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  • let me introduce who we have here today, starting at the far left James Mattress, who everybody knows.

  • Budgetary dropper.

  • Mika, Secretary to the governor.

  • Melissa the Rose up commissioner took from the Health department and General Patrick Murphy pulling General Patrick Murphy.

  • General Patrick Murphy was in charge of our National Guard for many years.

  • Did not standing job.

  • I've been with him in many emergency situations over the years.

  • Eyes a man who leads from the front My type of leader He had so much fun that he retired And then he came and joined the says Commissioner of Homeland Security.

  • This team and the team we have working on this New Yorker should have total confidence they because they have done before.

  • They've been in this situation at this exact situation, but they've handled emergencies.

  • They've handled the more very well.

  • So they are proven.

  • Let's go through this for an update on where we are today.

  • Overview of the system.

  • Everybody knows what we're dealing with.

  • It's It's preventing an overload of the health care system.

  • So the number of acute cases that are coming into the health care system, the growth in the number of acute cases must match the capacity of the health care system, and that's what we've been working on.

  • We watch the rate of hospitalizations.

  • We watch the rate of I C.

  • U hospitalizations even more closely.

  • It's the difference between how many beds you need versus how many I seeyou beds and the real focal point the rate of ventilated patients, because that goes to the number of ventilators as we've been discussing.

  • So those are the three most critical points.

  • We need more beds.

  • We've been saying that we know that we've been working on it.

  • There was a discussion with all the hospitals, of course, the state of New York.

  • Today there's about a 50,000 bed capacity that has to be increased.

  • It has to be increased in the existing hospitals.

  • We're planning to cancel old noncritical elective surgeries, by definition, elective surgeries that air noncritical can be done in a different time, and now is the time not to do them.

  • We informed the hospitals of that.

  • We're going to set a date, probably next week.

  • For that That will free up between 25 to 35% of the existing hospital beds.

  • We are also instructed all the hospitals to maximize capacity.

  • We want to know from each hospital how many beds can you get in your hospital?

  • We waving the Department of Health and GFS regulations about space, et cetera.

  • This would be for a short term emergency basis, but we want a plan from every hospital.

  • If you use every available space, how many beds can you get in hospital on?

  • We started that a few weeks ago, but that is now coming to a critical point with the more beds, you need more staff.

  • So we're going to nursing schools.

  • Medical schools asking retired doctors and nurses to come back into service.

  • Supplies are a major issue P p e gloves, gowns, masks, suppliers.

  • Uh, I'm now asking a ll product providers oil companies who are in this business.

  • We will pay a premium for these products if you are a business that doesn't manufacture these exact items.

  • But if you have equipment and personnel and you believe that you could manufacture these items, they're not complicated.

  • A mask is not a complicated item to make.

  • A P.

  • P E gown is not a complicated item.

  • Gloves night trial gloves are not a complicated item.

  • If you can make them, we will give you funding to do it on.

  • We will give you funding to get the right equipment to get the personnel et cetera.

  • I'm asking businesses to be creative.

  • I'm even looking on the state's side.

  • As you know, we went into the hand sanitizer business, which we're now increasing, by the way, we've opened additional hand sanitizer manufacturing areas.

  • But I've also spoken to the state facilities that make uniforms.

  • If you could make a uniform, why can't you make a mask?

  • And we're researching that?

  • But it's that kind of creativity we need from businesses.

  • I can't mandate that businesses make something, but I can offer financial incentives, and that's what we're doing.

  • Any business that's interested should contact them.

  • Previously Development corporation.

  • They will get on it right away.

  • Eric Gertler is the head of that.

  • Any company that wants the sell product should contact my office, the executive chamber Cimini to Subotic at that number, there are also a number of companies that have masks.

  • Goldman Sachs donated 100,000 masks to the state of New York, and I want to thank them, but if you have masks offices that a non essential right now, uh, there were dentists offices that are closed.

  • There are clinics that are closed.

  • We need those masks, those gowns, gloves and we need them.

  • Uh, now in terms of building more beds, As I said, we've had the Army Corps of Engineers here, and we're working with them.

  • This is Lieutenant General Todd Sema Knight, who is is really top professional.

  • Ironically, I worked with him when I was Department of Housing and Urban Development, building housing on Native American reservations at the Pine Ridge Reservation.

