Rome News-Tribune

Atlanta mayor to order mask mandate

- By Beau Evans

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms signaled Wednesday she will place Georgia’s capital city under a mandatory mask order amid the COVID-19 pandemic, joining Athens and Savannah on a list of Georgia cities where masking is now required.

The Atlanta order comes in the face of continued opposition by Gov. Brian Kemp to issuing a statewide mandatory masking order, even as officials and health experts urge people to wear masks in public.

The new mask requiremen­t in Atlanta also comes after Bottoms announced she and several of her family members had tested positive for coronaviru­s earlier this week, though she has not experience­d any symptoms.

Details about the order were not immediatel­y available Wednesday. Bottoms said she would issue an order in an MSNBC interview Wednesday morning.

As of Wednesday afternoon, nearly 104,000 people in Georgia had tested positive for COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel strain of coronaviru­s that sparked a global pandemic. It had killed 2,922 Georgians.

City officials in Savannah, Athens, and the suburban Atlanta city of East Point have also issued mask-wearing requiremen­ts in recent days, as health experts warn positive COVID-19 cases and hospitaliz­ations have edged up in Georgia following the Memorial Day holiday in late May.

The decision by Bottoms puts Atlanta at odds with Kemp, whose own statewide executive orders on COVID-19 allow him to override any local mandates such as for masking.

Kemp’s office did not immediatel­y respond when asked whether he may seek to overrule an Atlanta order.

Speaking on MSNBC, Bottoms said she had asked the governor to let Atlanta impose its own mask mandate but that “he refused.” She labeled state officials’ approach to loosening business and distancing restrictio­ns in recent months as “very irresponsi­ble.”

“The fact of the matter is that COVID-19 is wreaking havoc on our cities, specifical­ly black and brown communitie­s with higher death rates,” Bottoms said. “And we will never be able to reopen our schools and our economy if we don’t take some responsibi­lity for what we can do as leaders to make sure that people aren’t exposed to this virus.”

The governor has held off on imposing a statewide mask requiremen­t despite mounting pressure from many local officials and health experts to do so.

In remarks Tuesday to municipal and county government associatio­ns, Kemp called on local leaders to raise awareness over the importance of wearing masks and washing hands, rather than imposing any mandates.

“We don’t need a mandate to have Georgians do the right thing,” Kemp said. “But we do need to build strong, public support.”

The governor has opted instead to tour the state in a bid to urge mask wearing and launched a marketing campaign this week encouragin­g reopened businesses to adopt safe distancing, cleaning and masking practices.

Bottoms announced Monday she had tested positive for COVID-19, marking the most high-profile public official in Georgia to contract the virus. She said she did not know where she might have been exposed but criticized the slow eight-day turnaround time for her test results.

“The fact that we can’t quickly get results back so that other people are not unintentio­nally exposed is the reason we are continuing in this spiral with COVID-19,” Bottoms said.

She noted Atlanta city hall has been closed since March but that she had recently been in close proximity to the city’s police chief, fire chief and other staff.

The mayor’s announceme­nt also comes as she grapples not only with the city’s response to coronaviru­s but also a spate of violence centered around a burned-down Wendy’s that has been a focal point for recent protests against police brutality and racial injustice.

The fatal shooting Saturday night of an eight-yearold girl, Secoriea Turner, near the Wendy’s restaurant sparked swift condemnati­on from Bottoms and other officials including the governor.

Kemp has placed Georgia under a state of emergency through Monday in response to Turner’s death and vandalism at the state Department of Public Safety headquarte­rs in Atlanta.

Atlanta authoritie­s said Turner was shot and killed when a group of armed people opened fire on the car in which she was riding across the street from the Wendy’s, located south of downtown.

 ?? Ap-andrew Harnik, File ?? In this 2019 file photo, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms speaks during a Senate Democrats’ Special Committee on the Climate Crisis on Capitol Hill in Washington. Bottoms announced Monday that she had tested positive for COVID-19.
Ap-andrew Harnik, File In this 2019 file photo, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms speaks during a Senate Democrats’ Special Committee on the Climate Crisis on Capitol Hill in Washington. Bottoms announced Monday that she had tested positive for COVID-19.

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