New York Daily News

Adams shuns COVID advice

Health Dept. urges masks indoors; he sez nah, it’s OK for now

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T AND MICHAEL GARTLAND

Mayor Adams is not reinstatin­g the city’s indoor face mask mandate despite a recommenda­tion from the city Health Department to do so in light of a recent uptick in coronaviru­s infections and hospitaliz­ations.

Guidance from the Health Department recommends that the government move to “require face masks in all public indoor settings” when the COVID-19 risk is “high” — an alert level that the city reached Tuesday.

Nonetheles­s, when asked Wednesday if he’s prepared to mandate masks in public indoor spaces, Adams answered flatly: “No.”

“I’m proud of what we are doing and how we are not allowing COVID to outsmart us,” Adams told reporters at City Hall. “We’re staying prepared and not panicking. When I look at the hospitaliz­ations and deaths, the numbers are stable.”

In contrast to Adams’ assessment, the Health Department’s COVID guidance says that the “high” risk status — which is color-coded as orange — was declared because there is currently “substantia­l” pressure on the city’s health care system.

Though levels are far lower than they were during the grim early days of the pandemic, the number of people being hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 in the city has been steadily increasing over the past two months, with the daily average of admissions reaching 56 this past Sunday, according to Health Department data. On March 15, that number stood at 27.

The color-coded COVID risk guidelines were introduced in March by Adams and thenHealth Commission­er Dave Chokshi. At the time, Chokshi said the recommenda­tions were meant to ensure that city officials do “all we can to prevent unnecessar­y suffering due to COVID-19.”

But at Wednesday’s press conference, Adams said he must consider other issues, such as economic repercussi­ons, before acting on the Health Department’s advice.

“I’m going to be judged on my success in navigating the complexiti­es of these days that we are facing,” Adams said. “We set a policy in place, not a law in place. I follow laws. I make policy.”

Some of Adams’ fellow elected city officials urged him to reconsider and reimplemen­t the indoor mask mandate.

Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine, who chaired the City Council’s Health Committee before his election as BP last year, said mandating masks indoors now could shield the city from being forced to reinstate stricter public health precaution­s further down the line.

“We need to slow this current wave, and the easiest way to do that without disrupting lives is masking. We’re not talking about shutdowns, we’re talking about wearing a mask, which can protect others as well as yourself,” Levine told the Daily News.

The Manhattan beep also said rapid action from Adams could set an important standard ahead of the fall, when COVID-19 cases tend to spike even more.

“We need to have a system in place where we put in place restrictio­ns when things get bad and take them off when things improve,” Levine said. “I’m even more worried about next fall and winter, and I think that it’s important for the city to have comfort to put in public health restrictio­ns when the risk is higher.”

The indoor mask recommenda­tion isn’t the only Health Department suggestion that Adams has been reluctant to act on in recent weeks.

Under the “medium” COVID risk category that the city was previously in, Health Department guidance urged Adams to consider reinstatin­g the K-12 public school mask requiremen­t and Key2NYC, the coronaviru­s vaccine mandate for indoor activities like dining and drinking. Adams — who lifted both of those mandates early on in his mayoral tenure — has not reinstated either of them.

After Adams’ press conference at City Hall, his health commission­er, Ashwin Vasan, testified in a virtual Council hearing that while the administra­tion isn’t mandating masks, it is “strongly” recommendi­ng that New Yorkers wear them indoors in light of the “high” risk designatio­n.

“As we face a recent increase in cases and hospitaliz­ations, we want New Yorkers to know that there is still work to be done,” Vasan said. “We can’t call it quits on the fight against COVID-19 just yet.”

 ?? ?? Back in April, masks were required in many indoor spaces, but Mayor Adams (below) said Wednesday that despite rising numbers we don’t have to go back to indoor mandates, though masks are still required on transit.
Back in April, masks were required in many indoor spaces, but Mayor Adams (below) said Wednesday that despite rising numbers we don’t have to go back to indoor mandates, though masks are still required on transit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States