Monday, June 6, 2022

Governor Hochul Updates New Yorkers on State's Progress Combating COVID-19 - JUNE 6, 2022

COVID-19 vaccine vial and syringe

Statewide 7-Day Average Case Rate Has Declined Over Past 20 Consecutive Days - Lowest Since April 13

Statewide 7-Day Average Hospitalization Continues to Decline -- Lowest Since May 12

Governor Encourages New Yorkers to Keep Using the Tools to Protect Against and Treat COVID-19: Vaccines, Boosters, Testing, and Treatment

11 Statewide Deaths Reported Yesterday  


 Governor Kathy Hochul today updated New Yorkers on the state's progress combating COVID-19.

"While numbers are heading in the right direction, we must remain vigilant against this virus and continue boosting our preparedness for any potential surges later this year," Governor Hochul said. "I encourage all New Yorkers to make use of the tools we have available to us to keep each other safe and healthy. Be sure to keep up to date with vaccinations and booster doses in order to protect yourself and those around you from serious illness and hospitalization. Test often, especially if you are experiencing symptoms, and talk to your doctor about available treatments if you test positive."

Today's data is summarized briefly below:       

  • Cases Per 100k - 20.11
  • 7-Day Average Cases Per 100k - 28.86
  • Test Results Reported - 66,856
  • Total Positive - 3,930
  • Percent Positive - 5.80%**
  • 7-Day Average Percent Positive - 6.07%**
  • Patient Hospitalization -  2,127 (+31)  
  • Patients Newly Admitted - 242
  • Patients in ICU - 216 (-14)
  • Patients in ICU with Intubation - 84 (-2)   
  • Total Discharges - 309,475 (+223)  
  • New deaths reported by healthcare facilities through HERDS - 11 
  • Total deaths reported by healthcare facilities through HERDS - 56,211

   ** Due to the test reporting policy change by the federal Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and several other factors, the most reliable metric to measure virus impact on a community is the case per 100,000 data -- not percent positivity.   

The Health Electronic Response Data System is a NYS DOH data source that collects confirmed daily death data as reported by hospitals, nursing homes and adult care facilities only.         

Important Note: Effective Monday, April 4, the federal Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is no longer requiring testing facilities that use COVID-19 rapid antigen tests to report negative results. As a result, New York State's percent positive metric will be computed using only lab-reported PCR results. Positive antigen tests will still be reported to New York State and reporting of new daily cases and cases per 100k will continue to include both PCR and antigen tests. Due to this change and other factors, including changes in testing practices, the most reliable metric to measure virus impact on a community is the case per 100,000 data -- not percent positivity.   

  • Total deaths reported to and compiled by the CDC - 71,670

This daily COVID-19 provisional death certificate data reported by NYS DOH and NYC to the CDC includes those who died in any location, including hospitals, nursing homes, adult care facilities, at home, in hospice and other settings.         

  • Total vaccine doses administered - 39,003,605 
  • Total vaccine doses administered over past 24 hours - 6,429
  • Total vaccine doses administered over past 7 days - 77,577
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with at least one vaccine dose - 92.6%   
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with completed vaccine series - 84.1%   
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) - 95.0%   
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with completed vaccine series (CDC) - 87.5%   
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 12-17 with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) - 83.7%   
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 12-17 with completed vaccine series (CDC) - 73.6%   
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with at least one vaccine dose - 82.2%   
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with completed vaccine series - 74.5%   
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) - 90.7%   
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with completed vaccine series (CDC) - 77.5%      
Each New York City borough's 7-day average percentage of positive test results reported over the last three days is as follows **:  