  • Eso He's been with the core a long time.

  • He's top shelf.

  • We're looking at a possible number of locations for large temporary facilities.

  • Javits Center.

  • A number of CUNY sites.

  • Number of Sunni sites.

  • ST.

  • John's University wants to be helpful.

  • Fordham University So we're looking at all these sites and they're all under analysis.

  • Where do we have the space?

  • Where could we get up a temporary facility?

  • How quickly it's ventilators, Ventilators rental.

  • Laters.

  • That is the greatest need.

  • We're notifying any health department er in the state.

  • If you have a ventilator and you are not using it at this time, or it is non essential to your use.

  • We want it, if you worry.

  • Regulated health facility.

  • We are asking you by order of the Department of Health to make that ventilator available.

  • Uh, we will purchase it from you.

  • You could lend it to us, but we need ventilators and anyone who has them.

  • Now, please call the New York State Department of Health of that number again.

  • There are a lot of medical offices that have ventilators that are not operational.

  • Now, on there just in the corner of the office, we need those ventilators.

  • The ventilators are to this war.

  • What missiles were to World War two, right?

  • Rosie the Riveter.

  • We need ventilators.

  • That is the key piece of equipment.

  • We can get the beds.

  • We'll get the supplies by hook or by crook, but event the latest a specific piece of equipment.

  • These are people with a respiratory illness.

  • We need the ventilators wth e number one.

  • Opportunity to make a difference here is to flatten the curve, flatten the increase in the number of cases as we've talked about flattened the increase of the number of cases coming into the hospital system.

  • And the best way to do that is by reducing density, uh, density, control, density, control, valve.

  • Right.

  • And that's what we have been doing all along.

  • And we're going to take it to the ultimate step, which is we're going to close the valve, all right, because the rate of increase in the number of cases portends a total overwhelming of our hospital system.

  • So we're going to put out an executive order today New York State on Pause policies that assure uniform safety for everyone.

  • Uniforms, Safety for everyone.

  • Why?

  • Because what I do will affect you, and what you do will affect me.

  • Talk about community and interconnection and interdependence.

  • This is the very realistic embodiment of that.

  • We need everyone to be safe.

  • Otherwise no one can be safe.

  • We've studied all the other countries.

  • We've talked to people all across the globe about what they did, what they've done, what works, what doesn't work on that has all informed this policy to basic rules.

  • Onley essential businesses will be functioning, People can work at home.

  • God bless you.

  • But only essential businesses can have workers commuting to the job or on the job.

  • Second rule remain indoors to the greatest extent to protect physical and mental health on the businesses on the valve, we reduced it to 50% of the workforce.

  • We then reduced it to 75% of the workforce must stay home and today we're bringing it to 100% of the workforce.

  • Must stay home.

  • These are non essential.

  • Service is essential.

  • Service is have to continue to function.

  • Grocery stores need food.

  • Pharmacies need drugs.

  • Your Internet has to continue to work.

  • The water has to turn on when you turn the faucet.

  • So there are essential service is that will continue to function but 100% of the workforce.

  • And when I talk about the most drastic action we can take, this is the most drastic action we can take.

  • We also have a specific rules for people's conduct.

  • First is for the what we call the quote unquote vulnerable population.

  • And remember, many people will get this disease.

  • Different countries estimate 70 80% of the population.

  • People will get it, people will recover.

  • That's what's going to happen for the vast majority.

  • That's what's happening in this state for the vast majority who will we worried about seniors compromised immune system, people with underlying illnesses?

  • Where are the places were really worried about nursing homes, senior congregate facilities?

  • We need really diligence with Bill, vulnerable populations.

  • And there's been a lot of confusion and a lot of different theories and a lot of mixed information.

  • I've gone through it myself with my own family, Asai said.

  • We have my mother who lives alone.

  • Everybody wants to help on.

  • We've gone back and forth.

  • Who should go visit?

  • Mom, should Mom go to my sister's house?

  • Should Mom go to this house?

  • Nobody knows for sure.

  • I asked Commissioner Zucker, speak to every health official.

  • Get the best rules you can to protect our senior citizens and people with vulnerable populations.

  • And that's what thes rules are.

  • Remain indoors.

  • Go outside for solitary exercise.

  • Pre screen or visitors and AIDS.

  • Don't visit households with multiple people.

