As local COVID-19 cases continue to spike, parts of Staten Island are now in an orange zone.
COVID-19 cases are on the rise across New York, and hospitalizations are soaring.
The city’s morgue could not hold them all.
With growing demand for COVID-19 testing, there has been growing frustration over long lines.
Mayor de Blasio and the city sheriff said Tuesday that travelers caught violating state quarantine orders would be subject to $1,000 fines.
Thanksgiving is just the start of a "dangerous situation" with the coronavirus' second wave if New Yorkers aren't careful, Cuomo said.
As COVID cases continue to increase across our area, more restrictions could be coming to parts of New York City.
A rush to get tested before the holiday has led to hours-long lines at sites across the five boroughs.
The data lets you find the least busy times to grab a cup of coffee, go to the grocery store and do other everyday activities.
"That will happen soon after Thanksgiving, probably the first week of December,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said Friday based on COVID-19 trend.
New York City likely will fall under an “orange zone” limiting indoor dining and more in the next week or two, Mayor Bill de Blasio said.
The city's climb past 3 percent coronavirus positivity will trigger "orange zone" rules that stop indoor dining, close gyms and more.
New York City’s Human Rights Commission is launching an investigation into three private hospitals.
There is a coronavirus hospital crisis in several states, including Wisconsin, where more than 90% of Intensive Care Unit beds are full.
Mayor Bill de Blasio urged New Yorkers to mask up amid a coronavirus resurgence — and municipal workers like the NYPD need to too, he said.
Now that coronavirus cases are rising again, there’s another rush for necessities.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo warned that New York's relative good standing in the pandemic could slip. He plans a summit with neighboring governors.
The urgent care system's locations starting Nov. 16 will close 90 minutes early to give long-overworked staff a break, an email states.
Borough President Jimmy Oddo implored his fellow Staten Islanders to push through "COVID fatigue" and fight a surge in the borough.
The state has partnered with the New York State Brewers Association to connect trail-goers to some 200 nearby breweries.
See where your neighborhood's COVID-19 positivity rate stands as numbers rise across the city and Staten Island faces new restrictions.
Parts of Staten Island with high COVID-19 rates also will see "yellow zone" restrictions, Gov. Andrew Cuomo also announced.
Health professionals will replace cops as the first response to nonviolent mental health crises under a planned pilot program.
Long lines were reported Tuesday at some coronavirus testing sites in New York City.
Mayor Bill de Blasio said Tuesday that New York City can still beat back a second wave but that this is the last chance.
New York City officials again urged caution over holiday travel amid coronavirus and pledged stricter enforcement of quarantine measures.
Tottenville's 10307 ZIP code had the highest average coronavirus positivity rate in the city last week at 6.57 percent, new data shows.
New daily data shows where each neighborhood stands as the coronavirus reasserts itself and the city's positivity rate hits 2 percent.
State health officials reported 27 positive cases of the flu among New York City residents as vaccinations are up significantly from 2019.
The city eclipsed a troubling COVID-19 threshold at least nine times in two weeks — a potential sign of a coronavirus resurgence.
When voters cast their ballots in the Bronx, many had COVID-19 on their minds.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo said a coronavirus "red zone" in Brooklyn will be reduced by 50 percent. He also disbanded a Far Rockaway "yellow zone."
COVID-19 cases continue to climb in the Tri-State Area.
There are new details on what you should do if you plan to travel out of New York and back.
Hundreds of Halloween revelers gathered at two warehouse parties this weekend in the city.
Positivity rates in 16 ZIP codes are above 3 percent, the city’s self-imposed threshold for closing schools.
CBS2’s Aundrea Cline-Thomas got a look at changes inside Bellevue Hospital aimed at better managing a surge of patients.
Mayor Bill de Blasio voiced worry over a “meaningful jump” in the city’s seven-day COVID-19 average to 1.92 percent, among other indicators.
Bipartisan criticism claims the state's official tally of dead at long-term care facilities is off by thousands.
More than 706,000 New Yorkers received a flu shot this season, a 37 percent increase over the same point in 2019, officials said.