Borough  

Friday, June 3, 2022 

Saturday, June 4, 2022 

Sunday, June 5, 2022 

Bronx  

4.01% 

3.81% 

3.68% 

Kings  

5.07% 

4.93% 

4.88% 

New York  

6.35% 

6.11% 

6.03% 

Queens  

5.88% 

5.89% 

5.58% 

Richmond  

5.96% 

5.65% 

5.65% 


Borough  

Tuesday, May 31, 2022 

Wednesday, June 1, 2022 

Thursday, June 2, 2022 

Bronx  

4.15% 

4.07% 

4.07% 

Kings  

5.80% 

5.28% 

5.00% 

New York  

6.49% 

6.51% 

6.44% 

Queens  

6.09% 

6.20% 

6.19% 

Richmond  

6.36% 

6.11% 

5.93% 


FORMER GENERAL COUNSEL OF NYC BOARD OF ELECTIONS PLEADS GUILTY TO TWO COUNTS OF OFFICIAL MISCONDUCT IN CONNECTION WITH UNAUTHORIZED CONDUCT WITH AN INTERN AT THE BOE AND ANOTHER INDIVIDUAL

 

 Jocelyn E. Strauber, Commissioner of the New York City Department of Investigation (“DOI”), issued the following statement on today’s guilty plea by the former General Counsel of the New York City Board of Elections (BOE”) to two counts of Official Misconduct in connection with the unauthorized exercise of his official duties, specifically misconduct involving other individuals, including an intern, who worked at BOE. DOI began investigating the matter in 2020 after receiving an anonymous complaint regarding inappropriate activity by the defendant with interns. DOI worked in partnership with the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office on the investigation.

 STEVEN H. RICHMAN, 63, of Brooklyn, N.Y., pleaded guilty in New York Criminal Court to two counts of Official Misconduct, which are class A misdemeanors. He received an unconditional discharge as part of the plea agreement. RICHMAN is required to report his conviction to the Appellate Division of the New York State Supreme Court within 30 days.

 DOI Commissioner Jocelyn E. Strauber said, “This defendant exploited his position of authority with the BOE when he conditioned potential future job prospects for an intern he supervised, and another individual to whom he offered potential employment, on meeting improper demands to gratify his own personal interests. This conduct is not only outrageous and shameful; it is criminal. As a result, Steven Richman has acknowledged and pleaded guilty to Official Misconduct. I thank the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office for their commitment to working with DOI on this important investigation.”

 According to the defendant’s plea allocution to two counts of Official Misconduct, RICHMAN was responsible for the hiring, supervision, and discipline of the legal interns and other staff at the BOE, where he served as General Counsel from 1999 to 2021. In that capacity, RICHMAN knowingly engaged in an unauthorized exercise of his official functions, in order to obtain a personal benefit. Specifically, in the summer of 2017, RICHMAN convinced an intern he supervised that he could help the intern obtain a job as a security guard at political events, if the intern could pass a so-called “physical fitness assessment” to be administered by RICHMAN. RICHMAN used the BOE offices, after official business hours, to conduct the assessment, measuring the intern’s body parts, placing the intern in wrestling holds and having the intern place RICHMAN in wrestling holds, and repeating the “assessment” several times thereafter. RICHMAN had no immediate intention of securing the intern a job as a security guard and never took any steps toward securing such a job. Separately, in August 2020, RICHMAN convinced another individual that he could use his General Counsel position to secure the individual a job as a security guard at a political event and that the individual would have to pass a purported physical fitness evaluation that would be administered by RICHMAN. RICHMAN and the individual entered the BOE offices on Sunday, August 16, 2020, and after the individual completed an interview and paperwork, RICHMAN performed an “assessment” that was similar to the one RICHMAN conducted of the intern in 2017. In the 2020 incident, RICHMAN took photos during the “assessment,” and did not take any steps toward securing the individual a job as a security guard.

 RICHMAN was employed by the BOE from January 1999 until he resigned in January 2021 in the middle of this investigation. At that time, he received a salary of $193,730.

 Commissioner Strauber thanked Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and his staff for their prosecution of this matter. Assistant District Attorney Daniel Passeser of the District Attorney’s Major Economic Crimes Bureau is handling the case.

 At DOI, the investigation was handled by DOI’s Office of the Inspector General for the BOE, specifically Special Investigator Gina N. Diaz, under the supervision of Deputy Inspector General Trenton Sweeney, Inspectors General Juve Hippolyte and Eleonora Rivkin, Deputy Commissioner/ Chief of Investigations Dominick Zarrella and First Deputy Commissioner Daniel G. Cort.