Tag Archives: New York

Cuomo accuser says gov had someone else take sex harass training for him

Gov. Andrew Cuomo had someone else take his mandatory workplace sex harassment training course for him — then signed off on it as if he’d taken it himself, accuser Charlotte Bennett says in a bombshell new interview aired Friday night.

Bennett also claims that one of the governor’s own top aides conceded to her last summer that he had been “grooming” her — but that the matter didn’t need further investigation because Cuomo’s behavior hadn’t gone any further.

The explosive revelations were made by the 25-year-old former Cuomo aide in an interview on “CBS Evening News with Norah O’Donnell.”

 “At first they apologized, they said it was inappropriate” she said of a June 30 meeting with Cuomo special counsel Judith Mogul and his chief of staff, Jill DesRosiers.

“I asked them if they could let it go, saying, ‘I don’t want this to be investigated please drop this,’ you know, because I was scared.

“She said, ‘You came to us before anything serious happened. It was just grooming, and it was not yet considered sexual harassment so for that we do not need to investigate,’” Bennett alleged.

It was not clear if Bennett was referring to Mogul, Desrosiers or someone else at the meeting.

Cuomo had a ringer take his official training for him, Bennett also alleged.

“In 2019, he did not take the sexual harassment training,” Bennett tells O’Donnell in the interview.

“How do you know that?” O’Donnell asks.

“I was there,” Bennett, who worked for him at the time, answers.

“I heard Stephanie, say, ‘I can’t believe I’m doing this for you,’” Bennett recalls –referring to office director Stephanie Benton.

“I’m making a joke about the fact that she was completing the training for him,” Bennett recalls.

Norah O’Donnell, left, interviews Charlotte Bennett, who has accused Gov. Andrew Cuomo of sexual harassment.
Adam Verdugo/CBS News via AP

“And then I heard her at the end ask him to sign the certificate,” Bennett said.

Bennett’s explosive claim that the governor had an aide complete his sex-harassment training for him directly contradicts what he said on Wednesday.

When asked by a reporter if he had taken the mandatory training, Cuomo simply said, “The short answer is yes.”

Benton, meanwhile, “categorically denies the exchange,” according to a statement from the governor’s office that added, “this is not true,” CBS reported.

Also in the interview, Bennett said the governor tasked her with “finding” him a girlfriend — then impatiently asked a day later if she had done so, a revelation teased in previews earlier Friday.

Meanwhile on Friday, Bennett’s lawyer, Debra Katz, sent a letter to state Attorney General Letitia James asking the AG to ensure that evidence related to Bennett’s sexual harassment claims is preserved by the Governor’s office and senior staff.

The urgency of Katz’s request “was heightened by recent new reports that the Governor’s staff modified government reports related to other matters,” the lawyer said in a press statement.

That was an apparent reference to news from Thursday night that Cuomo’s top advisors pushed state health officials to omit from a public report the number of nursing home residents who died in hospitals from COVID-19.

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Manhattan apartment discounts may be ending soon as sales soar 73%

A man enters a building with rental apartments available on August 19, 2020 in New York City.

Eduardo MunozAlvarez | VIEW press | Corbis News | Getty Images

Sales contracts in Manhattan for residential real estate soared by 73% in February, and brokers say the days of big price cuts and deals in the city may be ending.

There were more than 1,110 sales contracts signed in February, up from 642 in 2019 and marking the third straight month of year-over-year gains, according to a report from Douglas Elliman and Miller Samuel.

After seeing historic declines in deal volume in 2020, as hundreds of thousands of people migrated from the city to the suburbs and other states, Manhattan’s real estate market is bouncing back more quickly than many brokers and analysts expected, thanks largely to the Covid vaccine progress and price cuts.

The first two months of 2021 saw a total of 2,472 contracts signed — the highest levels since the Manhattan market peak in 2015, according to Garrett Derderian, director of market intelligence for Serhant, a real estate brokerage firm. Sales contracts in 2021 so far have topped $5 billion.

“This is a remarkable recovery from 2020, and a trend we began to see emerge from the time Biden was elected in November to the announcement of the first viable vaccines for Covid,” Derderian said.

