What you need to know for Monday.
Coronavirus in N.Y.C.: Latest Updates |
Weather: Cloudy, then breaks of sun, with a high of about 60. |
Alternate-side parking: Suspended through April 28. Meters are in effect. |
| Marian Carrasquero for The New York Times |
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De Blasio asks Trump if he’s telling the city to “drop dead.” |
Mayor Bill de Blasio on Sunday continued to call on President Trump to direct desperately needed federal funding to American cities, and to criticize the president’s silence on the matter. |
“How on earth do you not have an opinion on aid to American cities and states?” Mr. de Blasio said during his daily press briefing. |
He compared Mr. Trump’s lack of response to the financial shortfall facing New York City in particular to President Gerald Ford’s dismissal of the city during the fiscal crisis of the 1970s. |
“There was that famous Daily News cover that said ‘Ford to City: Drop Dead,’” Mr. de Blasio said. “So my question is, Mr. Trump, Mr. President, are you going to save New York City or are you telling New York City to drop dead? Which one is it?” |
New York may have passed the high point of infection. |
Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said Sunday that data indicated that New York was “past the high point” of the coronavirus outbreak. |
“If this trend holds, we are past the high point, and all indications at this point are that we are on a descent,” he said, adding, “We are on the other side of the plateau, and the numbers are coming down.” |
The governor asked that New Yorkers remain vigilant, pointing out that 1,300 people had been hospitalized for the virus the previous day. |
Trump praises Cuomo on federal-state partnership. |
During a news conference on Sunday evening, President Trump thanked Mr. Cuomo, saying that their partnership had been effective, including in extending the city’s hospital capacity. |
“We built a little bit more than we needed — that’s good,” the president said. “As opposed to building a little bit less — that’s not good.” |
Mr. Trump also played a two-minute clip from Mr. Cuomo’s Sunday news conference in which the governor praised the coordination between federal and state governments in response to the outbreak. |
Local college students are using 3-D printers to make face shields. [Bronx Times] |
Here is an inside look at how health care workers are responding to the outbreak on Long Island. [Newsday] |
How did a dead man in Queens get nominated for a position with the local Democratic County Committee? [Queens Chronicle] |
And finally: New York, from artists’ windows |
Antonio de Luca, Sasha Portis and Adriana Ramić write: |
Windows are often described as the eyes of a building. They are a symbol of pondering, an aperture through which we can experience the world outside while remaining inside — an important feature now that millions of New Yorkers have had to move their lives indoors. |
We reached out to 17 illustrators and artists sheltering in place in neighborhoods across the city and asked them to draw what they see out of their windows — to show us what it feels like to be in New York at this rare moment in time. |
| Yuko Shimizu |
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“For three weeks, I have not seen anything move,” said Yuko Shimizu, an artist in Morningside Heights, Manhattan, who drew the scene above. |
It’s Monday — what’s outside your window? |
Metropolitan Diary: Passing by |
It was 1978, and I was walking uptown on a snow-covered part of lower First Avenue. Local merchants had shoveled a one-person-wide path in the middle of the sidewalk. |
A young man and woman were walking toward me. As they got closer, we all realized we would need to do a little dance to pass one another while staying on the path. |
They went single file with the woman in front. We all turned sideways to create uptown and downtown “lanes” for ourselves to the degree possible. |
Just before the woman passed me, she turned back toward her companion. |
“By the way,” she said, “when do you want to get married?” |
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