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NY, NJ and CT need two weeks to detain from states with high coronavirus rates



New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut issued a travel advisory on Wednesday, with a 14-day coronation for those coming from the states.


New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, and Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont said the state's broadcast rate applies to travel advisories for people who are above the 10 percent, seven-day rolling average or above 10 percent. The overall population tested was positive for a seven-day rolling average.

"We need to make sure the virus doesn't get on the plane," Cuomo said.

"We have worked very hard to reduce the viral transmission rate and don't want to see it increase," he said.

As of Wednesday, advisers will apply in Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Washington, Utah, and Texas. It starts at midnight.

Cuomo said each New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut are responsible for enforcing their own detention.

In New York, Cuomo said, violators may be subject to legal restraint and compulsory detention and can pay up to $ 2,000 for the first violation, $ 5,000 for the first violation, and $ 10,000 for damages.

The cases were controlled in a triangular position

The announcement made a 180-degree flip a few months ago when the tri-state area and especially New York City were the epicenter of the epidemic.

At the end of March, President Donald Trump planned to detain three states, Rhode Island police stopped vehicles with New York license plates, and Florida sidelined all passengers in the tri-state area for two weeks or so.

Monstrous lockdown regulations, extensive testing, and incomplete efforts at contact tracing have kept matters in tri-state territory and territory for months. New cases are falling in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut this week compared to a week ago.

But now, the Southern and Western states are viewed as a member of the White House Coronavirus Task Force, Dr. Anthony Fauci called the cases a "disturbing boom." As of Wednesday, 26 states reported an increase in cases last week compared to last week, and the increase was higher in states with higher populations, such as California, Texas, Florida and Arizona.

Governor Murphy of New Jersey said the tri-state region "broke the virus" with its public health efforts and praised the travel consultant.

"It's the right thing to do. It's a matter of common sense. It's the right thing to do," Murphy said.

The Connecticut Government said Lonmont had "reluctantly" decided to set up a travel adviser, adding that "the Northeast is taking it seriously."

"We are not an island and when we look at the rest of the country, we see, not just spikes, but the actual community spread," he said.

Lack of national infrastructure

Another consequence of the federal government's failure to create a strong national public health structure is the interstate travel ban. Nationwide regulations and the lack of effective supply chains have had the effect of leaving each state self-sufficient and against each other.

Even now, people living in 19 states do not have to wear facemasks - a simple and inexpensive layer against a virus that is not vaccine-free and widely effective.

In fact, Cuomo has openly mocked other states that he said were politically rather than scientific.

"New York has reached the lowest level of one of the highest infection rates in the country because we make decisions based on science - not politics," he said Tuesday. "We see in other states what happens when you don't have a matrix or data only. It's bad for public health and the economy, and the reopening of the states now appears to be a boomerang."

As part of the step-by-step reopening, New York will require areas to complete tests, contact tracing and hospital admissions, and certain metrics around available beds. The second phase of the reopening of New York City on Monday was the last area to be reopened after seeing continuous improvement in every metric.

However, Dr. Richard Beser, former acting director of the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention, says no state has safely reopened its economy.

"We have to figure out how to make that change successful, or every state that reopens, even those who did a good job of reducing it, are a very dramatic increase. We're going to end up looking at that.

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