  • Don't go to your daughter's house.

  • Mom doesn't want to be alone.

  • I understand.

  • But you bring her into your house and you have 10 people there and they're coming in and out.

  • And your daughters have friends.

  • That is a mistake.

  • That is a mistake.

  • What?

  • We're going to go visit Mom, I'm gonna bring the whole family to see Mom.

  • Uh, no, not now.

  • Vulnerable person should wear a mask when in the company of others.

  • To the greatest extent, everyone in the presence of a vulnerable person should wear a mask.

  • They shouldn't be on public transportation unless it is urgent and absolutely necessary.

  • What?

  • What does that mean?

  • It means urgent and absolutely necessary.

  • It means what the words say.

  • I call it Matilda's Law.

  • My mother's name is Matilda.

  • Everybody's mother, Father, sister, friend in vulnerable population.

  • This is about protecting them.

  • It's about protecting them.

  • What you do, what you do is, uh, hi really higher.

  • Lee, uh effects their health and will be the instinct to love.

  • I want to be with them.

  • I want my kids.

  • Mom wants to see the kids.

  • Be smart, my mother and your mother.

  • For non vulnerable populations, these are the rules.

  • No non essential gatherings.

  • Any concentration of individuals is because you're an essential work, essential business and an essential work force.

  • When in public social distancing at list least six feet, outdoor recreation is a solitary recreational exercise.

  • It's running, it's hiking.

  • It's not playing basketball with five other people.

  • That's not what it is.

  • It's not laying in a park with 10 other people and sharing a beer.

  • That's not what this is there people in places in New York City, where it looks like life as usual.

  • No, this is not like usual and accept it and realize it and deal with it.

  • Sick individual should not leave their home unless they receive medical care, et cetera.

  • Young people need to practice social distancing aboard contact with vulnerable populations.

  • Precaution, Alcohol wipes.

  • We talked a lot about Hale sanitizer, so I went into the hints on the Tizer business.

  • Semi expert on hand Sanitizer.

  • Hand sanitizers, alcohol.

  • That's what it is.

  • You can kid get hand sanitizer, get a bottle of alcohol.

  • Uh, pour it on wipes.

  • Paper towels.

  • That's an alcohol wife.

  • Uh, hand sanitizer.

  • Now, according to the CDC, has to be over 60% alcohol to be effective, these provisions will be enforced.

  • These air Not helpful hints.

  • Uh, this is not if you really want to be a great citizen.

  • Uh, these are legal provisions.

  • They will be enforced.

  • There will be a civil fine and mandatory closure for any business that is not in compliance again.

  • Your actions can affect my health.

  • That's where we are.

  • S O.

  • There is a a social compact that we have government makes.

  • Your society is safe for everyone.

  • What you do can affect my health.

  • There's some bad information, especially among young people.

  • You're looking some of these videos that are going around and some of these no newscast on what young people are saying I can't get it.

  • Yeah, that's wrong.

  • That is wrong.

  • What?

  • Young people can't get it.

  • That is wrong.

  • It's just not a factual state.

  • 20% of Corona virus cases cases, according to CDC, Ages 20 to 44.

  • Okay, France.

  • More than 50%.

  • The Corona virus patients in I C U under 60 years old.

  • You can get it.

  • Well, I can't transmit it if I'm not symptomatic.

  • No, you can transmit it if you're not symptomatic.

  • And even if you are young and strong and everybody's Superman superwoman, I can deal with it.

  • Oh yeah, You can give it to your grand parent.

  • You can give it to your parents and you can put somebody else's life in danger.

  • Eso just a factually.

  • A lot of these premises are room.

  • These are nothing that people don't know.

  • It's nothing that we haven't been talking about.

  • But we have to do it on.

  • We have to be serious.

  • And again, it is a government responsibility.

  • Everyone has personal freedom.

  • Everyone is personal liberty, and we respect that, and I'll always protect that.

  • But everybody also has a responsibility to everyone else.

  • And this is a specific case of that.

  • I believe in regional actions, huh?

  • None of these policies work unless the geographic area is an area that works.

  • I have spoken to the governor of New Jersey, governor of Connecticut, about the actions that we're taking today.

  • I'm going to speak with him later this afternoon.

  • I would we have been coordinating to the greatest extent possible on they're going to be considering these policies, which again are very dramatic on.

