The much-anticipated reopening comes with changes due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
AMC Lincoln Square opened at noon, and it s a different experience now.
Are you ready to go to the movies? Theaters finally reopen today in New York City. 25% capacity. pic.twitter.com/ljBXg1gPYL Derick Waller (@wallerABC7) March 5, 2021
You have to wear a mask unless you re eating or drinking, and there are no more self-serve beverage stations. An employee fills it for you instead.
Some things are not changing, though, like movie theater popcorn. But what many people are wondering is if the public will come back?
RELATED | NYC takes big step in combating COVID pandemic
MTA Board approves toll hikes at bridges, tunnels, delays fare hikes on subway, bus, rails
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NEW YORK CITY The MTA Board approved an increase in tolls at bridges and tunnels, but they put the brakes on a similar hike for subway, bus and rail fares until the summer.
The increase raises the one-way toll for New York E-ZPass users at major MTA crossings to $6.55, up from $6.12. Non-New York E-ZPass drivers will pay $10.17, up from $9.50.
Staten Island commuters will continue to have a resident discount, and the post rebate toll to cross the Verrazzano Narrows Bridge increases to $2.95, up from $2.75
As more cases of the highly contagious variants first found in the UK and in South Africa are discovered across the U.S., the race is on to track, identify and test the worrying mutations.
WOODSIDE, Queens (WABC) Even with the widespread concerns over the contagious new COVID variants, it seems many people just want to party - and in tight, packed spaces.
Authorities say they shut down another illegal club - this one on Roosevelt Avenue in Woodside, Queens on Saturday.
Police found more than 75 people inside - but COVID was not the only concern. Officials say the place was a fire hazard with a blocked exit and dangerous levels of carbon monoxide
Organizers face several charges including resisting arrest, and health code violations.
COVID Live Updates: Weekly NY hospitalizations decline for 1st time since September
COVID-19 Live Updates, News and Information
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He said this past week was the first week with declining hospitalizations since early September.
COVID cases are also declining across all regions of the country. Hospitalizations are the lowest since mid-December. I think the next 4 weeks will be very telling, if that dip is temporary after the high of the holidays, or if we re heading in the right direction to improve our nation, said Dr. Shashank Ravi, Assistant Director, Stanford Emergency Department.
However, over the weekend, the US passed 25 million cases. Five million of those cases occurred since January 1. The death toll now tops 418,000 people.