
 
        
         
		Health offi cials address Brooklyn uptick 
 Left: Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams hands out a mask in Borough Park. Top right: A health worker tests a man in Borough Park; Bottom right: Amateur radio host Heshy Tischler  
 heckles city health offi cials at a Gravesend press conference to address recent upticks.  Left: REUTERS/ Carlo Allegri; Top right: REUTERS/Brendan McDermid;Bottom right: Photo by Paul Frangipane 
 BY AIDAN GRAHAM 
 Anti-maskers  heckled  
 city health offi cials during a  
 southern Brooklyn press conference  
 meant to address a recent  
 uptick in COVID-19 cases  
 on Sept. 25 — forcing the medical  
 professionals  to  cut  the  
 gathering short.  
 Various offi cials  leading  
 the charge against the virus  
 within the Five Boroughs met  
 at Gravesend Park shortly before  
 noon,  ostensibly  to  alert  
 community members about  
 new measures in response to  
 the spike of cases in Brooklyn  
 and Queens — but shortly  
 before  things  kicked  off,  local  
 resident and amateur radio  
 host Heshy Tischler showed up  
 fi lming himself bombastically  
 denying the continued existence  
 of COVID-19 in the area. 
 Tischler, who continuously  
 disrupted the press conference, 
  called doctors and city  
 offi cials in attendance “liars”  
 as they spoke about the troubling  
 increase in positive test  
 cases in the “Ocean Parkway  
 Cluster”, which includes areas  
 like Williamsburg, Midwood,  
 Flatbush, and Borough Park.  
 Caribbean L 16     ife, Oct. 2-8, 2020 
 The  conspiracy  theorist  
 was  eventually  joined  by  a  
 handful of other maskless attendees  
 who questioned the  
 validity  of  the  science,  causing  
 NYC Health + Hospitals  
 head Michael Katz to launch  
 stern warnings about the seriousness  
 of the pandemic.  
 “I witnessed as my  11 hospitals  
 took  care  of  thousands  
 and thousands of people with  
 COVID in March and April,  
 and many of those people we  
 lost. They died. Their families  
 were left without them because  
 of the tremendous infection,”  
 he told the crowd. “We’re here  
 because we care about health.  
 This is the issue that matters  
 the most, we don’t want people  
 to lose members of their community.” 
 Katz also spoke of how his  
 father-in-law  died  of  coronavirus, 
   but  drew  no  sympathy  
 from Tischler, who continued  
 to antagonize the medical professional, 
  social media video  
 shows.   
 “He’s lying. You do not lie.  
 Get the hell out of my community, 
  you fi lthy animal,” yelled  
 the heckler.  
 The  commissioner  of  the  
 city’s  Department  of  Health  
 and Mental Hygiene also used  
 the  ruckus  occasion  to  warn  
 that  the  cluster  of  outbreaks  
 in the six communities —  
 which also includes Queens’  
 Kew Gardens and Edgemere- 
 Far Rockaway — mark a tipping  
 point for the city’s containment  
 efforts.  
 “What we worry about is  
 that, if this growth continues, it  
 will turn into more widespread  
 community transmission, both  
 in these neighborhoods as well  
 as  potentially  citywide,”  said  
 Dr. Dave Chokshi. 
 Over the past few weeks,  
 Chokshi said, his department  
 has made hundreds of thousands  
 of robocalls to people in  
 these communities — representing  
 just a small part of a  
 larger outreach program  that  
 aims to encourage local residents  
 to follow basic health  
 guidelines.    
 “Today  I  want  to  be  very  
 clear. This may be the most  
 precarious moment that we’re  
 facing since we have emerged  
 from lockdown,” he said. “We  
 can deliver these messages,  
 we  can  continue  to  have  the  
 conversations, but this takes a  
 group response.”  
 “We want to save lives,”  
 Katz  added,  in  between  jeers  
 from Tischler and his fellow  
 anti-maskers. 
 The offi cials did manage to  
 announce a cadre of new anticoronavirus  
 efforts,  such  as  
 increased  mask  giveaways,  
 and increasing testing capacity  
 in the area — but ultimately  
 cut the press conference  
 short, as Chokshi and his  
 companions became too bothersome  
 to overcome. 
 On Sept. 28, Health Department  
 offi cials said the borough  
 is home to nearly one quarter  
 of all positive COVID-19 cases  
 in New York City over the last  
 two weeks. 
 ZIP codes in Gravesend,  
 Bensonhurst, and Sheepshead  
 Bay are now experiencing  
 coronavirus upticks in  
 addition  to  four  other  Brooklyn  
 hotspots  announced  last  
 week: Williamsburg, Midwood, 
  Flatbush, and Borough  
 Park. The upticks have caused  
 the city’s daily rate of positive  
 virus tests to rise to 3.25 percent  
 on Sept. 29 — a rate not  
 seen  in  New  York  City  since  
 early June.  
 Health offi cials said they  
 will continue to monitor  
 spikes  in  coronavirus-related  
 hospitalizations. 
 The mayor announced  
 Wednesday,  Sept.  30  that  the  
 city  will  deploy  almost  1,000  
 agents  to  check mask  compliance, 
  hand out face coverings,  
 and potentially fi ne  violators  
 in the nine affected ZIP codes. 
 An estimated 950 enforcers  
 — consisting of some 400  
 cops, 300 offi cials  with  the  
 NYC Health and Hospital’s  
 Test and Trace Corps, and another  
 250 city staffers — will  
 be out in the borough hotspots  
 distributing masks, providing  
 information on the coronavirus, 
  and issuing summonses  
 in cases of noncompliance, according  
 to de Blasio. 
 Over the weekend of Sept.  
 26, Borough President Eric  
 Adams was spotted handing  
 out masks in Borough Park. 
 Additional reporting by  
 Paul Frangipane, Kevin Duggan  
 and Alejandra O’Connell  
 Domenech. 
 Health