Hi Tommy. I don't know if I have the answer for you, but here are some situations I have experienced this year.
I had a colony, this year, that came out of winter that was similar to yours. It is a few miles away and the only colony currently at this location. I went ahead and reversed the brood boxes. I thought I would put some 1:1 sugar syrup on to stimulate egg laying. When I came back a week or so later, there was all kinds of brood and larvae in both brood boxes. So, one could do a wait and see.
The trouble with the wait and see method, is you could get a laying worker in there and then they are almost impossible to requeen.
Do you have more than one hive or is this the only one? If you have another, and you are sure that this colony is queenless, one option is to do a newspaper combine. This year, I also had a very strong colony that went queenless right at the beginning of spring. I did a newspaper combine with another colony. When queens become available, I will split.
Doing a newspaper combine is a preferable method of saving the bees.
Not sure if you can get bees? Do you mean queens or nucs or packages? Down here, in the lower 48, beekeeping falls under agriculture and is an essential business. Packages of bees are expected to arrive the first part of April. Caged Queens will be arriving with them. I don't know your weather conditions. Perhaps that is a factor when it comes to manipulating bees.