Summer camps have become a battleground for upstate reopening wars — with fearful locals and anxious operators in limbo awaiting direction on if and how they can open amid the coronavirus crisis.

Communities are split on whether to host children in the seasonal getaway towns, where a kumbaya on the issue is far out of reach.

“I have grave concerns,” said Fallsburg Town Supervisor Steven Vegliante. “I look at it from the standpoint of, I’m a father. I wouldn’t want my kids going to a summer camp this year.

“However, that being said, this is a decision that’s far above the town.”

Other upstate lawmakers refused to take a stance on the heated issue.

“The town’s position is, we don’t we don’t have a position,” said Thompson Town Supervisor Bill Rieber. “It’s the governor and Empire State Development [responsible for making the call].

Rieber said residents are afraid of an “influx of people” to camps, many of which serve Orthodox Jewish children from New York City.

“Brooklyn has been the hotspot of this whole equation. And most of the campers are going to come out of the New York City or the close metropolitan area. So there’s a concern with large numbers of people congregating here,” Rieber said.

Some organizations, such as Stagedoor Manor theater camp in Fallsburg and the Frost Valley YMCA have already nixed summer programming. The Girl Scouts of Northeastern New York also announced Friday it would not host camps this year.

But others are charging forward with plans to open, including Camp Hilltop in the Catskills, Long Lake Performing Arts Camp in Dobbs Ferry and dozens of Orthodox camps represented by the Association of Jewish Camp Operators. Read more at NY Post