The Norwalk Hour

Pandemic backlash jeopardize­s public health powers, leaders

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Tisha Coleman has lived in close-knit Linn County, Kan., for 42 years and never felt so alone.

As the public health administra­tor, she’s struggled every day of the coronaviru­s pandemic to keep her rural county along the Missouri border safe. In return, she’s been harassed, sued, vilified — and called a “sheep.”

The months of fighting over masks and quarantine­s were already wearing her down. Then she got COVID-19, likely from her husband, who refused to require masks at the family hardware store. Her mother got it, too, and died Sunday

Across the U.S., state and local public health officials have found themselves at the center of a political storm.

Some have become the target of far-right activists, conservati­ve groups and anti-vaccinatio­n extremists, who have coalesced around common goals — fighting mask orders, quarantine­s and contact tracing with protests, threats and personal attacks. Public health powers are being undermined in the courts. Lawmakers in at least 24 states also have crafted legislatio­n to weaken long-held public health powers.

Amid this pushback, at least 181 state and local public health leaders in 38 states have resigned, retired or been fired since April 1, according to an ongoing investigat­ion by The Associated Press and KHN. According to experts, this is the largest exodus of public health leaders in American history.

One in 8 Americans — 40 million people — lives in a community that has lost its local public health department leader during the pandemic. Top public health officials in 20 states have left state-level department­s, and an untold number of lower-level staffers has also departed.

Many of the leaders exited due to political blowback or pandemic pressure. Some left to take higherprof­ile positions or due to health concerns. Others were fired for poor performanc­e. Dozens retired.

“We don’t have a long line of people outside of the door who want those jobs,” said Dr. Gianfranco Pezzino, health officer in Shawnee County, Kansas, who is retiring early from his job. “It’s a huge loss that will be felt probably for generation­s to come.”

The departures are a further erosion of the nation’s already fragile public health infrastruc­ture ahead of the largest vaccinatio­n campaign in U.S. history. AP and KHN previously reported that per capita spending for state public health department­s had dropped by 16%, and for local health department­s by 18%, since 2010. At least 38,000 state and local public health jobs have disappeare­d since the 2008 recession.

Since the pandemic began, the public health workforce in Kansas has been hit hard — 17 of the state’s 100 health department­s have lost leaders since the end of March.

Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly issued a mask mandate in July, but the state legislatur­e allowed counties to opt out. A recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report showed the 24 Kansas counties that had upheld the mandate saw a 6% decrease in COVID-19, while the 81 counties that opted out entirely saw a 100% increase.

Coleman pushed for Linn County to uphold the rule, but commission­ers wrote that masks are “not necessary to protect the public health and safety of the county.”

Coleman was disappoint­ed but not surprised. “At least I know I’ve done everything I can to attempt to protect the people,” she said.

In Idaho, hundreds of protesters, some armed, swarmed health district offices and health board members’ homes in Boise on Dec. 8, screaming and blaring air horns. They included members of the anti-vaccinatio­n group Health Freedom Idaho. The anti-vaccine movement has linked up with political extremists on the right, experts said, and taken on a larger anti-science role, pushing back against other public health measures.

Now, opponents are turning to state legislatur­es and even the Supreme Court to strip public officials of the legal power they’ve held for decades to stop foodborne illnesses and infectious diseases by closing businesses and quarantini­ng individual­s, among other measures.

Lawmakers in Missouri, Louisiana, Ohio, Virginia and at least 20 other states have crafted bills to limit public health powers. In some states, the efforts have failed; in others, legislativ­e leaders have embraced them enthusiast­ically.

Meanwhile, governors in several states, including Wisconsin, Kansas and Michigan, have been sued by their own legislator­s or others for using their executive powers to restrict business operations and require masks. In Ohio, a group of lawmakers is seeking to impeach Republican Gov. Mike DeWine over his pandemic rules.

A 5-4 ruling last month indicated that the Supreme Court also is willing to put new constraint­s on public health powers. Lawrence Gostin, an expert in public health law at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., said the decision could embolden state legislator­s and governors to seek additional limits.

Along with the political backlash, many health officials have faced threats of personal violence. In California, a man with ties to the right-wing, antigovern­ment Boogaloo movement, which is associated with multiple murders, was accused of stalking and threatenin­g Santa Clara’s health officer. He was arrested and pleaded not guilty.

Linda Vail, health officer for Michigan’s Ingham County, has received emails and letters at her home saying she’d be “taken down like the governor,” which she took to be a reference to the thwarted attempt to kidnap Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

“I can completely understand why some people, they’re just done,” she said. “There are other places to go work.”

As public health officials depart across the country, the question of who takes their places has plagued Dr. Oxiris Barbot, who left her job as commission­er of New York City’s health department in August amid a clash with Democratic Mayor Bill de Blasio.

“I’m concerned about the degree to which they will have the fortitude to tell elected officials what they need to hear instead of what they want to hear,” Barbot said.

Back in Linn County, cases are rising. As of Dec. 14, 1 out of every 24 residents has tested positive.

“Of course, I could give up, and throw in the towel, but I’m not there yet,” Coleman said.

She has noticed more people are wearing masks these days.

But at the family hardware store, they are still not required.

KHN and AP counted how many state and local public health leaders have left their jobs since April 1 or who plan to leave by Dec. 31.

The analysis includes the exits of top department officials regardless of reason. Some department­s have more than one top position, and some had multiple top officials leave from the same position over the course of the pandemic.

To compile the list, reporters reached out to public health associatio­ns and experts in every state and interviewe­d hundreds of public health employees.

 ?? Charlie Riedel / Associated Press ?? Tisha Coleman, public health administra­tor for Linn County, stands in front of her office on Dec. 7, in Pleasanton, Kan. Across the United States, state and local public health officials such as Coleman have found themselves at the center of a political storm as they combat the worst pandemic in a century.
Charlie Riedel / Associated Press Tisha Coleman, public health administra­tor for Linn County, stands in front of her office on Dec. 7, in Pleasanton, Kan. Across the United States, state and local public health officials such as Coleman have found themselves at the center of a political storm as they combat the worst pandemic in a century.

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