You are reading

Donovan Richards Calls for Creation of New Office to Manage City’s COVID-19 Response

Queens Borough President Donovan Richards, pictured, has called for the establishment of a new office which would centrally manage the city’s overall response to COVID-19.

Jan. 14, 2022 By Michael Dorgan

Queens Borough President Donovan Richards called for the establishment of a new office Thursday to centrally manage the city’s overall response to COVID-19.

Richards proposed creating the “NYC Office of COVID Recovery” tasked with streamlining and improving the city’s COVID-19-related services.

He said the office was needed to cut bureaucratic red tape that continues to hinder the city’s ability to combat the virus.

The new office, Richards said, would prevent “rookie errors” like a shortage of testing capacity and testing sites—such as in areas such as College Point and Forest Hills—from being repeated in the future. The recent shortfall of tests during the recent Omicron surge has forced residents to wait in line for hours to get tested, he said.

“We need to take control of our response to COVID-19, we need to brace ourselves and organize for our new normal going forward,” Richards said during a virtual media roundtable.

The office, under Richards’ proposal, would be led by a commissioner with each borough having liaison representatives who would work with local elected officials. The representatives would identify each borough’s COVID-19 needs and then report back to the commissioner with its findings.

Richards said this would foster better lines of communication between city agencies, elected officials and healthcare officials.

“If we are going to beat COVID-19 once and for all… we also need a government that would function at the highest level and that means talking to each other,” Richards said.

For instance, the liaisons would map out where testing sites are needed to better inform government decision-making on where to open such sites. The liaison representatives would also work with community-based organizations and faith-based organizations to get in touch with hard-to-reach residents regarding vaccinations and testing.

The office would also take over Test and Trace Corps operations, which is currently operated by NYC Health + Hospitals. He said this transfer is needed to alleviate unnecessary administrative burdens between the NYC Health + Hospitals system and the Health Department.

The change would also help expand the city’s testing apparatus and also strengthen its delivery by offering home testing kits in more languages — noting that around 200 languages are spoken in the World’s borough.

“You should be able to know how to use these test kits… and know where testing is actually happening,” Richards said.

Richards said he is working with Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers to introduce legislation to codify the NYC Office of COVID Recovery.

He has also pitched the idea to Mayor Eric Adams.

“The administration has received Borough President Richards’ proposal in concept and we look forward to reviewing it in greater detail,” senior advisor to the mayor Stefan Ringel said in a statement.

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.

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

Recent News

Op-Ed | Hochul: Action is Imperative on Shoplifting, but Violent Crime is Just Fine

Apr. 29, 2024 By Council Member James F. Gennaro

Negotiations regarding the New York State budget have just concluded a few days ago and a budget has passed after more than two weeks of delays. But while Gov. Kathy Hochul has proclaimed this year’s ‘bold agenda’ aims to make New York ‘safer,’ there hasn’t been so much as a whisper about the safety issue New Yorkers actually care about – New York States’s dangerous bail reform laws and the State’s absence of a ‘dangerousness standard,’ which would allow judges to detain without bail those defendants that pose a present a clear and present danger to our communities. (The 49 other states and the federal government have a dangerousness standard. NY State is the only state that lacks this essential protection from the State’s most dangerous offenders.)

City opens new 35-acre public nature preserve along the Rockaway waterfront in Edgemere

City officials, elected leaders, developers and community members gathered at the location of a formerly vacant illegal dumping ground on Beach 44th Street Wednesday to cut the ribbon at the new 35-acre Arverne East Nature Preserve and Welcome Center along the Rockaway waterfront in Edgemere.

The preserve represents phase one of an ambitious Arverne East development project, which will transform more than 100 acres of underutilized space between Beach 32nd Street and Beach 56th Place into 1,650 units of housing — 80% of which will be affordable, serving low-income and middle-income individuals and families — in addition to retail and community space, a hotel and a tap room and brewery.

Sen. James Sanders delivers annual ‘Tuvalu Challenge’ address from the waters off Rockaway Beach to cap Earth Day celebration

State Senator James Sanders Jr. hosted his annual Earth Day celebration in the Rockaways on Saturday, Apr. 20, highlighted by his “Tuvalu Challenge” address, delivered while standing in the surf off Beach 86th Street with like-minded community leaders.

For the third year in a row, Sanders delivered his speech in the Atlantic Ocean to commemorate a similar address by Foreign Minister Simon Kofe of the South Pacific island nation of Tuvalu on Nov. 5, 2021, to dramatize the plight of his endangered country from climate change by standing in the ocean.