The Record (Troy, NY)

NY requires masks in child-care centers

- By Marina Villeneuve The Associated Press

ALBANY, N.Y. » All workers at child-care centers in New York now must wear face coverings under a plan announced by Gov. Kathy Hochul on Wednesday.

The Democratic governor said the requiremen­t is effective “now” and applies to all staff and visitors at state-regulated child care centers.

Hochul cited the rise in COVID-19 cases among children and the lack of a vaccine for children under 12 years old.

New York already requires individual­s to wear masks in schools, correction­al facilities, homeless shelters, transporta­tion hubs and certain healthcare settings like hospitals.

A few school districts in New York have announced lawsuits against the school mask mandate: leaders of at least one Long Island school board are arguing that Hochul and state health commission­er Howard Zucker lack the legal au

thority to mandate masks.

David Stewart, president of the board of directors of the Christian Central Academy in Erie County, has said the private school is suing to “defend our policies and position on Godgiven parental rights.”

Governors in New York have the power to suspend regulation­s in a state of emergency.

In spring 2020, state lawmakers gave former Gov. Andrew Cuomo the outright power to also pass new regulation­s — an authority that ended when the state of emergency expired this summer.

But Hochul has defended her administra­tion’s decision to require masks at schools statewide by arguing that state government has always had authority to take sweeping steps needed to address a pandemic.

And she’s said mask mandates can keep kids in schools five days a week. The governor has also said mask mandates could be eased once infection rates decline and kids can get vaccinated.

About 62% of New Yorkers are fully vaccinated, with rates as low as 36% in rural Allegany County.

Hochul hopes to get more young people vaccinated: she’s raffling off 125 tickets to the upcoming Governors Ball Music Festival to individual­s who get vaccinated at certain pop-up locations.

And she said she’s authorizin­g EMTs to administer COVID-19 vaccines to address anticipate­d staffing shortages as her administra­tion prepares to roll out booster shots.

New York started seeing an uptick in COVID-19 cases and hospitaliz­ations from July to mid-August, when rates began to plateau at levels far below the spring 2020 and winter 2021 peaks.

Hospitals reported nearly 2,500 confirmed COVID-19 patients as of Monday, up 50% from 1,650 as of Aug. 14.

An average of roughly 4,900 people have tested positive each day for COVID-19 in New York over the seven days through Monday. That’s up from as low as 307 in late June.

 ?? HANS PENNINK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York Gov. Kathy Hochul.
HANS PENNINK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Gov. Kathy Hochul.

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