Advertisement

U.S. coronavirus cases surpass 1 million; N.Y. figures decline

The U.S. Navy "Blue Angels" fly in formation over Manhattan in New York City on Tuesday as a tribute to front-line health workers. Similar flyovers will be staged in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Photo by John Angelillo/UPI
The U.S. Navy "Blue Angels" fly in formation over Manhattan in New York City on Tuesday as a tribute to front-line health workers. Similar flyovers will be staged in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Photo by John Angelillo/UPI | License Photo

April 28 (UPI) -- There have been more than 1 million cases of the coronavirus disease in the United States since the start of the pandemic, experts said Tuesday.

Trackers at Johns Hopkins University updated its national tally Tuesday evening to show about 1,011,500 cases. Experts at the school, who have been tracing global cases for weeks, say there have been more than 58,300 deaths in the United States.

Advertisement

The school says more than 5.79 million tests have been administered nationwide.

Earlier, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in his briefing that coronavirus figures in his state are on a steady decline. He reported the latest single-day death toll of 335 and said new hospitalizations fell below 1,000 for the first time in a month.

The new deaths put New York's total at 17,638.

Advertisement

"This number is basically reducing, but not at a tremendous rate," Cuomo said. "The only thing tremendous is the number of New Yorkers who still pass away."

Although several other states have begun permitting non-essential businesses to reopen, Cuomo said that's the goal for his state, but doing so must remain secondary to a potential surge in cases or "overwhelming the hospital system."

He outlined a 12-point plan for a controlled reopening that requires local officials to demonstrate a continual decline in cases over a two-week period.

"You can't sustain being closed, the economy can't sustain it, individual families can't sustain it," he said. "[But] it shouldn't be because people are protesting ... It is a factual discussion on reopening."

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio on Tuesday reported nearly 2,900 new cases and more than 250 additional deaths. To date, there have been about 156,100 cases in the city.

At his daily briefing, the mayor unveiled a new grading policy for public school students affected by the coronavirus-related closures. Under the new system, students from kindergarten through Grade 5 will receive "meets standards" or "needs improvement" ratings rather than traditional letter grades.

Advertisement

Students in Grades 6-8 will receive those two designations or "course in progress." High school students will see letter grades, grade point average, and options of "passing" and "course In progress."

"The goal here is not to fail students," said New York City Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza. "The goal is to have students master the subject matter."

In California, Gov. Gavin Newsom outlined a four-stage plan to gradually reopen the state.

Newsom said the state is currently in the first stage which is focused on flattening the curve through social distancing, and building testing, personal protective equipment and hospital capacity.

Stage 2 would involve opening "lower-risk workplaces" such as retail stores, manufacturing and offices where telework is not possible, followed by higher risk environments including movie theaters, religious services, hair salons, nail salons and gyms with limits on the size of gatherings, and sports without live audiences.

The final stage would lift the state's stay-at-home order and re-open the highest risk environments including concerts, convention centers and sporting events with live crowds once therapeutics to combat the virus have been developed.

In Florida, health officials reported the greatest single-day death toll yet, 83, pushing the the state total to 1,171. They also reported a surge of 700 new cases, pushing the total to nearly 33,000.

Advertisement

In Georgia, suburban Atlanta transit workers are threatening to walk off the job Thursday due to safety concerns.

The union representing employees of Transdev, which operates Gwinnett County Transit service, said they're at risk due to a lack of protective gear for bus drivers. They also demand that passengers wear masks and clear shields for separation.

Union representative Mikesha Walker said drivers' concerns were heightened by Gov. Brian Kemp's decision to begin allowing businesses to reopen.

COVID-19 pandemic alters life in New York City

Mannequins with face masks and designer clothing fill a window at a Diane Von Furstenberg store in New York City on September 8, 2020. Photo by John Angelillo/UPI | License Photo

Latest Headlines