Health & Fitness

Passaic County's COVID Cases: See Wayne Updates

The coronavirus continues to have an impact on Passaic County, according to updated state data. See how Wayne is doing below.

Wayne Mayor Christoper Vergano reported an additional 130 cases of the coronavirus in the township as of April 6 during a Saturday video update. One person has died in April, bringing the total numbers of deaths to 210, and cases to 6,034.
Wayne Mayor Christoper Vergano reported an additional 130 cases of the coronavirus in the township as of April 6 during a Saturday video update. One person has died in April, bringing the total numbers of deaths to 210, and cases to 6,034. (Jenna Fisher/Patch)

WAYNE, NJ — New data has been released that shows the coronavirus continues to have an impact on Passaic County and Wayne Township.

Passaic County reported 61,768 cases on Friday, an uptick from 60,139 last week.

Mayor Christoper Vergano reported an additional 130 cases of the coronavirus in the township as of April 6 during a Saturday video update. One person has died in April, bringing the total numbers of deaths to 210, and cases to 6,034. Read more: Over 9,000 Residents Have Been Vaccinated In Wayne: Mayor Vergano

Find out what's happening in Waynefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Watch Vergano's latest update here:

The disease’s impact is reflected in the state Department of Health's most recent "COVID-19 Activity Level Report," which is issued weekly. The most recent report, for the week ending April 10, says Passaic County is in the “orange zone”.

Find out what's happening in Waynefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

If the county is in the "orange" zone, it means it has a rate of 10 to 25 cases per 100,000 people. “Yellow” means the county has a rate 1 to 10 cases per 100,000 people.

If the overall activity is at an "orange" level, state officials say, school districts in those counties would have to take more serious steps — such as quarantining or even shutting down schools — if a child shows the symptoms of COVID-19.

"When it is high risk, there are some recommendations that we make together with local school boards," said Edward Lifshitz, medical director for the state Department of Health.

Indeed, a number of school districts still provide remote instruction even as the number of new daily cases has dropped in recent weeks.

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