![]() “When the mayor decides to close these stores,” said one of the vendors pointing at the Bronx Terminal Market behind his cart, “then it will be when all of us are going to feel the real hit. A corn elotes and tamales vendor also reported a 50 percent sales reduction, though, for him, the hit came over this past weekend. For example, a vendor of winter hats and other headwear said he used to sell approximately $200 per day, and after March 9th he just sold $50 worth. Most of the street vendors in that spot reported at least a 50 percent reduction in sales. ![]() Housing advocates and local leaders began calling for a freeze on rent payments and evictions, and the city’s mobile vendors were already feeling the financial impact of near-empty streets and public spaces:įor most street vendors at the Bronx Terminal Market, sales started to decline on Monday, March 9th. “We will never forget their names, their faces, or the ways they have shaped this great city, and we recommit ourselves, in their memories, to remake our city into one that is more just, equitable, and resilient.”Īs the city and the world enters its third year of life with COVID-19, here’s a look back at some pivotal moments, as told through City Limits’ coverage of the crisis since March 2020.ĭuring the earliest days of the city’s shutdown the week of March 14, 2020, many supermarket shelves were bare as New Yorkers stocked up on food and supplies. “As we work to recover and rebuild New York City, we must remember those that we have lost, and carry on their stories,” Adams said in a statement Monday morning. The city lifted both its mask mandate for public schools and its vaccine requirements for indoor venues last week-citing declining cases, low community spread and high vaccination-marking a new phase of the reopening. Kathy Hochul had COVID-related events on their public schedules Monday, though the mayor’s office announced it would be lighting City Hall and five other municipal buildings amber to honor the anniversary. The two-year milestone seems to be passing in a much quieter way this year. A year ago, the city marked the the first anniversary of the crisis with a “day of remembrance” that included a memorial ceremony where images of those lost were projected onto the Brooklyn Bridge. Since then, nearly 40,000 New York City residents have died from the coronavirus. In the days to follow, public schools, restaurants and bars would shut down, and the five boroughs would enter an eerie state of lockdown while the city emerged as an early epicenter of the pandemic. Two years ago on Monday, New York City saw its first COVID-19 death. CDC Read our coverage of New York City’s Coronavirus crisis. ![]()
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