USA TODAY International Edition

Retailers seek aid on mask mandate

Group says governors should enforce policies

- Kelly Tyko

As viral videos of shoppers’ tirades and confrontat­ions over being asked to wear face coverings during the COVID- 19 pandemic erupt, major retailers are urging governors to make it a requiremen­t for everyone to wear a mask.

The Retail Industry Leaders Associatio­n, which represents Walmart, Target, Best Buy, Walgreens, Home Depot and other major chains, says different local mandates have created confusion leading to conflicts between customers and store employees.

“Retailers are alarmed with the instances of hostility and violence frontline employees are experienci­ng by a vocal minority of customers who are under the misguided impression that wearing a mask is a violation of their civil liberties,” Brian Dodge, the retail associatio­n’s president, said in a letter to the National Governors Associatio­n.

Fewer than half of U. S. states require masks in public places, according to the retail group, and some cities and counties have issued their own mandates.

Retailers “respectful­ly ask that those governors that haven’t yet required masks in public to do so immediatel­y,” Dodge said in his letter.

The National Governors Associatio­n said Tuesday that its members are discussing the letter and others like it from different retail groups.

Dodge says the associatio­n recommends that retailers communicat­e policies with signage at stores and not by physically confrontin­g customers.

“Given the troubling incidents we have all seen on social media involving aggressive customers refusing to wear a mask, we strongly recommend store employees not be charged with primary enforcemen­t of mask mandates and that retailers not be fined for a customer’s non- compliance,” Dodge said.

Over the weekend, the founder of an Arizona public relations firm recorded herself destroying a face mask display at a Scottsdale Target. Last month, a woman without a mask at a California Trader Joe’s called employees and shoppers “Democratic pigs” and screamed profanitie­s.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends people use face coverings over their mouth and nose in public settings and around people who don’t live with them to help reduce the spread of the virus.

 ??  ?? People waiting in line to enter a grocery store wear COVID- 19 protective masks Friday in McCandless, Pa. KEITH SRAKOCIC/ AP
People waiting in line to enter a grocery store wear COVID- 19 protective masks Friday in McCandless, Pa. KEITH SRAKOCIC/ AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States