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NYC Vaccine Mandate Update Stokes Controversy – NBC New York

What to Know

  • Mayor Eric Adams signed an order exempting NYC-based performers from the private sector vaccine mandate while leaving the rule intact for the vast majority of private employees citywide
  • Reports of the plan drew immediate backlash, with many calling it unfair that NYC workers remain suspended without pay while millionaire pros and entertainers may be about to get a pass
  • Given the widespread protests and sick calls over the mandate when Adams’ predecessor introduced it in late December, his anticipated move begs the question of whether disruptions could happen again

An adamant Mayor Eric Adams on Thursday formally announced an executive order exempting New York City-based professional athletes and performers from the private sector COVID vaccine mandate while leaving it intact for the vast majority of employees, a highly controversial move he billed as one of economic necessity.

Declaring his a “tough” decision in the best interest of New York’s economic recovery from the pandemic, Adams appeared to brace for the controversy that began to brew a day ago, upon news of his intent, and that has mounted since.

“I’m mayor of the city and I”m going to make some tough choices. People are not going to agree with some of them,” Adams said. “I was not elected to follow. I was not elected to be fearful but to be fearless. I must move this city forward.”

“I’m not making this decision loosely or haphazardly,” Adams said. “The city has to function. Some will boo us, others will cheer us — that is not only a game of baseball but that’s the game of life and we have to be on the field in order to win.”

The Democrat insisted his decision was intended to put New York City-based performers, which include athletes in this case, on a level playing field — a contention in stark contrast to views from many who claim Adams’ order does the exact opposite, favoring millionaires over the general public that elected him.

“Hometown players had an unfair disadvantage to those who were coming to visit,” Adams said of the mandate, which excused only non-NYC residents previously. “It’s unimaginable — treating our performers differently because they lived and played for home teams. Unacceptable. It’s a self-imposed competitive disadvantage.”

Watch Mayor Eric Adams’ full announcement in the player below.

Adding NYC-based performers, including outspoken unvaccinated ones like Nets star Kyrie Irving, who has had to remain on the sidelines at home while playing away, to the exempt list is an equalizer, the mayor insisted, and economic booster.

“By putting our home teams on an equal playing field we increase their chances of winning and that has a real impact on this city. It’s not just fans in the stands, it’s fans in the stores,” the Democrat said from CitiField, arguing each home playoff game is worth millions in impact. “These are real dollars and they play a major role.”

The amended exemption to the private sector vaccine mandate is effective immediately. The change allows players like Irving to once again take the floor and will allow any unvaccinated Met to take the home field on Opening Day next week. The Yankees will be able to do the same after their away series to open the season.

We are simply making sure the rules apply equally to everyone who is a performer regardless of where they perform their craft.

NYC MAYOR ERIC ADAMS ON VACCINE MANDATE EXEMPTION

Adams said the change only applies to a “small number” of people, since most have complied with the vaccine mandate. He didn’t say how many — and he sought to make it clear he believes vaccination is the right course for everyone.

“We are simply making sure the rules apply equally to everyone who is a performer regardless of where they perform their craft,” the mayor said.

What about the janitors and ushers who serve Barclays Center, some have asked. What about the NYPD and FDNY, which had among the lowest vaccination rates citywide before the initial rollout of the mandate, leading to protests and sickouts? And what about the average private worker who has been suspended without pay?

Asked just two days ago, Adams said he had no plans to reevaluate the private-sector mandate just yet, calling the workplace an “important environment.” He said he was following the science and that baseball and basketball “would have to wait.”

Called out about that Thursday, the mayor said, “Two days is still a wait.” He also said he had wanted to change the rule when he first took office but his medial team advised against it, given skyrocketing omicron infections across the country.

Adams reiterated his “peel-back-the-layers” approach to COVID restrictions, citing this latest announcement as another layer in the process. Many are outraged.

News of Adams’ intentions drew immediate backlash as it developed late Wednesday, with many calling it unfair that city workers, many of whom worked through the pandemic when there was no vaccine available, remain suspended without pay for refusing the doses while millionaire performers get a pass.

NYC Mayor Eric Adams is expected to make a COVID-related policy change that Nets fans will appreciate, allowing athletes to be exempt from the city’s private sector vaccine mandate. Though some are not happy with the decision. NBC New York’s Adam Harding and Bruce Beck report.

The city suspended numerous public employees — about 1,500 of them — for refusing to get vaccinated, including public servants like firefighters and sanitation workers. All employers are supposed to bar unvaccinated workers from being in shared workplaces. Adams said Thursday he has no plans now to rehire them.

Staten Island Councilman Joe Borelli called the decision “appalling.”

“We are firing our own employees but allowing exemptions for the fancy ones,” he said. “What is the rationale for exempting basketball players from the city’s private sector vaccine mandate but not the ushers or janitors in the arena? There must be a compelling public interest for subverting the equal application of our laws. What is it?”

Police Benevolent Association President Patrick Lynch was equally opposed.

“We have been suing the city for months over its arbitrary and capricious vaccine mandate — this is exactly what we are talking about. If the mandate isn’t necessary for famous people, then it’s not necessary for the cops who are protecting our city in the middle of a crime crisis,” Lynch said.