Brokers and analysts say much of the activity was driven by lower sales prices, which have fallen an average about 10% in Manhattan, according to Jonathan Miller, CEO of Miller Samuel. Many condo buildings were forced to cut prices by 20% or more and resales of some luxury apartments on “Billionaire’s Row” in midtown Manhattan have been selling at less than half of their peak prices in 2015.

But now, with rising demand from buyers returning to the city, price cuts and deals could be ending or fading soon, brokers say. The inventory of unsold apartments, which had ballooned to more than 9,400 at its peak last fall, has shrunk by 20% to about 7,500, which is close to the historical average, according to Miller.

“It looks like it is going to be a short window” for price cuts, said Steven James, president and chief executive officer of Douglas Elliman’s New York City brokerage.

Of course, there is still a large supply of “shadow inventory” — or apartments that are empty but unlisted —and sellers who need to sell quickly will still need to discount, analysts say.

Potential tax increases in New York could also prolong any recovery, along with remote work policies that allow workers to live outside the city. Many say it could still take years for Manhattan prices and deal volume to return to pre-pandemic levels.

Yet analysts and even the most bullish brokers say they are surprised with how quickly Manhattan real estate is bouncing back after last year’s record decline. Brokers say the buyers are a mix of three categories: those who left the city and are returning, younger buyers who were priced out of the market for years and can now buy thanks to price cuts and low mortgage rates, and new buyers who sold their homes in the suburbs for high prices and want to try living in the city.

Much of the growth is being driven by the high end, with contracts signed for listings above $10 million quadrupling. Yet even studio apartments and one-bedrooms are seeing strong gains from younger buyers.

“The bigger narrative is the inbound migration to Manhattan,” Miller said. “I think the youth renaissance we are going to see in Manhattan is a big part of the story.”

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Double standard? Gillibrand in spotlight after Cuomo scandal

WASHINGTON (AP) — Kirsten Gillibrand was the first Democratic senator to call for her colleague Al Franken’s resignation in 2017 as he faced allegations of sexual misconduct, building a profile as a leading advocate for women that became the centerpiece of her 2020 presidential bid.

But the New York senator is taking a different tact when it comes to sexual harassment allegations hitting closer to home, those against her state’s Democratic governor, Andrew Cuomo.

In a series of statements, Gillibrand has said accusations of offensive behavior by Cuomo are “serious and deeply concerning” and that the three women “who have come forward have shown tremendous courage.” She has said that the claims against Cuomo are “completely unacceptable” and called for a full investigation — but stopped short of demanding his resignation.

Top Democrats in New York and nationally have similarly refrained from suggesting that Cuomo step down. That includes New York’s senior senator and the chamber’s majority leader, Democrat Chuck Schumer. It’s a far more cautious approach than the parade of Democratic senators who followed Gillibrand’s lead in calling for Franken’s resignation.

That’s fueling questions about whether, more than three years into the #MeToo movement, the push to hold powerful men accountable for sexual harassment and abuse is losing steam. Gillibrand paid a political price for her role in the Franken resignation and her tone toward Cuomo may reflect that.

“Our country needs to do better for women writ large,” said Rachel O’Leary Carmona, executive director of Women’s March, an advocacy group that grew out of the January 2017 demonstration when tens of thousands of women, most clad in pink, descended on Washington to protest Donald Trump’s presidency. “Both parties and at every level of government.”

Franken ultimately resigned, but Democrats later questioned whether they had moved too quickly to oust him. During her presidential campaign, Gillibrand faced questions about her decision and insisted she didn’t regret calling for Franken to give up his Senate seat. But she acknowledged that doing so hurt her with top donors and may have hampered her effort to win a following in the leadoff caucuses in Iowa, which borders Franken’s state of Minnesota.

Pete Buttigieg, who essentially tied for first place in Iowa, has said that when it came to Franken, he would “not have applied that pressure at that time before we knew more.” The former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, is now President Joe Biden’s transportation secretary.

Carmona’s group has gone a step farther than Gillibrand and other leading Democrats, calling for an investigation against Cuomo but also demanding his “immediate resignation,” noting that “conduct doesn’t have to be illegal to be disqualifying.”

Cuomo flatly rebuffed such calls Wednesday, saying that while he was “embarrassed” by the allegations, he has no intention of resigning.

“I work for the people of the state of New York,” the governor said, breaking days of silence during a news conference. “They elected me.”

