

Phase 2 of New York City's reopening will begin Monday. Governor Andrew Cuomo announced that NYC is on track to open on June 22, exactly two weeks from when we entered Phase 1. He told restaurants, retail establishments and other business to be ready to reopen June 22. Mayor Bill de Blasio said he felt the city was ready to move into Phase 2.
Today, the Mayor said "I’m very comfortable now saying that we will start Phase 2 on Monday," he said, noting that as many as 300,000 people will be returning to work during this next phase.
While Phase 1 didn't affect most New Yorkers—only curbside pick-up at stores is allowed and manufacturing and construction jobs are back online—Phase 2 marks the return of many things we love: outdoor dining, in-store shopping, getting our hair done and more.
New York State has been monitoring whether New York City meets meet seven health-related benchmarks. Basically, hospitalization and infection data must not show that more people are being infected with the virus than hospitals can handle. If those markers remain in check, as they are right now, then NYC will continue though the reopening plan. (The New York Forward Plan establishes a minimum of two-week intervals between a region's transition from one phase to the next.) As of 1:00 p.m. today, New York City reported 208,097 COVID-19 cases to date (+276 since yesterday), and 17,507 deaths (+20). Confirmed and “probable” COVID-19 deaths in New York City now total at 22,199.
International experts look at our data and determine if its best to move forward.
All office-based jobs, real estate services, and retail can reopen so long as each business has a detailed plan of how they'll meet state health standards.
Open during Phase 2:
Yes, but it will be very different.
Salons and barbershops must follow state regulations, which include making sure employees keep six feet away from each other, reducing occupancy to under 50 percent, keeping confined spaces to one person only (that means one person at a time on elevators and behind cash registers), limiting in-person meetings and doing them in a well-ventilated area with social distancing, providing protective gear like masks for employees, doing daily healthcare screenings, constant cleanings, and putting up signs and markers to help employees keep their distance. No walk-ins will be taken, either. Read more about what they're planning here.
Yes! State guidelines also apply to retail shops, so expect to see limits on how many people can be in a store at once, distancing signage, and employees and customers in masks. It won't be back to normal for sure, but it's a step toward some normalcy.
Not yet.
Yes we still have to wear them, and each business has guidance by the state that it must follow, including keeping occupancy in office buildings at 50 percent, doing daily health screenings of its employees, requiring everyone to wear masks or provide barriers if six feet cannot be maintained between people, putting up signs and distance markers, limiting in-person meetings and refraining from the communal sharing of food and drinks in larger areas. So that free pizza? It's gone for now.
The MTA's subway and buses have been back to full service since Phase 1 started. You can expect to catch a train as you used to, however, there are new protocols in place:
Indoor dining in restaurants, food services and personal care will reopen under Phase 3.