Las Vegas Review-Journal

No firm policy on face masks

Not mandatory for food workers, officials say

- By Heidi Knapp Rinella Las Vegas Review-journal

It can be downright baffling. Say you drive through a Starbucks for coffee, then hit a bakery-cafe chain for your breakfast pastry. Maybe you drive by a national fast-food franchise for lunch, then get curbside pickup from your favorite local restaurant for dinner.

All the employees you come in contact with are food service workers. While some of them wear protective face masks to help slow the spread of COVID-19, others don’t. What gives?

“We don’t require it,” said Dr. Cort Lohff, director of the residency program at the Southern Nevada Health District.

But that statement comes with a caveat.

“We do recommend them, based on what the (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) put out that wearing face coverings can be a way to reduce the transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s,” Lohff said. “Especially the people who may be carrying the virus but may not be symptomati­c.”

Dr. Shadaba Asad, medical director of infectious disease at University Medical Center, confirmed that mask use isn’t mandatory for food service workers in Southern Nevada and said any recommenda­tion that they do wear them has nothing to do with their profession.

“I think everybody should wear cloth masks,” Asad said. “The one way of protecting yourself at such a time is to have all of your public wearing some kind of face covering, so the person who is talking or breathing can’t release the particles into the air around them.”

In short: A mask isn’t meant to protect you from getting the virus. It’s meant to protect others from getting it from you, since many people are carriers but have no symptoms.

Washoe County Health District Officer Kevin Dick said Friday that after talking to members of the Reno-sparks Chamber of Commerce who are concerned about masks not being worn by employees of essential service providers, he contacted Gov. Steve Sisolak’s office to ask that face coverings be made mandatory for those workers.

A spokeswoma­n for the governor’s office didn’t return a request for comment Monday; neither did a spokeswoma­n for the Southern Nevada Health District.

Some local restaurant­s are not requiring masks.

Mcdonald’s corporate office announced on its website last week that it had obtained 100 million masks to be distribute­d throughout the chain. But an employee of local franchisee WBF Management who declined to be named said last week that, while the masks had been made available to employees, they weren’t mandatory.

During a Monday visit to a Henderson Mcdonald’s, only one of two employees with whom a customer made contact was wearing a mask.

Other restaurant­s are taking a harder line.

“We are following the recommenda­tions from the CDC that all team members are wearing protective face coverings during work,” said Jenny Gidge, vice president of operations

for Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf Las Vegas, adding that the requiremen­t extends to delivery drivers for third-party services.

“I insist upon it,” said Liam Dwyer, chef and owner of the downtown restaurant 7th & Carson. “If it saves lives, I’m all about it.”

“Everyone’s got the mask and gloves,” said Donald Lemperle, chef and owner of Vegenation eateries in Henderson and downtown Las Vegas. “It’s important that we let the guests see that we’re wearing them for safety and that we understand, so we can put their minds at ease.”

Players Locker in Downtown Summerlin is the only local member of the Wolfgang Puck Fine Dining Group that’s offering takeout and delivery. Tom Kaplan, the group’s senior managing partner, said employees are required to wear masks, and he wears one when he goes to the restaurant.

“Everything we’re doing, we want to do by medical experts, not politician­s, not TV doctors,” Kaplan said.

Gidge said each Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf worker was issued a mask made of cloth, with a coffee filter insert, and instructio­ns on how to make their own if they want another.

“They must take the masks home and wash them every day,” she said. “That’s why we showed them how to build their own masks.” Employees are instructed to wash their hands before donning their masks and not to wear them to the restroom.

“These are new times that no one’s used to,” Gidge said, “so I think any extra precaution­s we’re taking, being in the food industry, we should.”

Contact Heidi Knapp Rinella at hrinella@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0474. Follow @Hkrinella on Twitter. Capital reporter Bill Dentzer contribute­d to this report.

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 ?? La Strega ?? A worker at La Strega wears a face covering while handling food.
La Strega A worker at La Strega wears a face covering while handling food.

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