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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Denis Slattery

Gov. Cuomo negative for coronavirus after being tested during briefing on Sunday

ALBANY, N.Y. _ New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo got the all clear.

The governor announced Monday that he tested negative for coronavirus after getting a nasal swab during his news conference a day earlier.

"It's actually a nice sense of relief," he said during a press briefing in Buffalo.

Cuomo is pushing the public to get tested if they exhibit symptoms or are exposed to someone who has the virus as the state doubled testing capacity to reach 40,000 diagnostic tests per day.

"There's no reason why people shouldn't be getting tested," he said. "If you were exposed to a person who you find out is positive for COVID, get a test. It takes 30 seconds, we have 700 locations across the state, so there's no reason why you shouldn't do it. Go right to the web, shows you right where the location is, sign up and go."

As more regions of the state inch toward reopening, Cuomo said several key indicators including overall hospitalizations and ICU patients remain down statewide. As of Sunday, 351,371 people in the state have tested positive for COVID-19, according to the state Department of Health. A total of 1,908 people are currently being treated in Intensive Care Units.

Another 106 New Yorkers died from the virus on Sunday.

Western New York will begin a gradual reopening on Tuesday, joining much of upstate in the first phase of the process. Construction, manufacturing and retail businesses allowing curbside pickup can start up under the plan as long as they follow strict guidelines.

"It's been a long painful period, but we start to reopen tomorrow," Cuomo said of the area surrounding Buffalo.

The governor defended the state's handling of the pandemic as deaths have soared at nursing homes and said 320,000 testing kits are being shipped to adult long-term care facilities so they can meet the recently introduced mandate to test staff twice a week.

"If you watch what happens with the staff, it's a canary in the coal mine for what's happening in the nursing home and it clearly keeps the residents of the nursing home safe," Cuomo said.

New York City remains under the state's strict "pause" order, which has shuttered nonessential businesses, banned gathering and closed schools. The five boroughs are trying to meet the remaining metrics regarding testing, tracing and hospitalization rates.

The city has only met three of the seven benchmarks toward reopening as of Monday, according to the state. Cuomo has asked that 30% of hospital beds remain free as a buffer and wants to see regions up the number of trained tracers who can track positive cases.

The governor also encouraged major sports teams in the state to work on a plan to play without fans, saying the state will assist in planning and logistics.

"New York State will help those major sports franchises to just that. Hockey, basketball, baseball, football, whoever can reopen, we'll be a ready, willing, and able partner," he said. "I think this is in the best interest of all the people and the best interest of the state of New York."

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