The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Governors stress ‘personal responsibi­lity’ over virus orders

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Earlier this week, as Tennessee registered what then was its highest single-day coronaviru­s case increase, Gov. Bill Lee held a news conference and issued a stern response.

It wasn’t a mandate to wear masks in public or clamp down on businesses or social gatherings. Instead, it was a plea for residents to do the right thing.

“When we have people dying in this state as a result of this virus, we should be taking personal responsibi­lity for this,” the Republican governor said.

It was the same message Lee issued in late March as the COVID-19 disease was beginning to spread. He has vowed to stick to the personal responsibi­lity mantra, with no plans to reinstate stay-athome restrictio­ns or impose statewide mandates — even as photos of unmasked people crowding bars and outdoor concerts across Tennessee spread across social media.

Instead, Lee signed an executive order Friday that allows local officials to issue their own mask mandates if they want — as Nashville and Memphis had already done.

Elevating a message of personal responsibi­lity over statewide crackdowns on businesses and requiremen­ts for people in public spaces has been a consistent approach among certain governors during the coronaviru­s crisis. That’s especially true in Republican-leaning states that had relatively few cases in the initial months of the outbreak but have begun to spike in recent weeks.

Governors in Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Montana, South Carolina, South Dakota and Utah also have invoked some form of the “personal responsibi­lity” message over issuing strict statewide mandates.

“You shouldn’t have to order somebody to do what is just in your own best interest and that of your family, friends and neighbors,” Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey, a Republican, said earlier this week as she urged people to wear masks and take other precaution­s but downplayed the effectiven­ess of statewide orders.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, has frequently invoked personal responsibi­lity but took more decisive action this week in ordering Texans to wear masks in public in most cases. That came after another Republican governor, Doug Ducey of Arizona, changed direction and allowed mayors to make mask-wearing mandatory in their cities.

Those actions contrast with governors such as Republican Henry McMaster of South Carolina, who has refused a statewide mask order even as confirmed cases rise swiftly and the state’s rate of positive tests is three times the recommende­d level.

McMaster’s focus on rebooting the economy placed South Carolina among the first states to reopen. He has since said he won’t close down the state again while emphasizin­g the need for the state’s residents to follow hygiene and social distancing recommenda­tions.

“We cannot keep businesses closed forever,” McMaster said in defending his decision. “What it boils down to is, we must be careful individual­ly.”

West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice, a Republican, has appealed to residents’ sense of duty to help prevent the disease from getting worse, but recently warned that he might impose a mask mandate as cases in the state continue to rise.

In South Dakota, Republican Gov. Kristi Noem has largely avoided ordering restrictio­ns during the pandemic and refused to order social distancing or maskwearin­g for President Donald Trump’s visit to Mount Rushmore on Friday, an event that drew thousands.

She has consistent­ly invoked personal responsibi­lity as a key strategy in combating the virus.

“Every one of them has the opportunit­y to make a decision that they’re comfortabl­e with,“Noem told Fox News.

The personal responsibi­lity ethos has been GOP orthodoxy for decades, often used to justify smaller government and promote individual­ism. In the current climate, personal responsibi­lity is being used to encourage wearing masks, social distancing and avoiding large crowds without making those steps mandatory.

How well those calls for voluntary good behavior are working is another matter. COVID-19 infections are soaring in places like Tennessee, South Carolina, Arkansas, Alabama and other states where Republican governors have balked at statewide mandates and business shutdowns.

The message is not limited to Republican­s.

In Louisiana, an early hot spot where cases and hospitaliz­ations are again on the rise, Democratic Gov. John Bel Edwards has refused to implement a statewide mask requiremen­t. Instead, he regularly calls on people to be “good neighbors.”

Another Democrat, Montana Gov. Steve Bullock, said residents should wear masks when indoors and in crowds. But as the state passed 1,000 known cases, he continued to promote personal habits over any statewide mandate.

“Let’s recommit to taking care of our neighbors so we can move forward together and not have to take any steps backwards,“he said.

Poor participat­ion in social distancing and mask use led Dr. Aaron Milstone, a pulmonary and critical care physician at Tennessee’s Williamson Medical Center, to warn that simply relying on public encouragem­ent is inadequate to combat a pandemic.

He compared virus-related statewide mandates to other public safety laws.

“If we really want to slow the spread and buy time for us to get to a vaccine … then we need to start treating the idea of physical separation the same way that we do with speed limits and seat belts and drunk driving laws,” he said.

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