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June 29, 2025

Miami pauses reopening as Florida’s new coronavirus cases rise

Miami, which is among Florida’s most populous cities, will not move into the next phase of reopening because of concerns about rising COVID-19 cases, Mayor Francis Suarez announced during a Monday news conference.

Although the majority of Florida is in Phase 2 of reopening, rising new coronavirus cases in the state may put a damper on residents’ new freedom.

An ABC News analysis of New York Times data found that Florida is one of 22 states in which new positive coronavirus cases have increased over the past 14 days. While some states with an increasing number of cases, such as Montana, Hawaii and Alaska, have so few overall infections that their relative rises aren’t significant, as of Monday, Florida had reported more than 77,000 positive cases and roughly 3,000 deaths from COVID-19according to the state’s health department.MORE: Ominous sign? Of the 14 states with rising new coronavirus cases, Arizona has experts especially worried

When Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’s (R) stay-at-home order expired on May 4, there were roughly 680 cases being diagnosed each day in the state. As of June 14, Florida’s seven-day rolling average for new COVID-19 infections, which accounts for fluctuations in the number of cases, was 1,661 per day.

the COVID Tracking Project, ABC NewsDaily new Coronovirus Cases in FloridaDaily new Coronovirus Cases in Floridathe COVID Tracking Project, ABC News

State officials have previously pointed to increased testing as a possible explanation for the influx of new cases.

“Florida is actively searching for COVID-positive individuals to provide immediate treatment and contact tracing to help prevent the broader spread of the disease,” a spokesperson from the governor’s office told ABC News. “This is evident in the 30 state-operated testing sites throughout Florida that include areas with vulnerable and/or underserved communities. This aggressive testing strategy is proving to be successful and will continue.”

A high positivity rate can be a sign that a state is only testing its sickest patients and failing to cast a net wide enough to accurately capture community transmission, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Florida’s positivity rate has risen from 3.6% in early May to 4.2% in early June, but it’s lower than the 10% positivity threshold experts say states should aim to keep well below. In comparison, South Korea, considered global leader for its COVID-19 response, never had a positivity rate above 1% or 2%.

Marco Bello/ReutersA general view of the South Beach is shown as beaches are reopened with restrictions to limit the spread of the coronavirus disease, in Miami Beach, Fla., June 10, 2020.A general view of the South Beach is shown as beaches are reopened with restrictions to limit the spread of the coronavirus disease, in Miami Beach, Fla., June 10, 2020.Marco Bello/Reuters

A more worrisome sign is that Florida has seen a rise in new hospitalizations in recent weeks, according to an ABC News analysis of public data. That uptick cannot be attributed to more testing.

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