New York City is ready to close non-essential schools and businesses in nine neighborhoods in Brooklyn and Queens where coronavirus cases have been on the rise for two weeks, Mayor Bill de Blasio said on Sunday.
The Democratic nominee said he wants to reconfine those neighborhoods starting Wednesday, and is waiting for state Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s approval.
If he approves it, it will be the first time that the first American metropolis, which has become a model of controlling the epidemic after having deplored some 24,000 deaths, is forced to go back on deconfinement.
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New York City is ready to close non-essential schools and businesses in nine neighborhoods in Brooklyn and Queens where coronavirus cases have been on the rise for two weeks, Mayor Bill de Blasio said on Sunday.
The Democratic nominee said he wants to reconfine these neighborhoods starting Wednesday, and that he …
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