The authorities in New York City cracked down this past weekend on some coronavirus hot spots, issuing more than 60 summonses and tens of thousands of dollars in fines to people, businesses and houses of worship that did not follow newly imposed restrictions on gatherings or mask wearing and social distancing requirements.
Among those issued a summons by the New York City sheriff were a restaurant and at least five houses of worship in the city's "red zones", where coronavirus infection rates are the highest. Each of those locations was given a summons that could result in up to US$15,000 (S$20,300) in fines, said Sheriff Joseph Fucito.
In total, officials issued 62 tickets and more than US$150,000 in fines during the first weekend the new restrictions were in effect, the Twitter account of the New York City government said on Sunday.
The city is wrestling with its most acute pandemic crisis since the virus first swept through its five boroughs in March. Since mid-August, city and state officials say, large gatherings and lax social distancing have caused a surge in new cases in pockets of Brooklyn and Queens, several of them in Orthodox Jewish neighbourhoods.
The spike prompted Governor Andrew Cuomo to issue new restrictions on large gatherings and non-essential businesses in certain parts of the city.
The moment has set an already anxious city on edge, particularly as doctors, experts and health officials express growing concern about another wave of the virus this winter. It's also underscored the challenges that officials will face as they try to quash emerging hot spots in small communities before the virus can spread into the rest of the city.
When Mr Cuomo announced a new executive order imposing the restrictions the previous week, some religious leaders expressed staunch opposition, even as case numbers continued climbing in pockets of Brooklyn and Queens that are home to large populations of Orthodox Jews.
The Orthodox Jewish community was devastated by the coronavirus in the spring, when local officials and ultra-Orthodox news organizations said hundreds of people might have died, including beloved religious leaders.
The new restrictions are the most significant setback yet in the city's recovery, rolling back some of the successful reopenings that much of New York has embraced since the most restrictive early days of the pandemic this spring.
According to Mr Cuomo's executive order, in neighbourhoods with the highest infection ratesor "red zones"houses of worship are limited to 25 per cent capacity or a maximum of 10 people.
Elsewhere, where rates are lower but still alarming, "orange zones" are limited to 33 per cent capacity and "yellow zones" to 50 per cent capacity.
"I understand the desire to hold large religious ceremonies. I understand how important it's to their culture and to their religion," Mr Cuomo said on a phone call with newsmen on Sunday. "I also understand that it, as a matter of fact, jeopardises human life."
The governor also urged rabbis and other Jewish leaders to encourage their congregants to stay home amid reports that several synagogues had openly defied the state's order and had held services in person.
A national Orthodox organization has filed a lawsuit in federal court challenging the constitutionality of the new rules. But last Friday, a federal court ruled the new state rules could move forward, citing officials' responsibility to keep "all New Yorkers" safe.
The Catholic diocese of Brooklyn filed a separate lawsuit objecting to the new restrictions, which it said would force several churches in the borough to close. A judge in that case also ruled that the governor's order could move forward.
NYTIMES