“While celebrities were in lockdown, New York City police officers were on the street throughout the pandemic, working without adequate PPE and in many cases contracting and recovering from COVID themselves,” he added. “They don’t deserve to be treated like second-class citizens now.”

Adams, a known Mets fan, has said he felt the vaccine rule imposed by his predecessor was unfair when it came to athletes and performers because a loophole allowed visiting players and performers who don’t work in New York to still play or perform even if they were unvaccinated.

The creation of special exemptions for athletes or entertainers could potentially lead to court challenges arguing the city isn’t applying the law evenly.

And given the widespread protests and sick calls over former Mayor Bill de Blasio’s introduction of the vaccine mandate in late December, Adams’ anticipated move brings up the question of whether such disruptions could happen again.

Under the prior rule, unvaccinated Yankees and Mets players were not allowed to play home games. Those rules have kept Irving, one of the highest-profile vaccine holdouts, both for his stardom and outspokenness, from playing games at Barclays Center and Madison Square Garden since he returned to the team in December.

Mayor Bill de Blasio announced major new expansions to the vaccine mandate, on Monday. Andrew Siff reports.

Fans are somewhat on the fence about allowing the openly COVID vaccine-resistant Irving to finally hit the court after months of sitting out home games.

Some say they are excited about what his return could mean for the team but still believe he should get vaccinated. Other fans say he should never have been held out at home.

Brandon Kuty, a sportswriter for the Star-Ledger and NJ.com, said the rule change is a huge win for Irving and others like him.

“Kyrie Irving comes out on top: He gets to play without the vaccine. Whether you agree or not, he got what he wanted,” Kuty said. “It’s got to be a huge relief to sports fans, and not worry about unvaccinated Yankees and Mets players.”

New COVID-19 policies in New York could allow unvaccinated players, such as Kyrie Irving, to play home games in New York.

The Mets were one of six MLB teams that didn’t reach an 85% vaccination threshold that allowed relaxed protocols last season.

Mets executives said Thursday that 99.5% of its employees are now vaccinated, but pressed further, admitted that “players are kind of outside the scope.” They wouldn’t give an exact number of how many players have yet to be inoculated against COVID. The team also acknowledged it has terminated stadium workers over the mandate.

While the Yankees surpassed the Mets’ early benchmark, the team was known to have several key unvaccinated players. As recently as nine days ago, Yankees star outfielder Aaron Judge declined to say whether he was vaccinated or not.

Unvaccinated MLB players are currently not allowed to travel to Canada to face the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre and will not be paid for those games. Until now they also weren’t permitted to play in the Bronx.

The upcoming season includes 92 Yankee games total at those venues.

The Yankees, who open their season at home against the Boston Red Sox on April 7, said ahead of the official announcement that the team president was “working with city hall and all other appropriate officials on this matter.”

Brooklyn residents react to Kyrie Irving’s decision to not get vaccinated. John Chandler reports.

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The ‘PALPABLE’ optimism surrounding Kyrie Irving and the Nets | SC with SVP – ESPN

  1. The ‘PALPABLE’ optimism surrounding Kyrie Irving and the Nets | SC with SVP ESPN
  2. Kyrie Irving Fires Massive Warning to James Harden and the Rest of the League EssentiallySports
  3. Kyrie Irving and the Brooklyn Nets Preach Optimism Before Make-or-Break Home Stretch Sportscasting
  4. Stephen A. & JWill go off debating Kyrie Irving’s comments after All-Star break | First Take ESPN
  5. “I don’t think anybody in the East can beat a healthy Brooklyn Nets” – Stephen A. Smith reacts to Kyrie Irving telling people to watch out for the Brooklyn Nets Sportskeeda
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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COVID Omicron Updates: CDC releases new guidance for some Americans to get additional vaccine booster shot

NEW YORK (WABC) — The CDC has shortened the amount of time people who are moderately or severely immunocompromised need to wait before getting a fourth COVID vaccine booster dose.

They now recommend that the severely immunocompromised can get an additional Pfizer or Moderna shot three months after their third dose instead of five months.

The CDC also encourages people with weakened immune systems who originally got a Johnson & Johnson vaccine to take two additional doses, instead of just one.

RELATED: What are the symptoms of the COVID omicron variant?

Here are more of today’s COVID-19 headlines:

US death toll hits 900,000, sped by omicron
Propelled in part by the wildly contagious omicron variant, the U.S. death toll from COVID-19 hit 900,000 on Friday, less than two months after eclipsing 800,000. The two-year total, as compiled by Johns Hopkins University, is greater than the population of Indianapolis, San Francisco, or Charlotte, North Carolina. The milestone comes more than 13 months into a vaccination drive that has been beset by misinformation and political and legal strife, though the shots have proved safe and highly effective at preventing serious illness and death.

Scientists study why some never catch coronavirus
Scientists are trying to unlock the mystery of why some people seem never to catch COVID. While there is no clear-cut answer, one factor may lie in our DNA, giving people with certain genetic traits more pre-existing protection. Researchers in London have also found that people with higher levels of T-cells generated from other previous coronavirus infections like a common cold were less likely to get COVID. “If there are overlapping sequences that are shared between the common cold coronaviruses and the sarscov2, that T-cell can react very quickly to mount a defense against sarscov2,” said Dr. Akiko Iwasaki, professor of immunology, Yale University.