A spokesman for Gillibrand declined to comment on whether the senator considered calling on Cuomo to resign. But, even in 2017, Gillibrand spent weeks calling for an investigation into Franken and only became the first Democratic senator to say he should step aside when word of a seventh woman accusing misconduct surfaced.

She also has argued that a “double standard” was at work, with her getting blamed for her party losing a once rising star in Franken even though so many Democrats eventually called for his resignation.

“Who is being held accountable for Al Franken’s decision to resign? Women senators, including me,” Gillibrand said in July 2019, about a month before she left the presidential race. “It’s outrageous. It’s absurd.”

She’s not the only one to see sexism in pressure falling on women to denounce alleged wrongdoing by a man. But Gillibrand has promoted herself as a feminist leader and champion of women’s rights, and the Cuomo scandal concerns her state.

Gillibrand founded an activist group called Off the Sidelines, which raised millions of dollars to help mobilize more women to participate in politics, and for years relished being sometimes called the “#MeToo Senator.”

“We all wish she had more courage right now, but she is not the story and she should not become the story,” said Rebecca Katz, a Democratic consultant in New York City who said equating Gillibrand with Cuomo’s alleged misconduct is “missing the whole point.”

Gillibrand has nonetheless seen her national profile decline after her presidential bid.

She campaigned for Biden last fall. But unlike several other Senate colleagues who competed against Biden for the Democratic nomination, Gillibrand was never seriously considered a leading option to be Biden’s running mate, despite his long-standing promise to pick a woman.

Already a senator for a dozen years, the 54-year-old Gillibrand has time to mount another presidential run, though questions about her handling of the scandal involving Franken — and now perhaps even her reaction to Cuomo — may linger.

“We need to stop blaming women for men’s harassment,” Katz said. “Sen. Gillibrand took a lot of incoming for rightly calling out Al Franken many years ago — for being one of many to call out Al Franken. We’re doing this wrong.”

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Cuomo reverses course, calls for special investigator amid sexual harassment allegations

Facing mounting political pressure over allegations of sexual harassment, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said Sunday that he would support the appointment of an independent special investigator to examine the claims against him. Cuomo also issued a number of statements on Sunday, including one in the evening apologizing and saying he “never intended to offend anyone or cause any harm.”

Cuomo, a Democrat, initially called on the state attorney general and the chief judge of the New York State Court of Appeals to jointly appoint “an independent and qualified lawyer” to “conduct a thorough review of the matter and issue a public report.” 

After he backtracked on his initial request for the investigation, Attorney General Letitia James issued a statement that her office will “will hire a law firm, deputize them as attorneys of our office, and oversee a rigorous and independent investigation.”

James, a onetime Cuomo ally, rejected the governor’s initial proposal, saying she alone has the authority to investigate the allegations once the governor formally refers the matter to her office.

“While I have deep respect for Chief Judge DiFiore, I am the duly elected attorney general and it is my responsibility to carry out this task, per Executive Law,” James said, referring to the chief judge. “The governor must provide this referral so an independent investigation with subpoena power can be conducted.”

Earlier Sunday, James said she she “stood ready” to oversee an investigation and “make any appointments necessary.”

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo seen on September 8, 2020.

Spencer Platt / Getty


Cuomo’s support for an independent investigation is a reversal, after his special counsel said on Saturday night that a judge selected by the governor’s office would investigate the allegations, an arrangement that was widely condemned as inadequate by elected officials across the state.

In a story published Saturday, a former aide told The New York Times that Cuomo had harassed her at the height of the coronavirus pandemic. The woman, Charlotte Bennett, told the Times that Cuomo had asked her if she was open to a relationship with an older man — an encounter she interpreted as having sexual overtones. Bennett, 25, told the Times that when she told Cuomo’s chief of staff about the encounter, she was transferred to another job on the other side of the state capitol.

Cuomo responded with a statement on Saturday night that he believed he was acting as a mentor and he “never made advances toward Ms. Bennett, nor did I ever intend to act in any way that was inappropriate.”

In an updated statement Sunday evening, Cuomo said he “never intended to offend anyone or cause any harm. I spend most of my life at work and colleagues are often also personal friends.” 

“At work sometimes I think I am being playful and make jokes that I think are funny,” Cuomo said. “I do, on occasion, tease people in what I think is a good natured way. I do it in public and in private. You have seen me do it at briefings hundreds of times. I have teased people about their personal lives, their relationships, about getting married or not getting married. I mean no offense and only attempt to add some levity and banter to what is a very serious business.”

