'Do your job'; Cuomo: Police must disperse crowds outside bars

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Cuomo criticizes officials and residents

Gov. Andrew Cuomo said that local officials have to do more to stop residents from doing dangerous activities amid the pandemic. He threatened to roll back reopenings.

New York City moved to what was supposed to be the final phase of its coronavirus reopening Monday, but with indoor service at restaurants and bars still banned, malls and museums shuttered and theaters still dark amid concerns about the virus spreading indoors.

Phase four of the city's reopening does allow more outdoors arts and reaction activities to open. Media production companies can resume work, a major business in the East Coast entertainment capital. And professional sports teams can resume play too, though without fans.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo, though, said the city was not ready for indoor nightlife and he called on local governments Monday to dispatch police to disperse crowds that have been gathering outside some bars and restaurants offering outdoor dining and curbside pick-up of alcoholic beverages.

Police departments, including the NYPD, have to "enforce the law" if the crowds get larger than allowed, he said.

"It's not just showing up and watching," Cuomo said in his Monday news conference. "The crowd has to be dispersed. It's violating the law."

Social media posts continue to show crowds gathering outside of bars and restaurants in violation of the state's social distancing rules and open container laws.

"Local governments, you don't want to enforce the law because you think it's politically unpopular and you don't want to do something that's politically unpopular," Cuomo said. (Story continues below)

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Long Beach to crack down on crowds

Long Beach police say a crowd of 800 to 1,000 people gathered on a beach for what was billed as a sunset watch on Saturday night but it turned into a rowdy, mask-free, boozy party. Acting Commissioner Philip Ragona said officers needed several hours to get the crowd under control. Beginning Thursday, police will shut down the beach at 8 p.m. and the boardwalk at 9 p.m. Also, the city will not sell beach passes to nonresidents on weekends. Reported by Stacey Delikat

Eight people with COVID-19 died in New York Sunday, Cuomo said. About 1% of around 50,000 tests conducted Sunday came up positive, which continues a weeks-long trend.

"We're holding steady," Cuomo said. "We'd like to see it at zero obviously, but one percent is very good."

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said at his Monday news conference that "troubling overcrowding" at restaurants "will not be tolerated."

He referenced the recent shutdown of a restaurant in Astoria, and promised heavier enforcement by the sheriff's department and by the police department if necessary.

"One restaurant has been shut down," de Blasio said. "If others have to be we will."

Cuomo flew to Savannah, Georgia, for the day Monday to meet with the mayor to bring "thousands of PPE" and talk about testing and tracing programs and dealing with rising hospital capacity.

Cuomo said he's exempted from quarantine requirements under a multi-state travel advisory because he's an essential worker and he'll be in Georgia less than 24 hours.

Villeneuve reported from Albany, New York.