More vaccinations will lead to lifting mask rules: Hochul
Records show 80% of 12-to 17-year-olds in New York State have gotten their first dose of the COVID vaccine, and Gov. Kathy Hochul says more vaccinations will lead to the lifting of mask mandates in schools. “The more children we have vaccinated, the safer they will be in school,” she said, explaining vaccination rate will be a factor in decisions on mask rules. “And they wont need a mask anymore,” Hochul promised. “But we are just not there yet. It is all based on data.” Data shows 40% of 5-to 11-year-olds have gotten their first dose.

COVID falling in 49 of 50 states as deaths near 900,000
With omicron easing, new cases of COVID-19 in the U.S. are falling in 49 of the 50 states, even as the nation’s death toll closes in on another bleak round number: 900,000. The number of lives lost to the pandemic in the U.S. stood at about 899,000 as of Friday afternoon, with deaths running at an average of more than 2,400 a day, back up to where they were last winter, when the vaccine drive was still getting started. But new cases per day have tanked by almost a half-million nationwide since mid-January, the curve trending downward in every state but Maine.

CT crosses grim milestone
Connecticut reported an additional 175 COVID deaths since last week, bringing the state’s total across the 10,000 threshold to 10,083. The state’s positivity rate is currently 6.57%, with 869 current hospitalizations.

Palin resumes court battle with NY Times after COVID illness

Sarah Palin’s libel suit against The New York Times went to trial Thursday in a case over the former Alaska governor’s claims the newspaper damaged her reputation with an editorial linking her campaign rhetoric to a mass shooting. The trial is a rare example of a jury deciding the validity of a persistent refrain from Palin and other Republicans: That a biased news media is willing to bend the truth to make conservatives look bad. Palin, a one-time Republican vice presidential nominee, told journalists as she arrived at the courthouse that she was looking for “Justice for people who expect truth in the media.” Opening statements to the jury were initially scheduled for last week, but were postponed when Palin tested positive for COVID-19.
“We come to this case with our eyes wide open and keenly aware of the fact we’re fighting an uphill battle,” Palin attorney Shane Vogt said. “Give us a fair shot. We’re not here trying to win your votes for Governor Palin or any of her policies.”

Medicare opens up access to free at-home COVID-19 tests
The Biden administration says people with Medicare will be able to get up to eight free over-the-counter COVID-19 tests per month, starting in early spring. It’s seeking to fill a frustrating gap in coverage for coronavirus tests. Last month, the administration directed private insurers to cover rapid COVID-19 tests for people on their plans. But until now officials were trying to figure out what to do about Medicare, which covers older people particularly vulnerable to severe illness from COVID-19. Laws and regulations that govern the program stood in the way. Free tests will be available through participating pharmacies and other locations. AARP has praised Medicare’s decision.

Russia mulls loosening restrictions amid record virus surge
The Russian president says his government is considering loosening some coronavirus restrictions, even as the country is facing a record-breaking surge of infections because of the highly contagious omicron variant. Vladimir Putin on Thursday insisted that authorities are not planning any lockdowns or other additional restrictions because of the surge. Moreover, the government is considering lifting restrictions for those who come into contact with COVID-19 patients, “to give people the opportunity to continue working in peace.” Existing regulations mandate that people who come in contact with someone with COVID-19 must self-isolate for seven days. On Thursday, the country’s state coronavirus task force reported 155,768 new infections, a daily tally 10 times higher than a month ago.

How many times can I reuse my N95 mask?
How many times can I reuse my N95 mask? It depends, but you should be able to use N95s and KN95s a few times. The U.S. Centers of Disease Control and Prevention says health care workers can wear an N95 mask up to five times. But experts say how often the average person can safely wear one will vary depending on how it’s used. Using the same mask to run to the grocery store, for example, is very different than wearing it all day at work.
When am I contagious if infected with omicron?

When am I contagious if infected with omicron? It’s not yet clear, but some early data suggests people might become contagious sooner than with earlier variants – possibly within a day after infection. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says people with the coronavirus are most infectious in the few days before and after symptoms develop. But that window of time might happen earlier with omicron, according to some outside experts. That’s because omicron appears to cause symptoms faster than previous variants – about three days after infection, on average, according to preliminary studies. Based on previous data, that means people with omicron could start becoming contagious as soon as a day after infection.

MORE CORONAVIRUS COVID-19 COVERAGE

Omicron variant symptoms: what to know even if you are vaccinated
New York City COVID-19 Vaccine Tracker
New Jersey COVID-19 Vaccine Tracker
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on coronavirus

Submit a News Tip or Question

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COVID Omicron Updates: Variant may be headed for a rapid drop in US

NEW YORK (WABC) — Scientists are seeing signals that COVID-19’s alarming omicron wave may have peaked in Britain and is about to do the same in the U.S., at which point cases may start dropping off dramatically.

The reason: The variant has proved so wildly contagious that it may already be running out of people to infect, just a month and a half after it was first detected in South Africa.

“It’s going to come down as fast as it went up,” said Ali Mokdad, a professor of health metrics sciences at the University of Washington in Seattle.