  • I said, I'd like to do it in coordination.

  • I understand we have somewhat of a different circumstance in New York, but they are considering it.

  • We've added Pennsylvania and Delaware to thes states we're working with.

  • And again, you can businesses in New Jersey if they don't close than their workers are driving into New York.

  • Businesses in Connecticut stay open.

  • You need New Yorkers to drive up to those business, so regional action is the best we're talking.

  • I'll speak with him later today.

  • The number of cases and you can see why we've taken these dramatic actions.

  • Total positive up to 9900 new positive cases.

  • Now, I've told you in the past that the number of cases is relative to the number of pests.

  • I've also said that New York has been very aggressive about increasing our number of tests.

  • We went to the federal government.

  • We asked for authority to allow the state to run the tests as opposed to waiting for the federal government.

  • The president granted us that ability.

  • I ramped up all the labs in our state.

  • We open drive throughs all across the state.

  • We have the testing so high in New York right now that we're testing per capita more than China or South Korea.

  • Okay.

  • And China and South Korea obviously had a much longer time to ramp up.

  • So we have done a great job at ramping up the number of tests.

  • But when you ramp up the number of tests, you're going to get more positive cases.

  • Well, now we're more worried.

  • And no, because it was the reality.

  • The tests are just demonstrating what waas on again.

  • If we could do more tests, you would find more positives.

  • And finding positives is a good thing because then we can isolate and we contract back.

  • The number of counties continues to increase, and it will, until that entire state is blue.

  • Blue is not a political statement, by the way.

  • It's just blue versus yellow.

  • New York now has 7000 cases.

  • That compares to State of Washington that has 1000 California that has 1000 and change.

  • So you can see that New York is in a dramatically different position, and you can see why we're taking these actions now again.

  • New York may very well be testing at a multiple off the other states.

  • So does New York necessarily have 7007 times more people who are infected than California?

  • You don't know.

  • You know that we're doing more tests per capita, but you don't know what the actual infection rate is.

  • In total, we have tested 32,000 people.

  • We did 10,000 tests last night.

  • I had said last week that we would hope to get 6000 tests.

  • We've gotten to 10,000 tests, which again very proud of the operation.

  • But again, that's why you see the number going up the rate of hospitalization.

  • Watch this number.

  • It's 18% 1200 out of 7100 uh, again, overall perspective.

  • Look at the Johns Hopkins numbers.

  • People will get sick.

  • People will resolve you.

  • Look at our cases.

  • The first case we had the first health care worker that case.

  • She was never hospitalized.

  • She stayed home, and she now tests negative.

  • That's what's going to happen with 80% of the people.

  • So why is New York taking these dramatic actions?

  • We know from past history that what a locality does matters the 1918 Spanish flu, which also reminds us that this has happened before in society, right, this tendency to think, Oh, this is something new.

  • It's a science fiction movie.

  • Yet 1 1918 They had a flow epidemic, but ST Louis took one course of action.

  • Philadelphia took another course of action, and it made a dramatic difference in the number of people that died.

  • What government did at that moment made a dramatic difference.

  • And not nationally locally.

  • Uh, yes.

  • New York has the tightest controls in the country.

  • You look at those numbers and you understand why Look at the increase in the number of cases.

  • 16 days ago we were zero.

  • Today we are at 2900.

  • Those numbers are why we're taking these actions.

  • Just increase that curve and you will see it more than doubles our health care system capacity.

  • It more than triples the number of I.

  • C.

  • U beds with ventilators that we could possibly arrange.

  • That's why we're taking these actions.

  • These actions will cause disruption.

  • They will cause businesses to close the cause employees to stay at home.

  • I understand that they will cause much unhappiness.

  • I understand that also, I've spoken to my colleagues around the state, the elected officials.

  • I've spoken to business leaders.

  • There is a divergence of opinion.

  • There's a spectrum of opinion.

  • Some people say that we don't need to do this.

  • It's going to hurt the economy.

  • I understand that some people want to make it clear that they are disassociated from these actions.

  • I understand that.

  • And just so we're all clear, this is a statewide order.

  • It's not what your county executive is doing.

  • It's not what your mayor is doing.

  • It's not what anyone else but me is doing.

  • And I accept full responsibility If someone is unhappy.

  • Somebody wants to blame someone for complain about someone.

