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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Denis Slattery

New York prepping for fall COVID-19 surge, not ruling out school mask rule, Gov. Hochul says

ALBANY, N.Y. — New York is prepping for a potential fall surge in COVID-19 cases when schools reopen by stockpiling tests and keeping mask mandates on the table, Gov. Kathy Hochul said Wednesday.

“We need to be cognizant of what could be our future,” the governor said during a Manhattan press conference. “If anything, this pandemic, COVID, has taught us that preparations are the key to, literally, survival.”

Hospitalizations and infections are already on the rise in the Empire State thanks to the the BA.5 subvariant of omicron, which has proven to be particularly good at evading protections from vaccinations and prior infections.

The state has stockpiled more than 20 million at-home tests that are ready to be distributed as needed when students begin returning to classrooms, and Hochul said that mask mandates could also return if infections surge.

“We don’t currently, based on today’s numbers, anticipate the need for masks in classrooms, but I’m going to reserve the right to return to this policy if the numbers change, the circumstances change,” she said.

Indoor mask rules, including schools, were suspended earlier this year following a winter spike in coronavirus cases.

The state will be sending out about 3 million test kits to districts ahead of start of the school year

Health officials encouraged anyone over 50 to get a COVID booster shot if they have yet to receive one this year to help protect them against infection.

New York is also soliciting proposals for a pandemic policy review to study how the state handled the COVID crisis, something that critics have long called for and Hochul promised would happen shortly after she took office last year.

The review will focus on state policies that affected schools and businesses, as well as controversial rules that impacted nursing homes and prisons, during the peak of the pandemic.

“I want to make sure we are very intentional about this, have a broad scope to what we are doing and have a real blueprint so that it is useful to us,” Hochul said.

A request for proposals will for the “After-Action Review Board” will be issued soon and Hochul said she expects initial findings to be completed in six months and a completed review will be ready some time next year.

New York’s pandemic response has faced wide criticism, particularly related to rules that related to nursing homes under former governor Andrew Cuomo that many say led to unnecessary deaths.

A review by Attorney General Letitia James released last year found the state significantly undercounted nursing home deaths during the height of the pandemic.

State Homeland Security Commissioner Jackie Bray will help oversee the soon-to-begin independent review, Hochul said.

The governor also shot down concerns about recent reports about campaign donations made by a family that runs a company that received a no-bid contract for COVID tests.

“I was not aware of that this was a company that had been supportive of me I don’t keep track of that,” she said.

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