At the same time, experts warn that much is still uncertain about how the next phase of the pandemic might unfold. The plateauing or ebbing in the two countries is not happening everywhere at the same time or at the same pace. And weeks or months of misery still lie ahead for patients and overwhelmed hospitals even if the drop-off comes to pass.

Take a look at cases and hospitalizations in New York City:

RELATED: What are the symptoms of the COVID omicron variant?

Here are more of today’s COVID-19 headlines:

No change to schools’ mask mandate after Nassau County executive order
One week after Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman signed an executive order allowing school boards to decide whether students wear masks in schools, not one school district has changed their mask policies.

Blakeman said school board members have told him privately that they feel threatened by Governor Kathy Hochul and state officials.

When am I contagious if infected with omicron?
When am I contagious if infected with omicron? It’s not yet clear, but some early data suggests people might become contagious sooner than with earlier variants – possibly within a day after infection. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says people with the coronavirus are most infectious in the few days before and after symptoms develop. But that window of time might happen earlier with omicron, according to some outside experts. That’s because omicron appears to cause symptoms faster than previous variants – about three days after infection, on average, according to preliminary studies. Based on previous data, that means people with omicron could start becoming contagious as soon as a day after infection.

3,000 United Airlines employees test positive for COVID
United Airlines said it is reducing its flight schedule in hopes of stemming COVID-related staffing shortages that have caused thousands of flight cancellations across the industry. In a new company-wide memo, CEO Scott Kirby said the airline is “reducing our near-term schedules to make sure we have the staffing and resources to take care of customers.” Kirby did not specify by how much the airline is drawing down flights. But the memo added that “the omicron surge has put a strain on our operation, resulting in customer disruptions during a busy holiday season.” He went on to thank employees for their professionalism in handling the delays.

CDC says it will update mask ‘information’
The CDC says it plans to update its mask information to “best reflect the multiple options available to people and the different levels of protection they provide.” The CDC did not say when its guidance will be updated. In the meantime, the CDC said in a statement, “any mask is better than no mask, and we encourage Americans to wear a well-fitting mask to prevent the spread of COVID-19.” Since the arrival of omicron, health experts have urged Americans to upgrade their cloth masks to an N95 or KN95 because the new variant is so highly transmissible. But these higher-grade masks are costly and hard to find.

Multiple states issue emergency declarations
Governors in multiple states are issuing emergency declarations as the omicron variant depletes vital health care resources. The CDC says the variant now makes up 98% of all new cases, and new numbers, accounting for the weekend backlog, show the U.S. tallied a record 1.4 million cases in a single day. The CDC has determined the unvaccinated are 17 times more likely to be hospitalized than vaccinated Americans.

Virginia issued a 30-day state of emergency to help health care facilities increase bed space and staff, while New Jersey and Washington, DC, are also under emergency orders. Maryland, Maine, and Massachusetts are all leaning on the National Guard as a record number of COVID patients flood hospitals.

Police: Nurse in Italy caught faking shots, ditching vaccine
Police in Italy have arrested a nurse on charges he faked giving coronavirus vaccinations to at least 45 people so they could get a health pass without actually getting the shot. The nurse ditched the vaccines in a bin and even put bandages on his “patients” so the scam would not be detected. Police in Ancona, on Italy’s eastern coast, also placed four alleged accomplices under house arrest, accusing them of finding anti-vaccine customers who were willing to pay for a health pass rather than get the shots. Forty-five people who allegedly received the fabricated passes are under investigation.

Stay home or work sick? Omicron poses a conundrum for workers without paid sick days
As the raging omicron variant of COVID-19 infects workers across the nation, millions of those whose jobs don’t provide paid sick days are having to choose between their health and their paycheck. While many companies instituted more robust sick leave policies at the beginning of the pandemic, some of those have since been scaled back with the rollout of the vaccines, even though omicron has managed to evade the shots. Meanwhile, the current labor shortage is adding to the pressure of workers having to decide whether to show up to their job sick if they can’t afford to stay home.

“It’s a vicious cycle,” said Daniel Schneider, professor of public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. “As staffing gets depleted because people are out sick, that means that those that are on the job have more to do and are even more reluctant to call in sick when they in turn get sick.”

Federal officials issue warnings about fake COVID-19 testing kits
COVID-19 cases continue to rise dramatically, leading to brutally long lines at testing sites and empty shelves at stores where at-home rapid test kits were once in stock. Now, an additional problem has emerged: The Federal Trade Commission is warning about fraudulent testing kits being sold online to desperate customers.

Note: A previous version of this article incorrectly stated the CDC determined the unvaccinated are 17% more likely to be hospitalized. This article has been updated to say 17 times more likely.

