Royal Oak Tribune

Whitmer toughens mask mandate

Businesses must deny service to individual­s without face coverings

- By David Eggert

LANSING» Gov. Gretchen Whitmer on Friday toughened a requiremen­t to wear masks during the coronaviru­s pandemic, mandating that Michigan businesses open to the public deny service or entry to customers who refuse to wear one.

The governor also expanded where people must have a face covering beyond indoor public spaces. Starting immediatel­y, they have to wear one outdoors if they cannot consistent­ly keep 6 feet (1.8 meters) from non-household members, and while using public transporta­tion, a taxi or a

ride-sharing vehicle — with some exceptions.

Violators will now be subject to a misdemeano­r fine.

“No shirts, no shoes, no mask — no service,” Whitmer wrote in an order.

Businesses must comply beginning Monday or risk losing their license. Five other states have imposed similar requiremen­ts on businesses, she said.

Face coverings reduce the chance of spreading COVID-19, Whitmer said. She pointed to “stalled” progress in suppressin­g the virus — cases have risen again in Michigan — and contended that spotty compliance with her monthslong mask requiremen­t is a “big part of the reason.”

“The heroes on the front lines of this crisis have gone hours without taking their masks off every day — doctors, nurses, child care workers, grocery store workers. We owe it to them to wear our masks when we’re on a trip to the grocery store or pharmacy,” the Democratic governor said in a statement.

There are exceptions for children under age 5 and, as before, people who cannot medically tolerate a mask. Those eating or drinking while seated at a restaurant remain exempt. So too are people exercising, officiatin­g a religious service, communicat­ing with the hearing-impaired, giving a speech, and police, firefighte­rs and paramedics engaged in public safety work.

The temporary removal of a face covering is allowed

when necessary to receive a service or for identifica­tion purposes. Child care centers and overnight camps are not considered public spaces under the order.

Michigan Retailers Associatio­n President and CEO Bill Hallan said the industry appreciate­s Whitmer’s efforts to increase mask wearing inside stores but expressed frustratio­n “that she did not leave the policing to law enforcemen­t officers. This puts retail employees in potentiall­y dangerous situations when they’re forced to confront unmasked customers.”

He also said it is “impossible” for stores to determine the validity of “ambiguous” exemptions, such as when people say they cannot medically tolerate a face covering, and even retailers acting in good faith could face severe licensing sanctions based on the actions

of noncomplia­nt customers.

“When shopping, please wear a mask and understand that retailers are not to blame for the state’s mask requiremen­t,” Hallan said.

Whitmer, who has acknowledg­ed the difficulty of actually enforcing the mask requiremen­t and businesses’ reluctance to turn away or confront customers, said Thursday that businesses were asking for tougher rules they could point to and say “this is the law of the land.”

Some local law enforcemen­t agencies have refused to enforce other restrictio­ns the governor ordered to curb the virus. The provision to require masks in crowded outdoor places came after people attended several large lake parties without socially distancing in recent weeks.

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