  • Blame me.

  • There is no one else who is responsible for this decision.

  • I've been in public service for many years on every level of public service, have managed dozens of emergencies.

  • The philosophy that always worked for me is prepared for the worst and hope for the best.

  • That's what we're doing here.

  • When we look back at this situation 10 years from now, I want to be able to say I can say to the people of the state of New York I did everything we could do.

  • I did everything we could do, and this is about saving lives.

  • And if everything we do saves just one life, I'll be happy.

  • Last point.

  • I'd also like people to think about, and I don't have an answer for this, and it's not what I do, but the isolation that people are feeling and the mental health consequences of what we're doing When we quarantined people, you know, we quarantined about 10,000 people.

  • 14 days You had to stay at home.

  • Andi.

  • I spoke too many of them, and what they would say is physically, operationally, it was difficult.

  • But most of all, they would all talk about the sense of isolation and the feeling of isolation and not having human contact on how difficult that waas I, as you know, have my daughter who was in isolation and for you.

  • I was very aware of what she was dealing with him, what she was feeling.

  • And I'll tell you the truth, I had some of the best conversations with her that I have ever had.

  • Uh, she was alone for two weeks with her own thoughts, not talking to anyone else.

  • No noise, no activity on.

  • We talked about things in depth that we didn't have time to talk about in the past.

  • Or we didn't have the courage of the strength to talk about in the past feelings that I had about mistakes that I had made along the way that I wanted to express my regret and talk through with her.

  • People are in a in a in a small apartment.

  • They rent a house there.

  • They're worried they're anxious.

  • Just be mindful of that.

  • You know, those three sentence three words sentences can make all the difference.

  • I miss you.

  • You know I love you.

  • I'm thinking about you.

  • I wish I was there with you.

  • I'm sorry you're going through this.

  • I'm sorry we're going through this.

  • That's going to be a situation that is going to develop because we're all in quarantine now.

  • I mean, think about we're all in various levels of quarantine and it's hard.

  • It's hard.

  • Economically, It's hard everywhere, But it's gonna be hard here.

  • It's gonna be hard here.

  • And, uh, it takes each of us to try to help with that last the last announcement.

  • With all that's going on, I want to protect the people of the State of New York as much as I can.

  • I'm going to stop any evictions of any residential or commercial tenants for 90 days.

  • There will be no be a moratorium on evictions, residential or commercial for 90 days.

  • I understand that may affect businesses negatively, and I've spoken to a number of them.

  • I don't know who you think you're going to rent an apartment to now.

  • Anyway, if you kick someone out by my mandate, you couldn't even have your real estate agent out showing the apartment.

  • Same with the commercial penance.

  • But I know that we're gonna put people out of work with what I did.

  • I want to make sure I don't put them out of their house.

  • Questions, comments.

  • Bumped up the change in thinking in terms of what it seems to be a shelter in place.

  • Order the charity work.

  • It's not a show to replace it effectively.

  • The same idea?

  • No, it is not.

  • First of all, words matter.

  • California does not have a shelter in place.

  • Order.

  • Right.

  • They put in a new policy.

  • It was They don't.

  • It is not shelter in place, right?

  • What does the because?

  • And this is why words matter, Jesse.

  • Because people are scared and people pack shelter in place is used currently for an active shooter or a school shooting.

  • Uh, it waas during a nuclear event, I select yourself in the interior room.

  • No windows.

  • Stay there until you get the all clear sign the quote unquote shelter in place policy was never shelter in place.

  • It said shelter in place.

  • Except this except this except this acceptance.

  • Accept this.

  • And it scared a lot of people in a panic.

  • People, Uh, and even California doesn't call it that anymore.

  • So why am I increasing the mandates?

  • Because the numbers are increasing.

  • And I said from they want this is science and math.

  • Watch the number.

  • Watch the trajectory.

  • You have the density control.

  • The number starts to go up.

  • Tighten the valve.

  • If the number doesn't slow down, tighten the valve more.

  • If the number doesn't slow down, tighten the valve more.

  • If the number doesn't slow down, close the valve.

  • We're closing about.

  • This'll take effect Sunday evening.

  • I'm sorry.

  • Restaurant workers delivery service is of food are an essential service.

  • Mass transit obviously got few.

  • Estrogen is operational because we have to get people to hospitals.