MORE CORONAVIRUS COVID-19 COVERAGE

Omicron variant symptoms: what to know even if you are vaccinated
New York City COVID-19 Vaccine Tracker
New Jersey COVID-19 Vaccine Tracker
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on coronavirus

Submit a News Tip or Question

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COVID-19 spreads holiday misery, as canceled flights strand thousands on Christmas Eve – PBS NewsHour

  1. COVID-19 spreads holiday misery, as canceled flights strand thousands on Christmas Eve PBS NewsHour
  2. Some airline passengers face rocky holiday travel as COVID, staffing issues cancel hundreds of flights WJW FOX 8 News Cleveland
  3. Travel and health experts encourage taking covid-19 safety precautions during flights, holiday gatherings WFMZ Allentown
  4. COVID-19 continues to spread misery, upending holiday plans PBS NewsHour
  5. COVID-19 omicron variant not stopping holiday travelers from hitting the roads and skies WPVI-TV
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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NY Sets New Single-Day COVID Case Record; Health Commissioner a Breakthrough Case – NBC New York

What to Know

  • The omicron variant is fueling a surge that has set single-day pandemic records for statewide cases four days in a row; COVID hospitalizations are the highest they’ve been since mid-April
  • Given high vaccination rates for the densest parts of NY, especially the city, and increases in booster doses, amid other protective tools, Gov. Kathy Hochul says the state will be able to ride out this wave
  • Most importantly, the Democrat says she doesn’t anticipate the need for another shutdown. On schools, she stressed, “We are keeping our schools open. Let me repeat that: We are keeping our schools open”

New York state’s vaccinated health commissioner tested positive for COVID-19 via a rapid test, marking yet another breakthrough case as the Big Apple battles a record-breaking viral surge, Gov. Kathy Hochul said Monday as she acknowledged the open seat next to her. Dr. Mary T. Bassett has also gotten her booster, she added.

News of the positive test for the state’s leading health official came the same day the Empire State broke its own single-day pandemic case record for a fourth straight day, with Hochul reporting nearly 23,400 new cases overnight. The lion’s share of those infections come from New York City, where over 15,000 people tested positive, up nearly 50% since Friday.

The strain of coronavirus that infected Bassett wasn’t known and would take more extensive testing to determine if it were omicron, as all isolation of variants requires.

The unprecedented infectiousness of the new variant, and its apparent ability to evade the immune system, has stoked anxiety across the state and nation, but officials are quick to point out it doesn’t appear to cause more severe disease — at least for those who are fully vaccinated and received a booster like Bassett, for whom Hochul described no severe symptoms as a result of her infection.

The Democrat insisted fully vaccinated and boosted New Yorkers can safely gather with other fully vaccinated and boosted loved ones this holiday season and take solace in the expectation that those key protections, along with enhanced mask protocol in crowds at least through the season, will spare them any severe COVID illness this winter. She also insisted once again Monday that these tools, which were not widely available this time last year, will spare the state another shutdown.

Moderna says its COVID-19 booster does appear to provide protection against the omicron variant.

“It’s not March of 2020. It’s not even December of 2020. Just to keep things in perspective, it is milder than delta,” Hochul said of omicron. “We are avoiding a government shutdown because we now have the tools available to all of us — vaccinations, booster shots, masks — particularly for the variant we’re dealing with.”

“We are keeping our schools open,” Hochul emphasized. “Let me repeat that: We are keeping schools open.”

For the nearly 20% of New York adults who aren’t yet fully vaccinated, omicron — and the still pervasive delta variant, the story could be different. Hochul has been vocal about her mounting frustration with that group in recent weeks.

She has called out certain parts of the state with particularly low rates, like the Southern Tier, North Country and Mohawk Valley, for contributing to the furious spread of a pandemic-causing virus that feeds off its ability to mutate.

Only about two-thirds of adult residents in those regions are fully vaccinated, the latest state data show. That compares with about 83% of New York City adults and 86% of those on Long Island. The number of cases per 100,000 residents over a seven-day rolling period hits the denser areas harder, with the city and Long Island reporting 92.9 and 102.8 new cases per 100,000 residents by that metric.

The Southern Tier is the most densely populated of the three lowest vaccinated regions in New York state and has the highest new cases per 100,000 residents rate (110.4) of all 10 regions. New York City has roughly six times the population of the Southern Tier and a lower hospitalization per 100,000 residents rate (11.46) over the last seven days than any other region in the state.

Long Island is third-lowest (19.67), with another highly vaccinated region, Mid-Hudson, sandwiched in between. These numbers are further evidence, officials say, of the power of existing vaccines to prevent severe COVID-linked illness and death, whatever the variant linked to the increases in infections.

At least 192 cases of omicron have now been confirmed in New York state, about a fifth of them in New York City, though experts believe that 192 number is significantly underreported. The Empire State only conducts the genetic sequencing necessary to isolate variants on 3.6% of positive COVID samples, well lower than other hotspots like California (6.07%) but higher than New Jersey.

While the exact number of new omicron cases across the state can be difficult to determine given those limitations, no county has anywhere close to the number of confirmed cases of the new variant than Tompkins (117), which falls within the Southern Tier region. It’s also home to Ithaca and Cornell University, where the campus COVID surge forced a nearly full remote end to this latest semester.

Every single one of the 115 student samples that were tested for variants came back as omicron, the university said late Friday.

Data on the genetic sequencing rates by New York county for positive COVID samples by New York county does not appear available, so it’s unclear if Tompkins County is linked to a much higher omicron rate because of the testing volume.

While omicron may not be linked to more severe illness, it is causing an unprecedented surge in COVID cases that alone could overwhelm underprepared hospitals, top health officials at all levels of government have said.

