Vancouver Sun

RULES REQUIRING WEARING OF MASKS ON RISE IN U.S. SOUTH

COVID-19 surge forces politician­s to take action

- JONATHAN LEVIN

The sharp resurgence of COVID-19 in U.S. Sunbelt states is prompting a new spate of face-mask mandates as government­s try to curb the pandemic without reverting to lockdowns that wrought havoc on their economies.

In some cases, the orders have reinforced the politiciza­tion of public-health measures, with President Donald Trump mostly refusing to wear face masks in public and declaring in May that he “didn’t want to give the press the pleasure” of seeing him in one.

But with infections hitting record levels, Democratic mayors in some Republican-run states are going out on their own to demand the face coverings — and some governors are going along. Arizona’s Republican Governor Doug Ducey changed course and gave local government­s the power to require masks. Texas’s Greg Abbott said mayors couldn’t require citizens to mask up, but allowed them to sanction businesses that permitted patrons to enter unprotecte­d.

“I am taking this action for the health of our community, for the physical health, but also for the economic health,” Tampa mayor Jane Castor said in her daily update Thursday, speaking about her order to wear face masks indoors when social distancing isn’t possible. “We are just getting back up on our feet economical­ly, and the last thing that we can do is to go in reverse and to have businesses close down.”

In Arizona, infections rose by 2,519 cases Thursday — the biggest daily increase — to a cumulative 43,445. Municipal leaders are rushing to pass their own mask policies. Ducey “gave the power back to cities,” Phoenix mayor Kate Gallego tweeted.

In the Deep South, the pandemic has been a scourge, particular­ly in the Black Belt, where many residents are poor and lack access to health care. Montgomery, Ala., mayor Steven Reed’s executive order to require masks came after a measure on the issue failed in the Montgomery City Council on Tuesday. It split largely along racial lines, with Black members supporting the proposal.

“After listening to our health experts and warnings they continue to give us, we’re doing this today because it’s the right thing to do,” Reed said Wednesday, flanked by two white-coated doctors who had appeared before the council to argue the cause.

The new orders weren’t limited to red states: California had its biggest daily increase in coronaviru­s cases Thursday, and Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom issued new guidelines requiring masks in most situations outside the home in the nation’s most populous state.

The Trump administra­tion’s failure to devise a unified strategy for fighting the pandemic has left decisions largely to the states, and many of Trump’s gubernator­ial supporters have followed his lead in spurning masks. Indeed, Nebraska Governor Pete Ricketts has told local government­s they will miss out on federal COVID-19 funding if they make people wear masks in courthouse­s and government offices, the Omaha World-herald reported.

Trump told the Wall Street Journal in an interview published Thursday that some people may be wearing masks to signal disapprova­l of him, and that masks may actually contribute to the disease’s spread when people fidget with them.

The new mask measures come as COVID-19 is making a resurgence, including in places that had fared relatively well earlier in the pandemic. But state leaders across the political spectrum have proved reluctant to roll back reopenings, with many local businesses having barely survived the first wave of stay-at-home orders.

In Florida, Governor Ron Desantis has dismissed the possibilit­y of a new lockdown, even after a COVID-19 surge there prompted New York Governor Andrew Cuomo to threaten mandated quarantine­s for Floridians heading north. Desantis has said there is relatively ample hospital capacity in his state.

Meanwhile, the operator of the Tulsa, Oklahoma, arena that will be the scene of a Trump campaign rally Saturday said it had asked his re-election campaign for a written plan to safeguard the event against the state’s growing outbreak. The Trump campaign has said it will issue a face mask to all who attend, but it won’t require supporters to actually use them.

 ?? EVE EDELHEIT/BLOOMBERG ?? A lifeguard wears a mask on the job in Florida, where the governor has ruled out the possibilit­y of a new lockdown.
EVE EDELHEIT/BLOOMBERG A lifeguard wears a mask on the job in Florida, where the governor has ruled out the possibilit­y of a new lockdown.

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