You are reading

City to Shut Building Sites to Protect Construction Workers From Coronavirus

Manhattan Construction Site (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)

March 27, 2020 By Michael Dorgan

The city is shutting down most building sites to curb the spread of coronavirus and protect construction workers from getting infected.

Governor Andrew Cuomo has declared that non-essential construction will end today, effectively bringing the private construction sector to a halt, Mayor Bill de Blasio said on WNYC Friday.

Until now, construction workers had been allowed to continue to work under the state’s “pause” shutdown order because they were deemed as essential workers.

“Anything that is not directly part of the essential work of fighting coronavirus and the essential work of keeping the city running and the state running…is going to end,” de Blasio said in response to an on-air call from a concerned construction worker.

Construction workers have been raising the alarm about contracting the virus on-site and spreading it to their families. Many have said it is impossible to properly socially distance from co-workers at sites due to confined spaces and a lack of proper personal protective equipment.

On Thursday, a local carpenters union appealed to Governor Cuomo to narrow the definition of essential worker, saying that its members’ lives were at stake because not all construction work was essential.

De Blasio admitted that the issue had been missed early on as the city attempted to get to grips with COVID-19 spreading.

It is understood that public works like infrastructure, transportation projects, and affordable housing will be allowed to continue. Emergency repairs and hospital building construction will also not be affected.

“Luxury condos will not be built until this is over,” the mayor said.” Office buildings are not going to be built.”

 

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.


The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Stolen church van disrupts outreach services in East Flatbush

Jun. 5, 2025 By Olivia Seaman

For more than five decades, the Historic Mt. Zion Church of God 7th Day has been a vital fixture in the East Flatbush community, providing food, clothing and spiritual support to seniors, unhoused individuals and struggling families. Now, the congregation is grappling with an unexpected blow: the theft of its outreach van, a key tool in delivering those services.

Rooted in time: Brooklyn Botanic Garden celebrates 100 years of bonsai

Jun. 5, 2025 By Regina Martinez

In 1925, Ernest F. Coe, a landscape designer and nurseryman from Connecticut, donated a collection of Japanese trees and shrubs to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Now, a century later, the garden is marking the anniversary of that gift with a months-long tribute to the art of bonsai and the individuals who have shaped its legacy.