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New York City to become first major US city to require vaccination proof for indoor activities: Live COVID-19 updates

New York City will soon require proof of COVID-19 vaccination for people to enter indoor restaurants, gyms and entertainment venues.

The new requirement, the first of its kind in a major U.S. city, will go into effect Aug. 16, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Tuesday.

The White House also announced Tuesday that the United States has delivered more than 110 million COVID vaccine doses to over 60 countries, a milestone President Joe Biden is expected to discuss in an address to the nation.

Biden is expected to speak to vaccination issues in the U.S. as concerns mount over a rise in infections fueled in part by the delta variant. Florida and Texas had one-third of all COVID cases reported last week, according to the White House.

The number of people hospitalized for COVID rose to an all-time high of 11,515 patients in one day, according to data the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released Tuesday.

And Texas now has more total statewide deaths than New York, the early epicenter of the pandemic in the U.S.

The U.S. reported 599,334 cases in the week ending Sunday. A week earlier, cases numbered 364,123. The nation is now reporting 2,500 deaths per day, according to USA TODAY analysis of Johns Hopkins University data. 

Also in the news:

► Japan is now publicly shaming people who violate COVID-19 rules. The health ministry shared the names of three people who officials said clearly acted to avoid contact with authorities after returning to the country.

►The mayor of Maui County is calling on Hawaii officials to postpone students’ return to in-person learning amid rising COVID-19 cases throughout the islands. If officials do postpone in-person learning, Hawaii’s school district, which serves nearly 175,000 students across the state, would be the first major district to kick off the academic year remotely.

► McDonald’s says it will require employees and customers to resume wearing masks inside some U.S. restaurants regardless of vaccination status. Home Depot, Lowes and Target have also put in place face mask mandates for workers.

►Another of Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards’ staffers has tested positive for COVID-19. The governor’s office said in a statement Monday that the staffer and five others who may have been exposed are in isolation and awaiting more test results. Here's what to know about the state's new mask mandate.

►Sixteen destinations – Andorra, Curaçao, Gibraltar, Greece, Guadeloupe, Iran, Ireland, Isle of Man, Kazakhstan, Lesotho, Libya, Malta, Martinique, Saint Barthelemy, Saint Martin and U.S. Virgin Islands – were added to the CDC's "Level 4: COVID-19 Very High" travel list.  

►The European Union said Tuesday that 60% of E.U. adults were now fully vaccinated.

📈Today's numbers: The U.S. has had more than 35 million confirmed COVID-19 cases and 613,600 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University data. The global totals: More than 199 million cases and 4.23 million deaths. More than 164.9 million Americans – 49.7% of the population – have been fully vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

📘What we're reading: After more than 18 months of a pandemic, with 1 of every 545 Americans killed by COVID-19, a substantial chunk of the population continues to assert their own individual liberties over the common good. Read the full story.

Keep refreshing this page for the latest news. Want more? Sign up for USA TODAY's Coronavirus Watch newsletter to receive updates directly to your inbox and join our Facebook group.

Florida public schools say they can’t require students to wear masks

Florida school districts can't legally enforce a mask requirement because of Gov. Ron DeSantis' executive order, officials said Monday, despite calls by many parents and doctors to have all students on district campuses wear facial coverings when classes begin next month.

The Republican governor signed an order empowering the state’s Board of Education to withhold funding from districts that enforce a mask mandate. 

Palm Beach County School Board attorneys concluded that DeSantis’ executive order last week makes it impossible to enforce a mask mandate for students, the school board’s chairman said.

While the governor’s order doesn’t stop a school district from putting a requirement in place, “what it does do, however, is authorize parents to disregard any Board action requiring mandatory masking of their children,” School Board Chairman Frank Barbieri said in a statement.

Broward County Public Schools, which last week became the first school district in Florida to say it would require masks on campus this month, reversed course Monday, saying it "intends to comply with the governor’s latest executive order."

– Andrew Marra, Palm Beach Post

Biden to address the nation on vaccinations 

President Joe Biden is set to speak about the United State's efforts to stop the spread of the coronavirus abroad after the White House announced his administration has donated and shipped more than 100 million COVID vaccine doses to over 60 countries. 

The donated doses came from U.S. surplus vaccine stock as domestic demand slowed. Most of the shots were distributed through a global vaccine program called COVAX.

Biden pledged to ship more than 80 million doses overseas by the end of June but had only been able to share a fraction of that because of logistical and regulatory hurdles in recipient countries.

The U.S. will begin shipping 500,000 doses of Pfizer vaccine that is pledged to 100 low-income countries by June 2022 at the end of August, according to the White House statement. 

Domestically, the U.S. reported 468,000 doses administered Monday, including 320,000 newly vaccinated, said COVID-19 Data Director Cyrus Shahpar on Twitter. The seven-day average of newly vaccinated Americans was the highest since July 4.

The Biden administration has also offered to send more federal assistance to governors, including deploying "surge teams" of experts, as states grapple with a dramatic rise in COVID-19 cases. 

New York Gov. Cuomo urges businesses to adopt 'vaccine-only admission'

Pressure continues to increase from officials to get people vaccinated against the coronavirus as infections mount across the country, fueled by the spread of the highly transmissible delta variant.

Days after President Joe Biden said federal workers and contractors would have to get vaccinated or face restrictions that include masking and testing, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Monday that workers in New York City’s airports and public transit system will be required to get the shots or weekly tests. That follows last week's announcement by Cuomo that all state workers must get vaccinated or submit to weekly tests.

At a Manhattan news conference Monday, Cuomo also urged private enterprises to require vaccination of their employees and customers.

"Private business, bars, restaurants, go to a vaccine-only admission," he said.

This week, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio “strongly" recommended that vaccinated people return to wearing masks indoors, but declined to make masking mandatory. De Blasio announced Tuesday the city will require proof of COVID-19 vaccinations for indoor activities.

Mask opponents at risk after virus case at Missouri meeting

Many people were maskless as they expressed their displeasure with a mask mandate during a boisterous, four-hour St. Louis County Council meeting, and now contact tracers are trying to determine whether anyone picked up the coronavirus after someone at the meeting tested positive for COVID-19.

The delta variant of the coronavirus that emerged in rural areas of Missouri has made its way to urban areas, prompting new mask mandates in St. Louis city and county last month and one that began Monday in Kansas City. The St. Louis County mandate was the subject of a turbulent meeting last Tuesday. Democratic County Executive Sam Page said Monday that many of those who spoke and attended ignored the mandate that requires masks in indoor public places.

"Yes, it's unfortunate that many of those Tuesday night ignored the law, but that's what happened," Page said during a live-streamed video from his home. "As a result, this is where we are, wondering how many people were exposed to the virus and how many will become sick from the virus."

US reaches 70% of at least partially vaccinated adults

On the day the Biden administration welcomed the news that 70% of American adults are now at least partially vaccinated, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said a nationwide vaccination mandate “is not on the table” but noted that employers have the right to take that step as they see fit.

President Joe Biden said last week that federal workers and contractors would have to get vaccinated or face several restrictions that include testing and masking. His administration is also counting on vaccine requirements from private employers to convince holdouts to get inoculated.

Those efforts, along with perhaps fear of the delta variant's impact, seem to be paying off. While the 70% mark was achieved about a month later than the original goal of July 4, White House coronavirus response coordinator Jeff Zients noted a recent increase in vaccine uptake.

Zients said 3 million Americans got their first shot in the last week, the largest number for a seven-day stretch since July 4.

"There's a strong sense of progress, and you see it in the number of shots we're getting into people's arms each day,'' Zients said.

Contributing: The Associated Press.