You are reading

Senior Centers Can Reopen Later This Month: Mayor

Mayor Bill de Blasio visiting a Manhattan senior center in 2019 (Ed Reed/Mayoral Photography Office)

June 1, 2021 By Allie Griffin

Senior centers in New York City can reopen later this month after more than a year of being shut down, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Tuesday.

Indoor congregate activities can reopen on Monday, June 14, de Blasio said, and the centers can offer outdoor activities immediately.

“I’ve heard from so many seniors [that] they’re ready to go back to senior centers and I’m happy to announce our senior centers are coming back in New York City,” de Blasio said.

The city has been slow to reopen senior centers in comparison to retail services—since seniors face the greatest risk and chance of death from COVID-19.

“We know seniors bore the brunt of the COVID crisis — they were the most vulnerable,” de Blasio said. “We all had to do everything in our power to protect our seniors.”

He credited the high vaccination rate for the ability to reopen senior centers. Nearly 72 percent of city residents 65 and older have had at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine and more than 65 percent are fully vaccinated, according to city data.

Senior centers will be open to both vaccinated and unvaccinated New Yorkers. Social distancing rules, however, will continue to be in place at the facilities.

“We’ll be careful; we’ll be safe,” de Blasio said. “We’re going to make sure there is smart distancing and all the right precautions to keep our senior centers safe, but the time [to reopen the centers] is now.”

Local nonprofit leaders who run senior centers welcomed the mayor’s announcement.

“The re-opening of senior centers in New York City is an important milestone in the City’s fight against COVID-19 and it’s a step towards overcoming the social isolation many seniors felt,” said Judy Zangwill, Executive Director of Sunnyside Community Services, which operates the Center for Active Older Adults in Sunnyside.

The Center for Active Older Adults will reopen June 14 and Zangwill said she is excited to welcome the seniors back.

“We are overjoyed about this news and know that the seniors in our community are delighted as well,” Zangwill said. “It’s a clear signal that the city is returning to normal, even for the most vulnerable among us.”

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Myrtle Avenue honors late BID founder with plaza co-naming

Jun. 30, 2025 By QNS News Team

Council Member Robert Holden and local leaders officially co-named the 71st Avenue Plaza at Myrtle Avenue as Herman Hochberg Plaza last week, honoring a longtime civic leader and businessman whose decades of service helped shape Ridgewood’s commercial and community landscape.

Resorts World officially submits bid to expand Queens casino into $5.5B full-scale resort

Resorts World New York City put all its chips on the table when it officially submitted its bid to the New York State Gaming Commission hours ahead of the Friday deadline, the latest step toward unlocking an eye-popping $5.5 billion vision to build a world-class integrated resort in Southeast Queens.

Building on fifteen years of community partnerships, the 5.6 million-square-foot proposal to expand the city’s only casino would create thousands of union jobs, generate billions of dollars for education and transit, and deliver a new era of inclusive growth for Southeast Queens and expansive public amenities.