  • Best transit is operational because we have to get the essential workers to work weekend schedule or something way.

  • I'm not doing any of that right now.

  • Remember, this all comes down to the health care system and we're scrambling to increase the capacity of the health care system.

  • We have to get nurses, doctors, health care workers, child care, and we need to get them to work So the public transit system would be operation.

  • There is anyone monitoring or policing these businesses to make sure they're abiding by this 100% rule.

  • We said for the first time, this is not voluntary.

  • It's not helpful hints.

  • Uh, we are going to monitor it.

  • There will be civil fines, and there can be mandatory closures for businesses that don't comply.

  • I am not kidding about this.

  • The numbers are going up at such a rate that a ZAY said it's more than double the capacity of the hospital system.

  • It's more than triple the capacity of the I.

  • C U system.

  • We can't get more ventilators.

  • I can't increase that side of the equation.

  • I can't create Maura.

  • I seeyou beds with ventilators.

  • The only option available to us is to reduce the spread and reduce the rate of the spread.

  • So close the valve step to make sure people follow the regulations and the guidance, and that's enforcement.

  • So if a business that's not supposed to be open is open, yes, we will enforce it and they will be penalized.

  • It's also, by the way, rude, disrespectful, uh, of basic social obligations.

  • Please speak to what individuals and penalty user finds individuals might face if they break these rules.

  • You know, cluster of young people out of park.

  • Can you speak to what?

  • We don't have any individual finds at this point.

  • I hope they get the information, I think, with young people.

  • And we talked about this yesterday.

  • Part of it is they're just wrong.

  • They have the wrong information, and that's what I'm trying to say today.

  • They just wrong.

  • I mean, I can't tell you how many young people are out there saying, Why can't get it doesn't affect your people.

  • Know you're just wrong.

  • I can't transfer.

  • You're just wrong.

  • And this is lunacy.

  • What they're doing in some parks, in some areas, hanging out on a park bench.

  • They're playing basketball, you know, when you're young, you think you're invincible.

  • Yeah, you're wrong.

  • And social distancing means social distancing.

  • It means no more than six feet.

  • You can't play basketball and stay six feet from each other, but what you can, but you'd lose.

  • But as of this point, so note no civil fines or penalties have no civil fines on individuals at this.

  • Do you want the president to use the defence Protection Act to ramp up production of medical supplies?

  • Look, I am I am.

  • If I had a New York State Defense Production Act, I would use that.

  • Jesse, I don't have it.

  • So what I'm saying is I'll pay businesses more.

  • I'll start a new fund, a new business.

  • If you can make these products.

  • I'm trying to make these products.

  • If you were wearing this this line of work, you know, we need masks.

  • If you're making clothing, uh, figure out if you can make masks, I'll fund it.

  • So I'm doing everything I can to increase the production.

  • That's a sot.

  • That's besides having people all over the globe trying to buy products.

  • Right?

  • We talked about Empire State Development people literally running around China tryingto byproduct.

  • So if I had it, I would use it.

  • You mentioned stockpiles.

  • There's three stockpiles around the state of mask gloves, things like that.

  • Have those been dipped into?

  • Are you shipping?

  • Those hospitals around the state way have dipped into those and we are providing those to the hospitals that air across the state and also working to Reese apartment.

  • Give us a sense of how many you shipped across the state.

  • I didn't have to look to give you exactly.

  • Okay, I got next.

  • The deadline is the federal deadline, and Robert Monica, the man of many, many facial communications, will explain it.

  • Elektronik filing were tied to the federal deadline.

  • So our deadline will also then move with the federal deadline to the end of July on the sales tax deadline.

  • We're going to forgive interest and penalties related to the sales tax stays the same, but there's no interest or penalties for those who can't pay for correct or penalty or interests penalty.

  • Sure, sure.

  • We're making hand sanitizer, by the way.

  • And a lot of people got annoyed that we use core craft, which is the prison company to make him sanitizer.

  • The core craft company was already making chemicals that detergents, automobile, lubricants, hands.

  • So, uh, so it was in their line of work, but the hands on sanitizer is distributed to prisons, public transport, public transportation, facilities, state government, local governments, et cetera.

  • And we're increasing the production of hand sanitizer through cork.

  • Rift because we needed the shortage has only gotten worse.

  • Statesnew the You know that 35 people I don't know.

