New York City Council Speaker Corey Johnson came out on Wednesday in favor of allowing indoor dining in the city, which is home to a thriving restaurant industry that was battered by the pandemic.
“It’s time to allow indoor dining in New York City with reduced capacity and clear guidance to ensure social distancing and safety,” Johnson said in a statement.
Cuomo said he would like to see restaurants reopen for indoor dining in the city but that compliance and enforcement remained a major hurdle in doing so.
“We open restaurants, that’s going to complicate by the hundreds if not thousands the number of establishments that need to be monitored,” he said.
Indoor dining is allowed in New York state with the exception of New York City, where more than 300 restaurateurs recently filed a class-action lawsuit seeking $2 billion in damages, according to media reports.
On Wednesday, gyms in New York City opened for the first time in months. They must operate at 33% capacity, with floors rearranged so patrons can exercise more than 6 feet (1.8 m)apart.SHIFTING TRENDS
New York has seen by far the most deaths from COVID-19 of any U.S. state, more than 32,000, but its rate of new infections has dropped to among the lowest in the country.
Nationally, new cases of coronavirus have fallen for six weeks in a row, but infections are surging in the Midwest. Iowa, North Dakota and South Dakota are reporting the highest percentage of positive test results in the country – over 20% in each state.Iowa, with a population of more than 3.1 million people, saw over 8,300 new cases last week, up 116%. That compared with about 4,400 new cases in New York state, which has more than 19.4 million residents, according to a Reuters analysis.
Cases also rose 27% last week in Minnesota and 34% in Indiana.
Bars were ordered shut in certain Iowa counties last week. But in Michigan, a Midwestern state where infections have held steady at about 5,000 new cases a week, residents will be able to enjoy gyms, swimming pools and organized sports starting next Wednesday, albeit with safety measures in place.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has told state officials across the country to prepare to distribute a potential coronavirus vaccine as early as October, according to documents made public by the agency on Wednesday.
The vaccines would be given first to healthcare workers, national security personnel and nursing homes, the agency said in the documents.