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We've compiled all the latest stories about the coronavirus pandemic here so you can find them easily.We've also compiled a list of informational resources that can guide you to more coronavirus information.

Cuomo issues 'no mask, no service' law for NY businesses

Gov. Andrew Cuomo is enlisting the aid of actor Rosie Perez and comedian Chris Rock to encourage New Yorkers to wear masks in public.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo's office
Gov. Andrew Cuomo is enlisting the aid of actor Rosie Perez and comedian Chris Rock to encourage New Yorkers to wear masks in public.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo has issued an executive order that allows businesses to deny entry to customers who aren’t wearing a mask. He said it’s intended to improve public health and reduce fights.

Cuomo said the  “no mask, no service” rule is about changing the culture so that people view the wearing of masks in public as essential to preserving everyone’s health during the pandemic.

“Today, I am signing an executive order that authorizes private businesses to deny entrance to people who do not wear a mask or a face covering,” said Cuomo, who added masks are “amazingly effective.”

Health experts, including the Centers for Disease Control, now believe that wearing masks can help contain the coronavirus and prevent many illnesses and deaths.

Cuomo called in two celebrities to help with getting out that message. Actor Rosie Perez and comedian Chris Rock will appear in public service ads.

They joined the governor at his daily COVID-19 briefing, which was held Thursday in Brooklyn. Perez made a special appeal to Latinx New Yorkers, who, along with African Americans, have been contracting the virus at a higher rate than the rest of the population.

“Wear a mask, please,” Perez said. “The numbers in our communities are staggering. This is not a joke, this is not a hoax. This is real.”

Rock urged New Yorkers not to ease up on safety rules now that the virus seems to be waning. He likens it to doctors who prescribes antibiotics and tell the patient to take them all, or “it will come back worse.”

Perez said the new law will help prevent confrontations in stores between shoppers wearing masks and those who are not and help reduce overall anxiety.

Mask wearing has become the latest divisive issue in a polarized America. Cuomo and many Democratic leaders, including presidential candidate Joe Biden, appear in public wearing masks. President Donald Trump refuses to wear one, saying he doesn’t need to because he is tested frequently for the virus. Republican U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell backs wearing a mask, and has posed for photos with one.

Rock said where he lives, in Brooklyn, he estimates about 40% of people don’t wear masks, many of them younger people.

“It’s sad that our health has become a political issue,” Rock said.

Cuomo said younger people were told at first that the virus won’t affect them, though new evidence shows that’s not true. He said that may make them more reluctant to wear one.

Siena College poll conducted earlier in the week found that 89% of New Yorkers agree with wearing a mask, and 94% say they wear one in public when they cannot maintain social distance.

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau chief for the New York Public News Network, composed of a dozen newsrooms across the state. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990.