In New York, the number of hospitals with bed capacity below 10% has declined since Hochul’s Nov. 22 briefing, from 28 to 32, which she says is encouraging.

“This is really the break point. If you have a surge of individuals needing medical care in a hospital, that’s where things break down,” Hochul said. “This is where our hands-on engagement is really making a difference. This could have been a crisis situation already” given the soaring statewide hospitalizations over the last month.

“We may not hit those peaks again,” the governor added. “We’re not going to throw in the towel here. We will not surrender to pandemic fatigue, as much as we’re getting exhausted from this. We can get through this holiday season.”

Other differentiators the governor plans to deploy in the next few weeks — more hospital staff, at-home tests for school kids. Hochul says she’s adamant that they remain safely open. Starting in January, she plans to send at-home testing kids with children in COVID-affected classrooms as part of that multi-pronged effort.

In addition, Hochul said the state will send and/or make available:

  • $65 million in aid to counties for “mask or vax” protocol implementation
  • 10 million more free at-home tests, including half of those this month (2 million for school districts, 1 million for county emergency managers, 1.6 million for NYC, 400,000 for state vaccine sites)
  • 3.4 million robocalls reminding vaccinated people to get their boosters
  • 6 million masks to county emergency managers

Hochul says she’s not there yet but she’s frustrated with trying to hammer home the same point to vaccine holdouts and is instead redoubling her focus on vaccinations and boosters through incentive-laden campaigns in an effort to get potentially more amenable parts of the state with lower vaccination rates to boost their paces.

New York City continues to push the same message, even as its triumphant plans for a crowd-filled (fully vaccinated only, of course) New Year’s Eve in Times Square now appear far less definitive than they were just a few weeks ago.

Mayor Bill de Blasio has pledged a decision on that party before Christmas. He warned Monday the omicron surge would likely intensify further — and considerably so — before it abates but says the good news is it is expected to be short-lived.

“We’re going to see a really fast upsurge in cases. We’re going to see a lot of New Yorkers affected by omicron,” the Democrat said, noting the surge is only expected to last a few weeks, based on the information he has received.

“We will get past omicron. We will continue our recovery in this city,” de Blasio, whose mayoral term wraps up Dec. 31. “Vaccination will be the key to all of this and New York City continues to lead the way in this country in terms of huge numbers of people vaccinated and aggressive measures to get even more folks vaccinated.”

The fate of the annual New Year’s Eve celebration in Times Square will be decided this week. Meanwhile, private school teachers have run out of time to get vaccinated. NBC New York’s Tracie Strahan and Romney Smith report.

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Court allows Biden’s COVID vaccine requirement for large companies to take effect

A federal appeals court panel on Friday allowed President Joe Biden’s COVID-19 vaccine requirement for larger private employers to move ahead, reversing a previous decision on a requirement that could affect some 84 million U.S workers.

The 2-1 decision by a panel of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati overrules a decision by a federal judge in a separate court that had paused the requirement nationwide.

The requirement from the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration was to take effect January 4. With Friday’s ruling, it’s not clear when the requirement might be put in place, but the White House said in a statement that it will protect workers: “Especially as the U.S. faces the highly transmissible Omicron variant, it’s critical we move forward with vaccination requirements and protections for workers with the urgency needed in this moment.”

Republican state attorneys general and conservative groups said they would appeal Friday’s decision to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Twenty-seven Republican-led states joined with conservative groups, business associations and some individual businesses to push back against the requirement as soon as OSHA published the rules in early November. They argued the agency was not authorized to make the emergency rule, in part because the coronavirus is a general health risk and not one faced only by employees at work.

The panel’s majority disagreed.

“Given OSHA’s clear and exercised authority to regulate viruses, OSHA necessarily has the authority to regulate infectious diseases that are not unique to the workplace,” Judge Julia Smith Gibbons, who was nominated to the court by former President George W. Bush, a Republican, wrote in her majority opinion.

“Vaccination and medical examinations are both tools that OSHA historically employed to contain illness in the workplace,” she wrote.

Gibbons noted that the agency’s authority extends beyond just regulating “hard hats and safety goggles.” She said the vaccine requirement “is not a novel expansion of OSHA’s power; it is an existing application of authority to a novel and dangerous worldwide pandemic.”

She was joined in the majority decision by Judge Jane Branstetter Stranch, an appointee of former President Barrack Obama, a Democrat.

The case was consolidated in the 6th circuit, which is dominated by Republican-appointed judges. Earlier this week, the circuit’s active judges rejected a move to have the entire panel consider the case, on an 8-8 vote.

The dissent in Friday’s ruling came from Judge Joan Larsen, an appointee of former President Donald Trump, who said Congress did not authorize OSHA to make this sort of rule and that it did not qualify as a necessity to use the emergency procedures the agency followed to put it in place.

Larsen also argued that vaccinated workers “do not face ‘grave danger’ from working with those who are not vaccinated.”

Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge, a Republican, said she would ask the U.S. Supreme Court to block the order. At least two conservative advocacy groups said they had already appealed to the nation’s highest court.

“The Sixth Circuit’s decision is extremely disappointing for Arkansans because it will force them to get the shot or lose their jobs,” Rutledge said.

