Houston Chronicle

Target, CVS are latest to require masks

The list of retailers making rule national continues to grow

- By Hannah Denham and Taylor Telford

Several retailers have joined Walmart in requiring shoppers to wear face coverings at every U.S. store amid an upswing in coronaviru­s infections.

Target and CVS Health announced new policies Thursday. Kohl’s and Kroger made the change Wednesday, hours after Walmart — the world’s biggest retailer — said it would require maskwearin­g at its 5,300 namesake and Sam’s Club locations.

Target said its policy, which takes effect Aug. 1, doesn’t apply to young children or those with underlying medical conditions.

Like Walmart, it will station employees at store entrances to remind shoppers to wear masks and to provide disposable ones if needed. It also will install signage, run reminders on store audio systems and encourage no-contact shopping options.

More than 80 percent of its 1,871 U.S. stores already have mask requiremen­ts in compliance with local and state mandates.

CVS said its policy takes effect Monday at its 10,000 U.S. locations.

“To be clear, we’re not asking our store employees to play the role of enforcer,” CVS Chief Operating Officer Jon Roberts said in a news release. “What we are asking is that customers help protect themselves and those around them by listening to the experts and heeding the call to wear a face covering.”

Kroger, the nation’s largest supermarke­t chain, announced Wednesday in a tweet that masks will be required at all 2,758 stores. The Ohio-based grocer’s banners include Kroger, Harris Teeter, Ralphs and Fred Meyer.

Kohl’s policy takes effect Monday at more than 1,100 stores nationwide.

Both companies already required employees to wear masks.

Walmart said masks will be required at all its stores starting Mon

day, and that it will position “health ambassador­s” at the entryways to help with enforcemen­t.

The retailer said about 3,500 of its more than 5,300 Walmart and Sam’s Clubs locations already are observing public health mandates within their respective markets.

“We know some people have differing opinions on this topic,” said a news release from Dacona Smith and Lance de la Rosa, the chief operating officers of Walmart and Sam’s Club, respective­ly. “We also recognize the role we can play to help protect the health and wellbeing of the communitie­s we serve by following the evolving guidance of health officials like the” Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The world’s biggest retail trade group lauded Walmart’s move and expressed hope it would be a “tipping point” for the retail industry. Costco, Apple and Best Buy already had mask policies in place.

“Workers serving customers should not have to make a critical decision as to whether they should risk exposure to infection or lose their jobs because a minority of people refuse to wear masks in order to help stop the spread of the deadly coronaviru­s,” the National Retail Federation trade said in a statement.

“Shopping in a store is a privilege, not a right. If a customer refuses to adhere to store policies, they are putting employees and other customers at undue risk,” the statement continued.

Mixed messaging from local and state government­s, and varying business policies, have politicize­d mask use despite CDC guidance that suggests masks can help prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s, the pathogen that causes COVID-19, which has killed at least 133,000 Americans. The number of confirmed U.S. coronaviru­s infections is approachin­g 3.5 million.

The CDC, which originally downplayed the importance of masks, now calls face coverings “a critical preventive measure” and says they should be worn in public.

The move comes amid a surge in infections, particular­ly in the South and West, that has overwhelme­d hospitals and raised fears of more outbreaks this fall and winter.

Economists say nationwide mask requiremen­ts could prevent a return to widespread shutdowns and further economic turmoil. Last week, a Goldman Sachs analysis estimated that a nationwide mask requiremen­t could avert more shutdowns and the potential loss of $1 trillion from U.S. gross domestic product.

The patchwork approach to masks and the political tempest surroundin­g them has left retail workers vulnerable as they enforce mask policies.

Some workers say they’ve been told that they can’t refuse service to maskless customers, even if local laws require the wearing of masks. During the pandemic, retail workers have been physically assaulted, even suffering broken limbs and, in the case of a security guard at a Family Dollar store in Michigan, killed while trying to enforce the mask requiremen­t.

 ?? Mark Lennihan / Associated Press file photo ?? A customer wearing a mask carries his purchases as he leaves a Target store in April in Brooklyn, N.Y. Target soon will require masks to be worn at all its stores.
Mark Lennihan / Associated Press file photo A customer wearing a mask carries his purchases as he leaves a Target store in April in Brooklyn, N.Y. Target soon will require masks to be worn at all its stores.
 ?? Andrew Caballero-Reynolds / Getty Images ?? A woman wearing a face mask enters a Walmart store next to a sign with social distancing rules in Washington, D.C. Walmart’s mask rule is going national on Monday.
Andrew Caballero-Reynolds / Getty Images A woman wearing a face mask enters a Walmart store next to a sign with social distancing rules in Washington, D.C. Walmart’s mask rule is going national on Monday.

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