Councilman Mark Levine (D-Manhattan) wrote in a series of tweets:
“This likely will be done using a NYC park for burials (yes you read
that right). Trenches will be dug for 10 caskets in a line.”
“It will be done in a dignified, orderly–and temporary–manner. But it
will be tough for NYers to take,” Levine wrote, adding in another
tweet, “The goal is to avoid scenes like those in Italy, where the
military was forced to collect bodies from churches and even off the
streets.”
He later clarified his tweets, saying this “is a contingency NYC is
preparing for BUT if the death rate drops enough it will not be
necessary.”
Mayor Bill de Blasio was asked about the grim matter during a coronavirus press briefing Monday at the Brooklyn Navy Yard.
“We may well be dealing with temporary burials, so we can deal with
each family later,” the mayor said. We will have the capacity for
temporary burials – that’s all I’m going to say.”
“I’m not going into details,” de Blasio said. “I don’t think it’s a great thing to be talking about.”
However, Hizzoner did mention city-owned Hart Island — the city’s
longtime potter’s field and nation’s largest public burial ground, which
sits just off The Bronx’s southeast coast in the Long Island Sound.
“We’re going to try and treat every family with dignity, respect
religious needs of those who are devout, and the focus now is to try and
get through this crisis and obviously also put all of our energy and
resources into saving those we can save,” he added.
A spokeswoman for the city’s Medical Examiner’s office, Aja
Worthy-Davis, told The Post there are no plans currently to begin
temporary burials and that the freezers at agency facilities in
Manhattan and Brooklyn have “adequate space.”
“We have no plans right now to bury anyone in city parks,” said
Worthy-Davis, noting that the disturbing scenario is mentioned in a
previous OCME disaster plan, but “it’s not in the works at this time.”
Levine explained that city hospital morgues have filled up and the
Office of the Chief Medical Examiner has sent out 80 refrigerated
tractor-trailers with a capacity to hold 100 bodies to hospitals around
the city.
“These are now mostly full too,” Levine said. “Some hospitals have had to add a 2nd or even 3rd trailer.”
According to Levine, “Grieving families report calling as many as
half a dozen funeral homes and finding none that can handle their
deceased loved ones” and that “cemeteries are not able to handle the
number of burial requests and are turning most down.”
More than 2,470 people have died in the city as a result of
coronavirus and more than 64,900 people in the city have tested positive
for the virus.
“[T]he number of bodies continues to increase,” Levine tweeted. “The
freezers at OCME facilities in Manhattan and Brooklyn will soon be
full.”
https://nypost.com/2020/04/06/nyc-to-begin-temporarily-burying-coronavirus-victims-in-local-parks/
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