Scenes of merrymakers gathering outside bars prompted the governor
of New York, the state hardest hit along with New Jersey by the
coronavirus pandemic, to urge local officials and businesses on
Monday to strictly enforce reopening guidelines.
"To the local governments I say, 'Do your job,'" Governor Andrew
Cuomo told reporters. Over the weekend he criticized New York City
street crowds outside bars and asked people to adhere to six feet
(two meters) of distance from others.
Both Cuomo and neighboring New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy said they
were keeping open the option of reimposing restrictions if officials
fail to stop large public gatherings that risk leading to a second
wave of infections.
In California, Governor Gavin Newsom has left it up to individual
counties on when to reopen once they meet state guidelines. He
reminded county officials of the risks of not restarting economies,
as well as reopening them.
Newsom told a news briefing on Monday people could not be "locked
away for months and months and months," especially those among the
5.5 million Americans who have lost their jobs since mid-March. He
said some had also lost health coverage and were among the many
people suffering severe mental and physical health problems during
the pandemic.
In enforcing coronavirus restrictions, he said the state and
counties could not "see lives and livelihoods completely destroyed
without considering the health impact of those decisions as well."
"As we mix, as we reopen, inevitably we're going to see an increase
in the total number of cases; it's our capacity to address that that
is so foundational," said Newsom.
NEW FORECAST
California is one of four states that is projected to see the
biggest spike in deaths in the months ahead, according to the
Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University
of Washington.
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Its new forecast on Monday forecast over 200,000 deaths due to COVID-19 in the
United States through the beginning of October, mainly due to reopening measures
under way.
The IHME, whose estimates are cited by many health experts, projected Florida
will see its deaths nearly triple to 18,675 deaths from 6,559 on June 10, while
California can expect to see deaths increase by 72 percent to 15,155 from 8,812,
it said.
Georgia and Arizona also have sharp increases in deaths forecast by the
institute.
New York and New Jersey between them account for more than a third of the nearly
116,000 U.S. deaths, but deaths and hospitalizations have been on the decline of
late. Both have followed strict health guidelines for reopening businesses when
all measures of infection drop - new cases, deaths, hospitalizations and
positive rates among those getting tested.
Scott Gottlieb, the former Food and Drug Administration director who has advised
the White House on the coronavirus, said on Monday that flare-ups needed to be
addressed with aggressive contact tracing and targeted responses.
"We’re not going to be able to shut down the country again this summer. We’re
probably not going to be able to shut down the country again this fall,” he said
on CNBC.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu in Washington, Jonathan Allen and Maria Caspani in
New York, Lisa Shumaker in Chicago, Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico; Writing by
Sonya Hepinstall and Andrew Hay; Editing by Howard Goller, Bill Tarrant and
Cynthia Osterman)
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