  • I could get you to break up.

  • Do you know off the top of your head?

  • Have any in New York City?

  • What's that?

  • I'm sorry.

  • Can you say that?

  • You said primarily I know that Albany Medical Center in ST Peter's Hospital have stopped performing tests.

  • We understand that in this hospital has run out of them people in the capital region.

  • Is there a place that dough to get tested?

  • Dr.

  • So I was looking at the side.

  • I'm sorry.

  • Okay.

  • We've heard that Albany Medical Center and ST Peter's Hospital have stopped performing tests and Ellis Hospital has apparently run out of them.

  • So people in the capital region who might need to be tested where they at the Albany Medical Center.

  • They're still testing.

  • We could look it weaken.

  • Look, att, Other places.

  • If there if we feel that there aren't enough places to provide the test with people.

  • Sorry.

  • Actually, we have worked that out.

  • We're working with bio reference.

  • Sues our lab that came online earlier this week, and they're gonna be processing tests for all some other states.

  • Obviously, opening had this announcement that the only people were gonna get tested our frontline doctors, nurses, first responders, et cetera, and that if you're sick, you think you might have thrown a virus.

  • The advice is gonna be Stay home.

  • Don't go out.

  • Get yourself well, So are you still doing community testing statewide?

  • What's the thinking about if or when we need to shift that protocol?

  • So what we are doing is, as I mentioned originally, is to work with your help.

  • Help professional about them.

  • If you need the test, it's clinically relevant face in their assessment.

  • We will get the test done, and we have.

  • And we have sites all across the state, and you can see by the numbers of how many cases we have tested.

  • Yeah, Jimmy, we're testing more than anyone.

  • The was never just health care professionals, right?

  • It's all these drive throughs, et cetera.

  • They're just testing people, but you have a protocol that you have to have a fever or have B have a symptom or have been in contact with a positive person, so it can't just be.

  • You know, I want to test because I'm a little because I'm a lot nervous.

  • Uh, but that's for everyone that protocol just to drill down on this for a second.

  • So for a New Yorker, at this point, they can go buy groceries.

  • As of Sunday, they go walk their dog taken, go get medicine.

  • But beyond those sorts of activities, basically, you're telling people to stay upstairs.

  • You know the stay home.

  • Uh, physical health, mental health?

  • Yeah.

  • You need to get out to take a walk and get some fresh air.

  • Yes.

  • You know these A.

  • That is a practicality to this.

  • You can't say to someone.

  • You are must be locked in your apartment 24 hours a day for the foreseeable future.

  • By the way, I look at what you're saying to people.

  • This could be going on for months.

  • Stay in your apartment for 234 months.

  • Uh, it's frightening, you know?

  • Yeah.

  • Okay.

  • Thank you.

  • It was very, very nice.

  • No, I'm not you.

  • There was no provisions.

  • I see.

  • I see.

  • Maybe more.

  • I hadn't heard that.

  • But we we will look at it and I'm sure we can find Internet ways we must have.

  • Do we know it's been overrun to the point of near collapse?

  • But we've been working every day to continue to restore it and build it back up.

  • There's obviously massive volume right now, but we are working on that.

  • Mr.

  • Campbell, you know a lot about a number number.

  • Good question.

  • The number one challenge.

  • We need 30,000 ventilators.

  • Everything is second to that.

  • After that, we need beds.

  • We need staff mobility and truth.

  • John, we'll move people.

  • You know, we're looking at these temporary facilities.

  • Uh, remember how this disease progresses.

  • You don't come in and need an I.

  • C.

  • U unit.

  • In 15 minutes, you come in with a fever, respiratory symptoms, et cetera.

  • If we didn't have a hospital of you come in and and you live in Suffolk and we don't have a hospital bed.

  • And Suffolk and the the hospital betters in Queens.

  • Then we're gonna put you in Queens.

  • It's You're right.

  • It's not convenient.

  • But that's the least of our worries right now.

  • Frankly.

  • So wherever we have beds and equipment, that's where we would put people.

  • I'm even I'm even working on coordinating between upstate and downstate.

  • You know, we have lower numbers in upstate, so we're coordinating the down state need with upstate hospital beds so it could be a person comes in and from New York City.

  • But we have a hospital bed in Albany.

  • And if that's what it gets to, that's what it gets, too.