He contended that his actions may have been “misinterpreted as an unwanted flirtation. To the extent anyone felt that way, I am truly sorry about that.”

The allegations came in the same week that another ex-aide, former deputy secretary for economic development and special adviser to the governor Lindsey Boylan, accused him of subjecting her to an unwanted kiss and inappropriate comments. Cuomo has denied those allegations.

The furor also comes as the governor is fighting off another scandal, with federal authorities investigating how his administration handled nursing home patients in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. In recent weeks, Cuomo and his administration have been forced to admit the COVID-19 death toll for nursing home residents is nearly 15,000, almost double the previous number. The 15,000 figure includes patients in long-term care facilities and those who died after being taken to a hospital. 

While the Trump administration opened up an investigation into Cuomo’s handling of the nursing home data, criticism intensified after a top aide admitted she was concerned that the data was “going to be used against us.”

While some Republicans and Democrats have begun to call for Cuomo to step down amid the allegations, others, including New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, have called for him to be stripped of the emergency governing powers that he was given at the height of the pandemic.

Cuomo is currently in his third term as governor, which is set to end in 2022.

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Second former aide accuses Gov. Andrew Cuomo of sexual harassment: report

A second woman has accused Gov. Andrew Cuomo of sexual harassment, according to a new report.

Charlotte Bennett, a 25-year-old former aide to Cuomo, told the New York Times that the governor asked her inappropriate personal questions and had said that he was open to relationships with women in their 20s.

Cuomo released a statement Saturday night saying, “Ms. Bennett was a hardworking and valued member of our team during COVID. She has every right to speak out.”

“When she came to me and opened up about being a sexual assault survivor and how it shaped her and her ongoing efforts to create an organization that empowered her voice to help other survivors, I tried to be supportive and helpful. Ms. Bennett’s initial impression was right: I was trying to be a mentor to her. I never made advances toward Ms. Bennett nor did I ever intend to act in any way that was inappropriate. The last thing I would ever have wanted was to make her feel any of the things that are being reported,” he said.

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A wax Don Draper hanging at the bar

NEW YORK (AP) — It’s a promotion that could be straight out of the “Mad Men” Don Draper playbook.

Brooklyn’s famed Peter Luger Steak House has teamed with Madame Tussauds to have celebrity wax figures mingle with patrons, promoting the easing of coronavirus pandemic restrictions on indoor dining in New York City.

A wax Jon Hamm — known for his portrayal of ad executive Draper in the hit TV series — could be found at the restaurant’s bar Friday with a cocktail in hand. Other figures on loan from Madame Tussauds include Michael Strahan, Jimmy Fallon, Al Roker and Audrey Hepburn in Holly Golightly of “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” mode.

Peter Luger “thought this would be a fun, safe way to fill some of the seats that need to remain empty as we continue to fight the pandemic,” said restaurant vice president Daniel Turtel.

As of Friday, restaurants in the city were allowed to fill 35% of their indoor seats, up from 25% previously.

Peter Luger, in business for more than 130 years, will keep the mannequins until Monday. After that, they’ll return to the recently reopened Madame Tussauds in midtown Manhattan.

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Researchers find emerging COVID-19 strain in New York

A new coronavirus strain that shares some characteristics with the South Africa variant is emerging in New York City, researchers said Wednesday.

As of mid-February, the new variant, called B.1.526, was present in about 12 percent of coronavirus samples collected in the Big Apple and surrounding areas, according to researchers at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons.

In their analysis of publicly available databases, the Columbia researchers did not find a high prevalence of the South Africa or Brazil COVID-19 variants in the region.

“Instead we found high numbers of this home-grown lineage,” Dr. Anne-Catrin Uhlemann, assistant professor in the division of infectious diseases at Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons, said in a statement.

The Columbia study found the new strain shares some similarities to the South Africa strain, which scientists believe can spread more easily than other virus variants.

B.1.526 was also described in research published this week by the California Institute of Technology.

Neither study has been reviewed by outside experts.

With Post wires

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Katie Holmes and Suri Cruise, 14, enjoy a mother-daughter shopping trip in New York City

Katie Holmes and Suri Cruise enjoyed a mother-daughter shopping trip in the swanky SoHo area of New York City on Friday afternoon. 

