2020 YEAR IN REVIEW 
 QNS’ top stories of the year 
 BY JACOB KAYE 
 This past year was dominated by one thing: COVID-19. 
 Stories about the spread of the virus in the borough, the actions taken by leaders  
 to limit its spread and the countless ways in which it affected the everyday lives of  
 Queens residents were read on QNS.com millions of times. 
 In the early days of the pandemic, readers wanted to know how to pass their time  
 while quarantining, what resources were available online to continue to enrich their  
 children’s learning and what the destructive virus was doing to their neighbors. 
 In total, Queens residents visited QNS.com more than 9.1 million times in 2020  
 and we deeply appreciate your readership. 
 Here are the top 10 most read stories on QNS.com in 2020. 
 1. Free resources and subscriptions for remote learning and home schooling due to  
 coronavirus 
 By Donna Duarte-Ladd, Olga Uzunova and Katarina Avendaño, March 16, 2020 
 The day this story was published, March 16, 2020, was the first day New York  
 City schools closed down to prevent the spread of COVID-19. It was early days of the  
 pandemic and readers wanted to know how to keep their students engaged during  
 what was a very uncertain time. 
 In this story, readers could access resources and subscriptions that offered students  
 lessons on history, math, art, reading and much more. 
 2. Coronavirus count: Queens leads New York City in virus cases 
 By Robert Pozarycki, March 24, 2020 
 Just as soon as the COVID-19 crisis began, Queens was leading the city in confirmed  
 cases. Through no fault of their own, Queens residents were quickly living in  
 the world’s epicenter of the pandemic. 
 At the time this story was published, there were over 3,800 confirmed COVID-19  
 cases in Queens. Overall, there were 13,119 in the city. 
 3. New York state on PAUSE: Cuomo enacts ‘Matilda’s Law’ in response to ongoing  
 spread of COVID-19 
 By Emily Davenport, March 20, 2020 
 After debating the scale of a shutdown for some time, on March 20, 2020, Governor  
 Andrew Cuomo put the state on PAUSE, or Policies that Assure Uniform Safety for  
 Everyone. 
 For the first time during the pandemic, non-essential gatherings in New York  
 were canceled. 
 On the day the PAUSE was announced, New York state had 7,102 cases of coronavirus, 
  with 1,255 people hospitalized. Thirty-five people died that day from the virus. 
 4. Here are 10 things to do while in quarantine this weekend 
 By Alex Mitchell, March 20, 2020 
 On the day Governor Andrew Cuomo announced that New York City would be  
 shut down, people began to imagine their lives in quarantine. 
 By now, it’s almost guaranteed most Queens residents have completed every item  
 on this list, which includes redecorating your home, video conferencing with friends  
 and family and binge-watching the day away. 
 5. Hospital workers in Brooklyn who treated city’s fi rst coronavirus fatality went into  
 isolation 
 By Alejandra O’Connell-Domenech, March 14, 2020 
 The first known person to die from complications related to COVID-19 in New  
 York City was an 82-year-old woman from Ridgewood. Days later, the frontline medical  
 workers who treated her were sent into isolation. 
 The woman’s diagnosis wasn’t known until she had already been brought into  
 the hospital, possibly exposing the EMS personnel in the ambulance that took her to  
 Wyckoff Heights Medical Center, as well as those in the hospital’s emergency room. 
 6. New York State Liquor Authority charges Richmond Hill bar with violating  
 emergency shutdown order 
 By Robert Pozarycki, March 20, 2020 
 One of the first eateries to lose its liquor license after flouting rules put in place to  
 limit the spread of COVID-19 was Richmond Hill bar New Oriental Guyana Restaurant  
 Inc., located at 115-22 Liberty Ave. 
 TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.4     COM   |   DEC. 25-DEC. 31, 2020 
 While many restaurants and bars would go on to have their liquor licenses suspended, 
  New Oriental Guyana Restaurant was one of the first. 
 Several days after Governor Andrew Cuomo passed an executive order forcing  
 restaurants and bars to close their doors to indoor dining, the Richmond Hill bar  
 was found to have continued operations as normal. The bar packed in customers and  
 closed their gates to appear closed. 
 7. Coronavirus count: Queens leads with 4,667 cases as NYC total soars to more than  
 15,000 
 By Alejandra O’Connell-Domenech, March 25, 2020 
 The day after Queens had become the epicenter of the COVID-19 in the city, state  
 and country, the number of COVID-19 patients in the borough continued to rise. 
 On March 25, 2020, there were 4,667 known coronavirus cases in Queens. There  
 were 4,407 cases in Brooklyn, 3,013 cases in Manhattan, 2505 in the Bronx and 999 in  
 Staten Island. 
 8. Queens politicians condemn New York Post image of Flushing amid coronavirus case  
 in Manhattan 
 By Carlotta Mohamed, March 2, 2020 
 Much to the ire of local elected officials, The New York Post used a photo of an  
 Asian man in Flushing to illustrate its story about the first case of COVID-19 in New  
 York City. 
 In the early months of 2020, hate crimes against Asians in New York were on the  
 rise and believed to be related to the entirely false perception that they were more  
 likely to spread COVID-19. According to lawmakers like state Senator Toby Ann  
 Stavisky, the Post story did little to combat this dangerous narrative. 
 “Posting a picture of an Asian man in Flushing, Queens, while reporting about a  
 confirmed case in Manhattan is troubling,” Stavisky said at the time.  
 9. Student households can sign up for free Wi-Fi via Spectrum while DOE works to  
 deliver 25,000 iPads next week 
 By Angélica Acevedo, March 17, 2020 
 The transition to remote learning was and remains difficult for students and families  
 without access to the electronic devices needed for a virtual classroom. 
 In mid-March, days after schools closed for the first time, the Department of Education  
 began to distribute around 25,000 iPads to students in need of online access. At  
 the time, about 300,000 students were without online devices. 
 To help ease the transition to remote learning, internet provider Spectrum announced  
 it would be offering student households up to 60 days of free service. 
 10. When Americans can expect their coronavirus relief checks 
 By Carlotta Mohamed, April 6, 2020 
 As unemployment spiked in Queens and across the country in the early months  
 of the COVID-19 pandemic, people were – and many remain – in dire need of financial  
 relief. 
 In early April, it was announced that taxpayers would receive a payment up to  
 $1,200 per adult and $500 per child as part of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic  
 Security Act, passed by Congress. 
 
				
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