Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

MASKS IN CLASS?

Parents plunge into debate over whether face coverings should be optional or mandatory

- BY PAT EATON-ROBB

HARTFORD, Conn. — With U.S. health officials recommendi­ng that children mask up in school this fall, parents and policy makers across the nation have been plunged anew into a debate over whether face coverings should be optional or a mandate.

The Delta variant of the coronaviru­s now threatens to upend normal instructio­n for a third consecutiv­e school year. Some states have indicated they will probably heed the federal government’s guidance and require masks. Others will leave the decision up to parents.

The controvers­y is unfolding at a time when many Americans are at their wits’ end with pandemic restrictio­ns and others fear their children will be put at risk by those who don’t take the virus seriously enough. In a handful of Republican-led states, lawmakers made it illegal for schools to require masks.

In Connecticu­t, anti-mask rallies have happened outside Gov. Ned Lamont’s official residence in Hartford, and lawn signs and bumper stickers call on him to “unmask our kids.” The Democrat has said that he’s likely to follow the latest advice from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The CDC on Tuesday recommende­d indoor masks for all teachers, staff, students and visitors at schools nationwide, regardless of vaccinatio­n status. The agency cited the risk of spread of the highly contagious Delta variant, even among vaccinated people.

Alima Bryant, 33, a mother of four who organizes anti-mask parents in Branford, Connecticu­t, said she’s not a conspiracy theorist, but she believes scientists have overstated the dangers of COVID-19, especially for children. She said she will take her children out of school rather than subject them to wearing masks, which she believes are more likely to make them ill than the virus.

“Especially with little kids, I can imagine how often they’re touching dirty things, then touching the mask,” she said. “Also, in kindergart­en, you have to learn social cues, and even with speech and everything, it’s so important to not be wearing a mask.”

But parents such as Ryan Zuimmerman, of Lenexa, Kansas, fear that approach will prolong the pandemic.

In Johnson County, Kansas, the state’s most populous county, five districts recommend but do not require masks. A sixth district has not yet decided.

Zimmerman, speaking at a recent meeting of country commission­ers, said that if masks are only recommende­d and not required, “95% of kids won’t be wearing them.”

“This isn’t about comfort or control or obedience or your rights. It is not conspiracy or child abuse. It is about doing unto others as you want them to do unto you,” he said.

“I ask you this: If it was your kid who was high risk, what if you had to send that kid you had spent your whole life protecting to school in this environmen­t?”

Another public meeting, this one in Broward County, Florida, had to be postponed for a day this week after roughly two dozen mask opponents waged screaming matches with school board members and burned masks outside the building.

When the discussion resumed Wednesday, it was limited to 10 public speakers, and all but one spoke vehemently against masks, saying their personal rights were being eroded.

Amid the debate, there is also a push to get more older kids vaccinated.

The Pfizer shot is currently the only U.S. vaccine authorized for children 12 years and up. Moderna expects the Food and Drug Administra­tion to rule soon on its applicatio­n for children in the same age group.

Moderna said Monday that it expects to have enough data to apply for FDA authorizat­ion for younger children by late this year or early 2022. Pfizer has said it expects to apply in September for children ages 5 through 11.

But some parents, such as Bryant, say they will not get their children vaccinated, even after the kids are eligible, until they know more about potential side effects. Bryant said she knows people who have had severe reactions and others who believe it has affected their menstrual cycles.

Dr. Joseph Kanter, the state health officer of the Louisiana Department of Health, urges families to vaccinate all eligible children. He said the argument that they rarely get severely ill from COVID-19 is becoming outdated.

“As an absolute number, we are seeing younger individual­s and kids get sicker in higher numbers and get more severe numbers with Delta than they have before,” he said.

 ?? MARTA LAVANDIER/AP ?? A small but vocal group, including Joann Marcus of Fort Lauderdale (left), spoke vehemently against masks in schools on Wednesday at an emergency meeting of the Broward County School Board.
MARTA LAVANDIER/AP A small but vocal group, including Joann Marcus of Fort Lauderdale (left), spoke vehemently against masks in schools on Wednesday at an emergency meeting of the Broward County School Board.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States