's re-opening plan. 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. Regions must not open attractions or businesses that would draw a large number of visitors from outside the local area.
The Governor also outlined new safety precautions that each business must put in place upon re-opening to help lower the risk of spreading the virus. Businesses will be required to:
- Adjust workplace hours and shift design as necessary to reduce density in the workplace;
- Enact social distancing protocols;
- Restrict non-essential travel for employees;
- Require all employees and customers to wear masks if in frequent contact with others;
- Implement strict cleaning and sanitation standards;
- Enact a continuous health screening process for individuals to enter the workplace;
- Continue tracing, tracking and reporting of cases; and
- Develop liability processes.
The Governor also announced that more than one million New Yorkers have already been tested for COVID-19 to date.
The Governor also announced New York's National Guard has made nearly 300,000 testing kits to collect samples, 60,000 of which are being sent to labs and hospitals across New York State.
The Governor also announced the special enrollment period through the NY State of Health Health Plan Marketplace will remain open through June 15, 2020.
"While we continue to reduce the spread of the COVID-19 virus, we can begin to focus on re-opening, but we have to be careful and use the information we've learned so we don't erase the strides we've already made," Governor Cuomo said. "Re-opening is not going to happen statewide all at once - New York has diverse regions and those regions have different circumstances, so rather than wait for the whole state to be ready to re-open we are going to analyze the situation on a regional basis. We will measure whether a region can re-open based on four factors - the number of new infections, health care capacity, diagnostic testing and contact tracing - and we will continue to monitor these factors throughout the re-opening process to prevent a second wave of the virus and protect the health and safety New Yorkers."
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:
County
Total Positive
New Positive
Albany
1,287
29
Allegany
35
0
Broome
334
7
Cattaraugus
53
0
Cayuga
51
0
Chautauqua
37
1
Chemung
126
1
Chenango
100
1
Clinton
68
2
Columbia
213
4
Cortland
28
0
Delaware
62
1
Dutchess
3,131
45
Erie
3,802
92
Essex
29
0
Franklin
16
1
Fulton
84
2
Genesee
159
4
Greene
154
3
Hamilton
3
0
Herkimer
63
1
Jefferson
63
1
Lewis
9
0
Livingston
85
2
Madison
217
66
Monroe
1595
29
Montgomery
56
0
Nassau
36,965
185
Niagara
493
19
NYC
175,651
1,320
Oneida
550
61
Onondaga
971
19
Ontario
96
1
Orange
9,015
48
Orleans
97
0
Oswego
67
1
Otsego
67
0
Putnam
1,026
13
Rensselaer
337
15
Rockland
12,095
70
Saratoga
367
4
Schenectady
535
8
Schoharie
45
0
Schuyler
7
0
Seneca
45
0
St. Lawrence
178
1
Steuben
219
1
Suffolk
35,077
222
Sullivan
976
25
Tioga
90
0
Tompkins
129
0
Ulster
1,354
13
Warren
192
4
Washington
188
2
Wayne
76
1
Westchester
30,097
213
Wyoming
69
0
Yates
19
0