As the 42-year-old Dawson’s Creek star walked down the street in an olive green jacket, her 14-year-old looked like a total fashionista in a light blue puffer coat and light-wash denim. 

The actress’ mini-me completed her trendy look with a hot pink shirt and matching tote bag, which read: ‘I don’t use plastic bags’ in white lettering.  

Fun afternoon: Katie Holmes and Suri Cruise enjoyed a mother-daughter shopping trip in the swanky SoHo area of New York City on Friday

The close-knit pair walked closely together as they both wore face masks amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.  

While strutting down the block in her brown leather boots, Holmes chatted away with Suri, who partially braided her long chestnut locks.  

Suri appeared to be holding an iced coffee and looked nearly as tall as her five-foot-nine mom. 

Holmes’ sleek brown tresses, the same shade as her mini-me, were left down to cascade over her shoulders.

As the 42-year-old Dawson’s Creek star walked down the street in an olive green jacket, her 14-year-old looked like a budding fashionista in a light blue puffer jacket and light-wash denim

Growing up: Suri appeared to be holding an iced coffee and looked nearly as tall as her five-foot-nine mom

Katie shares Suri with her ex-husband Tom Cruise but she parents the teen on her own as it has been reported that the actor hasn’t seen his daughter in years.

The Batman Begins actress initially began dating Tom in 2005, and seven weeks into the relationship, they were engaged.

Their Scientologist wedding was held at the Castello Orsini-Odescalchi in Bracciano in November 2006, seven months after their daughter Suri was born.  

Budding activist: The actress’ mini-me completed her trendy look with a hot pink shirt and matching tote bag, which read: ‘I don’t use plastic bags’ in white lettering

Recently, Katie has been spotted out more and more with her new love, 33-year-old Emilio Vitolo Jr.

She and he restaurateur boyfriend seem to be getting more serious these days and even spent Christmas Eve together. 

On December 18, Holmes’s birthday, Emilio uploaded an adorable black-and-white photo of the new couple laughing with one another to Instagram. 

Way back when: Katie shares Suri with her ex-husband Tom Cruise but she parents the teen on her own as it has been reported that the actor hasn’t seen his daughter in years (Pictured in 2010)

In the caption, he wrote, ‘The most amazing, kindest, beautiful person ❤️. Every time I see your face it makes me smile . Happy Birthday !!! I love you !!’

And Katie responded in the comments section of the post in kind, with ‘Thank you so much my Love❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️ I love u too!!!!!’

Since the couple got together in 2020, the Dawson’s Creek star has been a frequent guest at her chef-boyfriend’s popular, family owned, Italian restaurant, Emilio’s Ballato. 

Katie and Emilio reportedly met for the first time last year, though it wasn’t until September that they launched their romance. 

Love birds: Recently, Katie has been spotted out more and more with her new love, 33-year-old Emilio Vitolo Jr (pictured in November)

L word: On December 18, Holmes’s birthday, Emilio uploaded an adorable black-and-white photo of the new couple laughing with one another to Instagram and dropped an ‘I love you’ in the caption

DailyMail.com confirmed exclusively on September 10 that Emilio broke off his previous engagement with his live-in fiancée Rachel Emmons, 24, via text when handsy photos of him and Holmes were first published.

Prior to being romantically linked with Vitolo, Katie spent years dating Jamie Foxx, whom she split from in 2019.

Katie and Jamie only went public as a couple in late 2017, though there had been speculation they were an item since 2013.

There was a swirl of rumors that Katie’s divorce agreement prohibited her from publicly dating anyone for five years after her 2012 split with Tom Cruise.

It’s complicated: There was a swirl of rumors that Katie’s divorce agreement prohibited her from publicly dating anyone for five years after her 2012 split with Tom Cruise; seen in 2019

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Health experts blame rapid expansion for vaccine shortages

Public health experts Thursday blamed COVID-19 vaccine shortages around the U.S. in part on the Trump administration’s push to get states to vastly expand their vaccination drives to reach the nation’s estimated 54 million people age 65 and over.

The push that began over a week ago has not been accompanied by enough doses to meet demand, according to state and local officials, leading to frustration and confusion and limiting states’ ability to attack the outbreak that has killed over 400,000 Americans.