South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson, who also is chairman of the Republican Attorneys General Association, said in a Twitter message Friday that he was confident the requirement could be stopped.

The vaccine requirement would apply to companies with 100 or more employees and would cover about 84 million workers in the U.S. Employees who are not fully vaccinated would have to wear face masks and be subject to weekly COVID-19 tests. There would be exceptions, including for those who work outdoors or only at home.

The administration has estimated that the rule would save 6,500 lives and prevent 250,000 hospitalizations over six months. On Friday, the U.S. Department of Labor, which includes OSHA, said the 6th circuit’s ruling will allow the agency to implement “common-sense, science-based measures to keep workers safe and healthy during a deadly pandemic.”

The vaccine rule for private employers is separate from other vaccine requirement announced by the Biden administration that apply to federal government contractors and workers in health care facilities that receive funding from Medicaid or Medicare. Those rules also are under assault from conservatives and have been paused in at least some parts of the country.

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Gov. Abbott Refuses DoD Vaccine Mandate for National Guard – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) says he will not impose a federal vaccine mandate on members of the Texas National Guard, despite warnings from the Department of Defense of consequences for guard members who remain unvaccinated without an exemption.

Abbott’s office said the governor sent a letter to U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin on Thursday “reaffirming that the State of Texas will not impose the Biden Administration’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate on members of the Texas National Guard.”

That doesn’t mean, however, members of the Texas National Guard won’t face consequences for remaining unvaccinated.

In November Secretary Austin laid out the consequences for service members who refused to get vaccinated against COVID-19. An NBC News report said Austin’s memo indicated they would face loss of pay and be marked absent without cause from drills and training.

Even more severe, the Air Force discharged 27 airmen earlier this week after they refused to get the COVID-19 vaccine, NBC News reported.

Abbott’s office said that in early October the governor ordered Texas Adjutant General Tracy Norris not to punish any guardsmen in Texas for choosing not to receive the vaccine, citing his executive order GA-39 which prohibits the imposition of a COVID-19 vaccine mandate by any governmental entity in Texas.

“As governor of Texas, I am the commander-in-chief of this state’s militia,” reads the letter. “In that capacity, on Oct. 4, 2021, I ordered the adjutant general of Texas to comply with my Executive Order GA-39. If unvaccinated guardsmen suffer any adverse consequences within the state of Texas, they will have only President Biden and his Administration to blame. The state of Texas will not enforce this latest COVID-19 vaccine mandate against its guardsmen. If the federal government keeps threatening to defund the Texas National Guard, I will deploy every legal tool available to me as governor in defense of these American heroes.”

Abbott, in his letter, mentioned several federal court cases where vaccine mandates have been challenged in court and put on hold. For now, though, vaccine mandates for military members have gone unblocked and a governor’s order does not supersede federal mandate, meaning members of the Texas National Guard who remain unvaccinated without an exemption could still be subject to discipline from the Department of Defense.

Republican Governors Ask Pentagon to Reconsider Guard Mandate

On Wednesday, a letter from the Republican governors of Wyoming, Alaska, Iowa, Mississippi, and Nebraska acknowledged the Pentagon can set “readiness standards” for the National Guard when activated for federal duty but they asked that the requirement that those members be vaccinated against COVID-19 be discontinued.

“Directives dictating whether training in a Title 32 status (state duty) can occur, setting punishment requirements for refusing to be COVID-19 vaccinated, and requiring separation from each state National Guard if unvaccinated are beyond your constitutional and statutory authority,” said the letter dated Dec. 14, NBC News reported.

The Pfizer vaccine has received full approval from the FDA. In their letter Wednesday, the governors did not list any concerns about any other fully approved vaccines required by the Department of Defense.

On Nov. 2, Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt of Oklahoma wrote a letter asking Austin to rescind the mandate for members of the Oklahoma National Guard. Days later, Stitt appointed a new adjutant general of the Oklahoma National Guard, who said he would not enforce the mandate.

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COVID-19 in Philly: Philadelphia rolling out vaccination requirements for food establishments

PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) — Philadelphia officials announced Monday that proof of a COVID-19 vaccine will soon be required to eat inside a restaurant or food establishment, saying the mandate is meant to help prevent another shutdown of indoor dining.

Patrons will have to show their vaccination card and a form of government ID.

The rollout begins January 3, Philadelphia Health Commissioner Dr. Cheryl Bettigole said.

“Any place that sells food or drink to be consumed on-site will have to require that everyone who enters be fully vaccinated against COVID-19,” she said.

For the first two weeks, January 3 to January 17, establishments may choose to accept proof of the negative COVID test in lieu of proof of vaccination.

“That negative COVID test must have been for the last 24 hours,” Bettigole said. “

After January 17, negative COVID-19 tests will no longer be accepted.

The city mandate allows some extra time for children ages 5-11 and employees to get vaccinated. The city is asking that those groups have a first dose by Jan. 3 and a second dose by Feb. 3.

RELATED: When will the COVID pandemic end? CDC Director Rochelle Walensky shares her prediction

The requirement does not apply to people who are exempted from vaccination, including children under 5 or people with proven medical or religious exemptions, Bettigole said.

