New York City to keep school closed till end of 2020
The US death toll in the coronavirus outbreak topped 20,000 on Saturday, according to a tally kept by Johns Hopkins University.
The outbreak has now claimed the lives of at least 20,071 people in the US, which also leads the world in the number of confirmed infections with 519,453, by the Baltimore-based school’s count.
Italy, the hardest-hit country in Europe with a population a fifth the size of the US, was also approaching the grim milestone with 19,468 declared virus fatalities.
Meanwhile, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said Saturday that public schools in the city would remain closed to the end of the school year as the coronavirus pandemic continues to rage, but the state’s governor later said the decision was up to him.
“There is nothing easy about this decision,” the mayor said at a morning news conference, before adding that “it clearly will help us save lives.”
But hours later, Governor Andrew Cuomo insisted that the authority to make such a call was his.
“You can’t make a decision just within New York City without coordinating that decision with the whole metropolitan region, because it all works together,” Cuomo said.
The governor said he understood de Blasio’s position, “which is he wants to close them until June, and we may do that, but we’re going to do it in a coordinated sense with the other localities.”
Freddi Goldstein, a de Blasio spokeswoman, noted on Twitter that the two Democratic officials had differed earlier on the timing of shelter-in-place orders.
“We were right then and we’re right now,” she said. “Schools will remain closed.”
The two men are longtime rivals and have butted heads before.
De Blasio unsuccessfully sought the party’s presidential nomination this year; Cuomo is the son of a governor and has seen his profile grow with his daily coronavirus briefings.
The death toll in the largest US city now stands at 5,820, according to the latest count from Johns Hopkins University. But the rate of hospitalizations has slowed, authorities say.
De Blasio said he had decided on the continued closures after conferring late Friday with Dr Anthony Fauci, who is leading the government’s scientific response to the coronavirus.
The city closed its public schools on March 16 as the virus continued its rapid spread.
Families lacking computers or laptops are being loaned city-owned devices for use in online learning; 175,000 have already been distributed.
The citywide closing affects 1.1 million students in what is by far the country’s largest public school district.
The mayor said he hoped school could resume normally in September at the start of the new school year.
Cuomo had earlier extended the closing of schools statewide to April 29. The state has registered more than 170,000 cases of the coronavirus, with more than 8,600 deaths.
De Blasio also said that 6,000 single adults living in homeless shelters — one-third of the total — would be transferred to hotels “to make sure people that need to be isolated are isolated.”
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