  • Uh, if we have a hospital bed with a ventilator anywhere in the state, I would be happy.

  • I mean, that's I'd be happy if the only thing we were dealing with waas complaints that you came in and Suffolk and you had to go to Queens.

  • I would take that in a heartbeat.

  • Is no Medical New York.

  • Here are the keys.

  • There is a medical reserve corps that this state and the city have, and they have been activated to help out as well.

  • There.

  • That's a good question right now.

  • No, but maybe in the future.

  • But right now, just don't get yourself sick.

  • And don't get anyone else sick, right?

  • Don't get yourself sick.

  • And don't get anyone else sick by your actions.

  • Over localities and states are running short of the slot.

  • How?

  • New York?

  • Look, we're doing more tests than anyone knock for maker Central services.

  • So restaurants do count what delivery counts.

  • Longer service is, I don't know.

  • We're working through.

  • The list of essential service is now essential.

  • Service is our look.

  • Society has to function.

  • Uh, you have to be able to go to the A T M and take out money.

  • And who's ever on the other side of that 80 m, which, I don't know, has to be there to make sure you get money.

  • So it's just going through those service is that need to function, but not like luxury service is, You know, I want to get a massage.

  • That's not an essential service.

  • That's an essential surface.

  • We've also asked the Internet service providers to increase data capacity on to do it at no charge.

  • And we're working through that.

  • In other words, now you have all these people working from home.

  • They all had data usage plans.

  • They might exceed their data usage plan.

  • Or you may overwhelm that home service capacity.

  • Eso It is essential that they work on that, and as a matter of fact, I asked them to increase the data available regardless of your plan and not charge customers for that.

  • Say, like best, the geeks lot with that essential the Geek Squad people existence with their the geek squad.

  • I'm gonna go back and check you got me on that.

  • But what about you know, what's your latest thinking on the economy?

  • It's the budget.

  • If you're kind of getting less revenue in, are we a stake to get into a cash crunch at some point?

  • Yes.

  • So when does that happen?

  • All of the federal government just move the filing deadline for taxes like June July.

  • We normally had tax payments in April.

  • Now, when you move the filing deadline, it means the state.

  • You won't pay your state taxes until June July, which means we get no money between April and June July.

  • That could be $78 billion to the state of New York.

  • In terms of cash, the only way I sleep at night on that one is Look, it's not just this stage.

  • It's every state, and this is going to be federal action, because if the economy is devastating for every state and also for individuals, you know it's every individual for the guy who's home today saying How am I gonna pay the rent?

  • First of all, moratorium.

  • You can't be evicted for three months anyway.

  • But how am I gonna pay the bills?

  • I'm laid off.

  • Thea.

  • Unemployment insurance doesn't cover it.

  • Everybody is in this situation.

  • Everybody.

  • And it's going to have to be a situation at this country.

  • Addresses and this nation addresses this nation and the state addresses and we will, and we will.

  • But today, one crisis at a time deal with what is in front of you and let's save as many lives as possible.

  • And that's what these policies do.

  • If people want to say to me, Jimmy, three months down the road, you know what?

  • You shouldn't close their businesses.

  • You, uh you added to the economic damage.

  • I plead guilty.

  • I plead guilty.

  • I believe these policies will save lives.

  • And I'm not willing to put a price on a human life.

  • Russians is the state going to halt hangout tax refunds or paying out other things that you were normally scheduled to pay out?

  • And do you have a message to New Yorkers?

  • We employed New Yorkers about, you know, whether they should be paying their taxes at a certain time.

  • Marie, do you have any appeals we're gonna follow with the We're going to follow the federal guidelines.

  • You know, we have economic pressure, but they have farm or economic pressures than we do.

  • Anyone who's trying to get through this in their daily lives, I don't want to wear to their pressure.

  • We'll deal with what we have to deal with.

  • One other point.

  • There was a person in our press office who was exhibiting signs off Corona virus.

  • They're going to be tested, but we is a precaution.

  • Quarantined employees of the press office.

  • In the meantime, I'm gonna goto work.

  • Thank you very much.

let me introduce who we have here today, starting at the far left James Mattress, who everybody knows.

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暫停 "是什麼意思?紐約州長Cuomo的完整新聞報道 (What it Means to 'Pause': NY Gov. Cuomo's Full Presser Here)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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