Porterville Recorder

Music industry weighs vaccine mandates, but politics collide

- By KRISTIN M. HALL

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The coronaviru­s vaccine gave the live entertainm­ent industry hope for a rebound in 2021. Now, as COVID-19 cases surge and hospital beds fill up, it feels like March 2020 all over again.

Tom Degeorge runs the popular Crowbar club in Tampa, Florida, that once hosted about 300 concerts a year, mostly touring bands. He managed to stay afloat and reopen last fall, hosting about six shows a month. But with cases surging in Florida, show cancellati­ons have racked up and attendance has plummeted.

“The amount of people that are coming out right now is I’d say about 25, 30 percent of what it should be,” said Degeorge. “I have a feeling that I’m probably going to lose the majority of my fall and winter calendar, but I’m basically already mentally prepared for the worst-case scenario.”

In hope of salvaging and surviving another devastatin­g year, the industry is moving rapidly toward vaccine mandates for concertgoe­rs, event staff and crew. In some instances, fans are being asked to show proof of vaccinatio­n or a negative test — such as for Harry Styles’ upcoming fall U.S. tour.

But the politiciza­tion of the pandemic and vaccines have dealt venues like Degeorge’s another heavy blow. Across the country, there are a myriad of state and local rules that regulate when and where mask mandates and vaccine requiremen­ts can be enforced.

In Florida and Texas, for instance, governors have issued bans on vaccine passports, which in some cases apply to private businesses. Some governors’ executive orders are being challenged — either in court or by businesses experiment­ing with how far they can go.

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