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Joseph Tolbert dies from Covid-19
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VOL. 29 NO. 15
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Funeral homes watch families grieve alone whether Covid-19 is the cause of death. And members of the clergy, for the most part, are not Everything seems to be differ- leading prayers or offering ent during the coronavirus pan- words of comfort to grieving demic, including funerals and families at the facilities. burials. Business has increased Funeral Masses are not perdramatically, local mitted inside funeral directors churches. Some acknowledge, clergy are offering because of Covidprayers at burial 19. sites, but that is not Louis Pillari, allowed at some t h e ow n e r a n d cemeteries. And director of the Oysnot even family ter Bay Funeral members are perHome, said that mitted to attend over the past week, burials at national he had seen a spike cemeteries, like in deaths of close Calverton and the to 50 percent. Long Island Codge Whitting, a National Cemetery, co-owner and the which allow only a director of Whitfuneral director to ting Funeral Home, LOUIS PILLARI be present. in Glen Head, said Owner and director, All of this is that he, too, had Oyster Bay Funeral taking an emotionseen a noticeable al toll not only on Home increase. families, but also “The whole on those working industry has been swamped,” in the death care industry. Whitting said. “In the last week “It’s heartbreaking to be the and a half, I’ve done 20 funerals. I only one there for a burial at a usually do three or four a week.” national cemetery,” said Karen Given the dictates of social DeVine, the owner and director distancing, there are no longer of Oyster Bay’s DeVine Funeral traditional viewing hours at Home. “For me, the biggest chalfuneral homes, regardless of CONTINUED ON PAGE 9
By LAURA LANE llane@liherald.com
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Christina Daly/Herald Gazette
Big thanks to health care workers Members of the Glen Cove Fire Department thanked the city’s hospital workers during a shift change on Tuesday. More photos, Page 8.
Garvies Point temporarily halts construction amid pandemic By JENNIFER CORR jcorr@liherald.com
As is the case at many construction projects across the state, work at the Garvies Point Development has ended for the time being, following a directive from Gov. Andrew Cuomo on March 27 that all “non-essential” construction work be halted to prevent the spread of Covid-19.
Cuomo defined essential construction as a “project necessary to protect the health and safety of the occupants.” Projects should continue, he said, “if it would be unsafe to remain undone until it is safe to shut the site.” Garvies Point is a 56-acre, $1 billion luxury residential and commercial development that broke ground in the fall of 2017.
The projects there include the Beacon, which has 167 condos; Harbor Landing, which has 385 rentals in two buildings; and Village Square, which has 146 rentals. Joe Graziose, executive vice president of RXR Realty, said the project “has his heart” because he lives in Glen Cove. The site’s infrastructure, which includes CONTINUED ON PAGE 5
’ve been around the business since I was 14 years old. This is worse than anything I’ve ever seen, including Sept. 11.