© 2024 WRVO Public Media
NPR News for Central New York
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Stay up to date with the latest news on the coronavirus and COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus. We'll post regular updates from NPR and regional news from the WRVO newsroom. You can also find updates on our live blog.

New York cases of COVID-19 up to 33

Hamza Butt
/
Flickr

NEW YORK (AP) — The rabbi of a suburban New York congregation that is grappling with the coronavirus outbreak has tested positive for the illness.

Rabbi Reuven Fink, of the Young Israel of New Rochelle temple, was among the confirmed cases of COVID-19 previously announced by state officials, according to a statement posted Friday on the website of Yeshiva University, where Fink teaches two courses.

Many members of Fink’s congregation were asked to self-quarantine earlier in the week, when one person in the synagogue’s community, a New York lawyer, was hospitalized. Since then, some people who were friends or relatives of the lawyer have tested positive.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Friday that the number of COVID-19 cases statewide had ticked up to 33, with all 11 new confirmed cases connected. That includes a person in New York City, three members of the congregation, two friends, two people in nearby Rockland County who worked at a bat mitzvah at the synagogue and three cases related to the lawyer’s initial hospitalization in Westchester County.

Cuomo told a news conference at the Capitol that the numbers will rise as the outbreak continues and as testing ramps up.

Fink had isolated himself as a precaution earlier in the week, telling congregants in a Facebook posting that following the quarantine order is “a sacred obligation that we all must take very seriously.”

“This is a very emotionally trying time for us all,” he wrote then. “When we first heard of the Coronavirus it seemed so remote. It has now come not only to our doorstep, but has pierced our lives.”

The upper Manhattan campus of Yeshiva University was already closed through Friday because the stricken lawyer’s son is a student there and has also tested positive for COVID-19. The university said it was advising Fink’s students to self-quarantine until further notice.

The synagogue’s website says it is closed through Sunday.

Health officials had said earlier that people who attended services there on Feb. 22, and a funeral and a bat mitzvah on Feb. 23, must self-quarantine until at least Sunday.

There were scattered school closings in the region amid fears of a wider spread of the virus. Two elite private schools in Manhattan, the all-girls Spence and the all-boys Collegiate, closed Friday because a family associated with the schools was being monitored for the coronavirus.

NEW YORK (AP) — The rabbi of a suburban New York congregation that is grappling with the coronavirus outbreak has tested positive for the illness.

Rabbi Reuven Fink, of the Young Israel of New Rochelle temple, was among the confirmed cases of COVID-19 previously announced by state officials, according to a statement posted Friday on the website of Yeshiva University, where Fink teaches two courses.

Many members of Fink’s congregation were asked to self-quarantine earlier in the week, when one person in the synagogue’s community, a New York lawyer, was hospitalized. Since then, some people who were friends or relatives of the lawyer have tested positive.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Friday that the number of COVID-19 cases statewide had ticked up to 33, with all 11 new confirmed cases connected. That includes a person in New York City, three members of the congregation, two friends, two people in nearby Rockland County who worked at a bat mitzvah at the synagogue and three cases related to the lawyer’s initial hospitalization in Westchester County.

Cuomo told a news conference at the Capitol that the numbers will rise as the outbreak continues and as testing ramps up.

Fink had isolated himself as a precaution earlier in the week, telling congregants in a Facebook posting that following the quarantine order is “a sacred obligation that we all must take very seriously.”

“This is a very emotionally trying time for us all,” he wrote then. “When we first heard of the Coronavirus it seemed so remote. It has now come not only to our doorstep, but has pierced our lives.”

The upper Manhattan campus of Yeshiva University was already closed through Friday because the stricken lawyer’s son is a student there and has also tested positive for COVID-19. The university said it was advising Fink’s students to self-quarantine until further notice.

The synagogue’s website says it is closed through Sunday.

Health officials had said earlier that people who attended services there on Feb. 22, and a funeral and a bat mitzvah on Feb. 23, must self-quarantine until at least Sunday.

There were scattered school closings in the region amid fears of a wider spread of the virus. Two elite private schools in Manhattan, the all-girls Spence and the all-boys Collegiate, closed Friday because a family associated with the schools was being monitored for the coronavirus.

NEW YORK (AP) — The rabbi of a suburban New York congregation that is grappling with the coronavirus outbreak has tested positive for the illness.

Rabbi Reuven Fink, of the Young Israel of New Rochelle temple, was among the confirmed cases of COVID-19 previously announced by state officials, according to a statement posted Friday on the website of Yeshiva University, where Fink teaches two courses.

Many members of Fink’s congregation were asked to self-quarantine earlier in the week, when one person in the synagogue’s community, a New York lawyer, was hospitalized. Since then, some people who were friends or relatives of the lawyer have tested positive.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Friday that the number of COVID-19 cases statewide had ticked up to 33, with all 11 new confirmed cases connected. That includes a person in New York City, three members of the congregation, two friends, two people in nearby Rockland County who worked at a bat mitzvah at the synagogue and three cases related to the lawyer’s initial hospitalization in Westchester County.

Cuomo told a news conference at the Capitol that the numbers will rise as the outbreak continues and as testing ramps up.

Fink had isolated himself as a precaution earlier in the week, telling congregants in a Facebook posting that following the quarantine order is “a sacred obligation that we all must take very seriously.”

“This is a very emotionally trying time for us all,” he wrote then. “When we first heard of the Coronavirus it seemed so remote. It has now come not only to our doorstep, but has pierced our lives.”

The upper Manhattan campus of Yeshiva University was already closed through Friday because the stricken lawyer’s son is a student there and has also tested positive for COVID-19. The university said it was advising Fink’s students to self-quarantine until further notice.

The synagogue’s website says it is closed through Sunday.

Health officials had said earlier that people who attended services there on Feb. 22, and a funeral and a bat mitzvah on Feb. 23, must self-quarantine until at least Sunday.

There were scattered school closings in the region amid fears of a wider spread of the virus. Two elite private schools in Manhattan, the all-girls Spence and the all-boys Collegiate, closed Friday because a family associated with the schools was being monitored for the coronavirus.

Copyright 2020 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.