Richards endorses COVID testing mandate 
 BY BILL PARRY 
 Queens Borough President  
 Donovan Richards endorsed  
 the city’s newly issued mandate  
 that all municipal employees  
 receive a COVID-19  
 vaccination or submit to weekly  
 COVID-19 testing ahead of  
 the start of the 2021-22 school  
 year. 
 Mayor Bill de Blasio is also  
 calling on the private sector  
 to enact vaccine and test mandates  
 at all offices, workplaces  
 and facilities. 
 “The science is clear: Getting  
 vaccinated  against  COVID 
 19 is the best way to protect  
 ourselves,  our  families  
 and  our  communities  from a  
 vicious  virus  that  has  killed  
 more than 8,600 of our fellow  
 Queens  residents  and  delivered  
 an  unprecedented  blow  
 to  our  borough,”  Richards  
 said. 
 Richards  said  the  mayor’s  
 announcement on Monday,  
 July 26, is a “common-sense  
 investment in the overall safety  
 and  ultimate  recovery  of  
 our city, while also respecting  
 reasonable  accommodations  
 on an individual basis.” 
 “We’ve come too far and  
 lost  too  much  in  the  fight  
 against COVID-19 to not defeat  
 this once and for all,” Richards  
 said.  “The  vaccines  are  
 safe, free and effective.” 
 The  de  Blasio  administration  
 is mandating  that  beginning  
 on Sept. 13, the first day of  
 school, approximately 340,000  
 city workers, including teachers  
 and police officers, will  
 need to be vaccinated, or submit  
 to weekly testing. 
 “We’re  also  going  to  reinforce  
 for all city government  
 workers starting on Monday,  
 reinforcing  clearly,  if  you  are  
 unvaccinated and you are  
 a city employee, beginning  
 on Monday, you must either  
 wear a mask indoors at your  
 work site at all times, or if you  
 would prefer not to, you have  
 to immediately go get vaccinated,” 
  de Blasio said. “This is  
 very, very clear.” 
 De  Blasio  said  they  will  
 “unfortunately,  be  very  
 tough” about the vaccine requirement. 
 “If a city government employee  
 does not wear a mask  
 indoors and they are unvaccinated  
 there,  unfortunately,  
 there  will  have  to  be  consequences  
 because we have to  
 Lawmaker expands reproductive health education 
 22     TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.COM   |   JULY 30–AUGUST 5, 2021 BT 
 take  it  seriously,”  he  said.  
 “If someone’s unvaccinated,  
 unfortunately,  they  pose  a  
 threat to themselves, but they  
 also have a greater chance of  
 spreading the disease.” 
 While the city’s infection  
 rate hit an all-time low earlier  
 in  the  summer  as  the  vaccination  
 rate  increased,  it  has  
 ticked  upwards  throughout  
 July  as  the  more  infectious  
 delta variant has become the  
 dominant strain. 
 “These new requirements  
 reflect our commitment to  
 each other and the people we  
 serve,”  Health  Commissioner  
 Dr. Dave A. Chokshi said. “In  
 the tug of war between vaccines  
 and the variants, we  
 should  continue  to  bet  on  the  
 vaccines. But now is the time  
 for our whole city to pull together  
 and defeat delta.” 
 Approximately 4.9 million  
 New Yorkers have received  
 at least one dose of the vaccine. 
  This includes over 10,000  
 doses from mobile vaccination  
 sites, 280,000 doors knocked by  
 canvassers  and  20,000  doses  
 given in-home to anyone who  
 needs it. There have also been  
 more  than  $80,000  in  referral  
 bonuses given to community  
 organizations. 
 “We’ve  come  a  long  way  
 from once being the ‘epicenter  
 of the epicenter’ on COVID 
 19, but the pandemic is not  
 over yet,” said NYC Health +  
 Hospitals President and CEO  
 Mitchell Katz, MD. “We have  
 a moral responsibility to take  
 every precaution possible to  
 ensure we keep ourselves, our  
 colleagues and loved ones safe.  
 Our city’s new testing requirement  
 for city workers provides  
 more peace of mind until more  
 people get their safe and effective  
 COVID-19 vaccine.” 
 Reach reporter Bill Parry  
 by e-mail at bparry@schnepsmedia. 
 com or by phone at (718)  
 260–4538. 
 Queens  Borough  President Donovan  Richards  (center)  accompanied Mayor  Bill  de  Blasio  at  a  College  
 Point vaccination hub in January, and now backs the city’s COVID-19 testing mandate for city workers. 
 Photo courtesy of mayor’s office 
 BY JULIA MORO 
 On  July  16,  Governor  Andrew  
 Cuomo  signed  legislation  
 sponsored by Assembly  
 member Jessica González- 
 Rojas allowing the New York  
 State Department of Health  
 to educate and provide treatment  
 options regarding preeclampsia. 
 Preeclampsia  is  caused  by  
 high  blood  pressure  after  the  
 20th  week  of  pregnancy.  If  it  
 goes untreated  or undetected,  
 it can lead to organ damage,  
 strokes,  seizures,  premature  
 birth and death. However, in  
 many  cases,  preeclampsia  is  
 preventable or can be detected  
 early. 
 The  recently  signed  legislation  
 was  inspired  by  Lian  
 Gravelle, a constituent of the  
 district  represented  by  Senator  
 Jeremy Cooney, who also  
 sponsored the bill. Gravelle  
 passed away  six months after  
 giving birth to twin boys from  
 preeclampsia complications. 
 “Lian  educated  new  mothers  
 about dangerous maternal  
 health conditions, such as  
 preeclampsia,” Cooney said.  
 “Although we tragically lost  
 Gravelle, her spirit is embodied  
 in  this  lifesaving  legislation.” 
 The law will provide thorough  
 education to patients  
 and  training  for  healthcare  
 providers  of  maternal  health  
 services. 
 “I spent my career in reproductive  
 health care and this is  
 something that is going to save  
 lives,” González-Rojas said. 
 González-Rojas  said  that  
 this  legislation  perfectly  
 aligns  with  her  goals  as  an  
 elected official looking to prioritize  
 women’s health and  
 reproductive rights. Prior to  
 running for office, she ran a  
 nonprofit called the National  
 Latina Institute for Reproductive  
 Health, working  to make  
 health care accessible. 
 “I see the implications  
 when  people  don’t  have  information  
 about maternal reproductive  
 healthcare,  there  
 are consequences,” González- 
 Rojas said. “There are often  
 social  determinants  of  health  
 based on immigration status,  
 insurance  status  or  the  language  
 you speak. My goal is  
 to break those barriers and  
 pass legislation that’s going to  
 ensure our communities have  
 access  to  the  healthcare  they  
 need.” 
 The bill was widely supported, 
  with 35 sponsors made  
 up  of  both  Republican  and  
 Democratic state senators and  
 assembly members. 
 Once the bill was signed  
 into  law,  González-Rojas  
 called Gravelle’s husband. 
 “It was very emotional. I’m  
 very grateful for him lending  
 her name to this bill,”  
 González-Rojas said. “We carry  
 this in her honor.” 
 Reach reporter Julia Moro  
 at jmoro@schnepsmedia.com. 
 Jessica González-Rojas.     Angélica Acevedo/QNS 
 
				
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