Over the past few days, authorities in California, Ohio, West Virginia, Florida and Hawaii warned that their supplies were running out. New York City began canceling or postponing shots or stopped making new appointments because of the shortages, which President Joe Biden has vowed to turn around. Florida’s top health official said the state would deal with the scarcity by restricting vaccines to state residents.

The vaccine rollout so far has been “a major disappointment,” said Dr. Eric Topol, head of the Scripps Research Translational Institute.

Problems started with the Trump administration’s “fatal mistake” of not ordering enough vaccine, which was then snapped up by other countries, Topol said. Then, opening the line to senior citizens set people up for disappointment because there wasn’t enough vaccine, he said. The Trump administration also left crucial planning to the states and didn’t provide the necessary funding.

“It doesn’t happen by fairy dust,” Topol said. “You need to put funds into that.”

Last week, before Biden took over as president, the U.S. Health and Human Services Department suggested that the frustration was the result of unrealistic expectations among the states as to how much vaccine was on the way.

But some public health experts said that the states have not been getting reliable information on vaccine deliveries and that the amounts they have been sent have been unpredictable. That, in turn, has made it difficult for them to plan how to inoculate people.

“It’s a bit of having to build it as we go,” said Dr. George Rutherford, an epidemiologist at the University of California, San Francisco. “It’s a front-end supply issue, and unless we know how much vaccine is flowing down the pipe, it’s hard to get these things sized right, staffed, get people there, get them vaccinated and get them gone.”

State health secretaries have asked the Biden administration for earlier and more reliable predictions on vaccine deliveries, said Washington state Health Secretary Dr. Umair Shah.

Dr. Marcus Plescia of the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials was also among those who said opening vaccinations to senior citizens was done too soon, before supply could catch up.

“We needed steady federal leadership on this early in the launch,” Plescia said. “That did not happen, and now that we are not prioritizing groups, there is going to be some lag for supply to catch up with demand.”

Supply will pick up over the next few weeks, he said. Deliveries go out to the states every week, and the government and drugmakers have given assurances large quantities are in the pipeline.

The rollout has proceeded at a disappointing pace. The U.S. government has delivered nearly 38 million doses of vaccine to the states, and about 17.5 million of those have been administered, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

About 2.4 million people have received the necessary two doses, by the CDC’s count — well short of the hundreds of millions who will have to be inoculated to vanquish the outbreak.

Biden, in one of his first orders of business, signed 10 executive orders to combat the coronavirus pandemic on Thursday, including one broadening the use of the Defense Production Act to expand vaccine production. The 1950 Korean War-era law enables the government to direct the manufacture of critical goods.

He also mandated masks for travel, including in airports and on planes, ships, trains, buses and public transportation, and ordered the Federal Emergency Management Agency to set up vaccination centers and the CDC to make vaccines available through pharmacies starting next month.

Biden has vowed to dispense 100 million shots in his first 100 days.

“We’ll move heaven and earth to get more people vaccinated for free,” he said.

Florida was one of the first states to open vaccine eligibility to members of the general public over 65. Now uncertainty over the vaccine supply has prompted the state surgeon general, Scott Rivkees, to advise counties to prioritize available doses for state residents, including so-called snowbirds who live there part-time. People seeking vaccination will have to provide a driver’s license or other document, such as rental leases and utility bills.

In New York, Mayor Bill de Blasio and Gov. Andrew Cuomo have been pleading for more doses. Appointments through Sunday for the first dose of the vaccine at 15 community vaccination hubs set up by the city health department were postponed to next week.

Vaccinations in New York haven’t stopped, but demand for the shots now far exceeds the number of doses available, the mayor said.

“It’s just tremendously sad that we have so many people who want the vaccine and so much ability to give the vaccine, what’s happening?” de Blasio said. “For lack of supply, we’re actually having to cancel appointments.”

Rosa Schneider had jumped at the chance to make a vaccination appointment once she heard that educators like her were eligible in New York. A high school English teacher who lives in New York City but works in New Jersey, she said that a day before she was to be vaccinated on Wednesday at a city-run hospital, she got a call saying the supply had run out and the appointment was canceled.

“I was concerned, and I was upset,” said Schneider, 32, but she is trying daily to book another appointment. She is hopeful availability will improve in the coming weeks.

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Associated Press writer Jennifer Peltz contributed to this report from New York.

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