But those with exemptions and children between 2 and 5 years old will be required to present a negative COVID-19 test taken within 24 hours to enter establishments that seat more than 1,000 people covered by the requirement.

That includes sports venues, movie theatres, bowling alleys or spaces like museum cafes inside larger venues.

She added that establishments like schools, daycares and others like soup kitchens or shelters that serve vulnerable populations will not require vaccination proof or negative tests.

Bettigole said the mandate will apply to the Wells Fargo Center, home of the Flyers and 76ers, and other indoor sporting venues where people buy food and eat it in their seats.

“We’ve already hosted several events where proof of vaccination or proof of a negative test were required for all guests, so we’re well prepared to comply with the city’s new policy,” Valerie Camillo, President of Business Operations for the Philadelphia Flyers and Wells Fargo Center, said in a statement.

The rules will not change for now at outdoor sporting events, but will apply to indoor areas and businesses inside Lincoln Financial Field, where the Eagles play, and similar venues.

“I don’t want to close our restaurants or other establishments that serve food. I want them to stay open and operate safely,” Bettigole said.

Bettigole said Philadelphia has seen infection rates double in the last few weeks and hospitalizations increase by about 50%.

According to data from the Action News Data Journalism Team, 75.8% of Philadelphia residents aged 18 and older are fully vaccinated.

Ben Fileccia, the spokesperson for the Pennsylvania Restaurant and Lodging Association, worries about employees becoming the city’s “vaccine police” and the possible confrontations that could follow.

“I really would hope that the city provides resources and guidance for all those young frontline workers who are now responsible for enforcing the city’s mandate,” said Fileccia.

Reaction from the community has also been mixed after news of the mandate was announced.

“I enjoy eating out and if I have to be vaccinated, that’s something I would do to continue doing what I like to do,” said Beverly Rubin of Rittenhouse Square.

“I just think that you should really be able to have the choice in order to get in. I think that’s a little extreme,” added Maddie Brady of Center City.

Philly officials say the mandate applies to the following settings that serve food:

-Indoor restaurant spaces

-Cafes within larger spaces (like museums)

-Bars

-Sports venues that serve food or drink for onsite consumption (including the Wells Fargo Center)

-Movie theaters

-Bowling alleys

-Other entertainment venues that serve food or drink for onsite consumption

-Conventions (if food is being served)

-Catering halls

-Casinos where food and drink is allowed on the floor

-Food court seating areas should be cordoned off and have someone checking vaccine status on entry to the seating area

Copyright © 2021 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.



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New Indoor Mask Mandate or Vaccination Requirement Starts Monday – NBC New York

All indoor public places across New York state must require masks for all people or proof of full vaccination prior to entry, a sweeping measure the governor announced Friday in an effort to curb a winter COVID surge that shows no signs of slowing.

It goes into effect on Monday. and covers any indoor space that is not a private residence.

Noncompliance comes with fines up to $1,000 for each violation and local health departments are being asked to enforce the requirements. The measure will be reassessed on Jan. 15, Gov. Kathy Hochul said. In the meantime, here’s a look at three options the affected places will have starting Monday and what businesses, patrons and employees need to know about each of them. Learn more here.

Read the full text of the new state mask mandate right here.

1. Proof of Full-Course Vaccination Requirement

Businesses and venues that implement a proof-of-vaccination requirement can accept Excelsior Pass, Excelsior Pass Plus, SMART Health Cards issued outside of New York state or a CDC Vaccination Card.

In accordance with CDC’s definition of fully vaccinated, full-course vaccination is defined as 14 days past an individual’s last vaccination dose in their initial vaccine series (14 days past the second shot of a two-dose Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccine; 14 days past the one-shot Janssen/Johnson & Johnson vaccine).

The state also accepts WHO-approved vaccines for these purposes. Parents and guardians can retrieve and store an Excelsior Pass and/or Excelsior Pass Plus for children or minors under legal guardianship.

New Yorkers can retrieve their Excelsior Pass or Excelsior Pass Plus here. Businesses and venues can download the Excelsior Pass Scanner app — free for any business nationwide and available in more than 10 languages — here.

Businesses and venues that implement a mask requirement must ensure all patrons 2 years and older wear a mask at all times while indoors.

3. Continued Masking Requirements

People who aren’t vaccinated are still responsible for wearing masks, in accordance with federal CDC guidance. The state’s masking requirements continue to be in effect for pre-K to grade 12 schools, public transit, homeless shelters, correctional facilities, nursing homes and healthcare settings per CDC guidelines.

New York state continues to strongly recommend mask-wearing in all public indoor settings as an added layer of protection, even when not required. Children under 5 who remain ineligible for vaccination must wear a proper-fitting mask.

COVID-19 vaccines and booster doses are free and widely available statewide. New Yorkers can visit vaccines.gov, text their ZIP code to 438829, or call 1-800-232-0233 to find nearby locations.

To schedule an appointment at a state-run mass vaccination site, New Yorkers can visit the Am-I-Eligible site or contact their health providers, county health departments, Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs), rural health centers or pharmacies.

New York City and New Jersey Vaccine Providers

Click on each provider to find more information on scheduling appointments for the COVID-19 Vaccine.

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