Gov. Andrew Cuomo isn’t ready to pull the brakes on public transit just yet, he said on Sunday as he urged New Yorkers to remain calm in the face of the mounting coronavirus epidemic.

“Look, what we do here is, we calibrate to the facts as we know them at the time,” Cuomo told Fox News “Sunday Morning Futures” host Maria Bartiromo. “So, as the facts change, you change your strategy. But, at this time, there’s no reason to close down mass transit.”

The assurance came one day after Amtrak announced it was suspending Acela nonstop service between New York and Washington D.C. until May, due to flagging demand amid the viral outbreak.

Map of coronavirus cases in the US

Cuomo on Saturday declared a state of emergency in the Empire State, where officials said there are now 105 confirmed coronavirus cases, including 82 in Westchester County and 12 in the five boroughs.

“We haven’t had — to the extent we have big numbers in New York, it’s actually in Westchester, which is a suburban community, as you know, where you have a cluster of cases,” Cuomo said.

Cuomo appeared three times on television Sunday and once in person on Long Island as he urged people to “stay calm.”

“If they know the facts, they will be calm,” he said.

The virus originated in China and has spread worldwide with more than 107,000 cases and 3,600 deaths.