National Post (National Edition)

Biden mandates masks in airports

Move seen as clear break from Trump strategy

- MICHAEL LARIS

WASHINGTON • President Joe Biden signed an order Thursday mandating mask usage in airports and on many planes, trains, ships and intercity buses, the White House said.

The moves are part of a new strategy released Thursday to confront the coronaviru­s pandemic that has killed more than 406,000 people in the United States.

Airline workers have described the dangerous results of passengers refusing to follow mask requiremen­ts issued by airlines. Safety reports filed with the federal government show flight attendants being repeatedly taunted and verbally abused by passengers, including some who called the virus a “political hoax.”

Biden's action comes on the heels of an earlier order Wednesday — the first he issued as president — requiring masks on federal property. Together, the orders come as close to a national mask mandate as his federal powers allow, because only states and municipali­ties can require residents to wear masks at a local level.

The Trump administra­tion rejected calls from Congress, unions representi­ng transporta­tion workers and public health experts within the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to require masks.

Biden's move marks a clear break from Trump's handling of masks, although some specifics, including how it might be enforced, remain unclear pending the release of the order. It will require masks “on certain public modes of transporta­tion and at ports of entry to the United States,” according to a White House strategy document released Thursday.

Biden had said before his inaugurati­on he would require masks for “interstate travel on planes, trains and buses,” and CDC officials previously indicated that interstate travel is where their existing authority lies. The precise role of the Department of Transporta­tion was immediatel­y clear.

Biden's pick for transporta­tion secretary, Pete Buttigieg, appeared Thursday before the Senate Commerce Committee for a hearing on his nomination. In prepared remarks, he pointed to the need to face the broad dangers stemming from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Safety is the foundation of the department's mission, and it takes on new meaning amid this pandemic,” according to his remarks. “We must ensure all of our transporta­tion systems — from aviation to public transit, to our railways, roads, ports, waterways, and pipelines — are managed safely during this critical period, as we work to defeat the virus.”

The White House said Thursday the pending order “directs applicable agencies to take immediate action to require mask-wearing on many airplanes, trains,” maritime vessels and intercity buses.

The strategy also seeks more aggressive action by the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion, including considerin­g emergency standards on mask-wearing and other matters. “Biden is taking steps to cover workers not typically covered by OSHA ... by directing agencies like the Department of Transporta­tion to keep workers safe,” according to the strategy document.

Biden's pending order, “Promoting COVID-19 Safety in Domestic and Internatio­nal Travel,” also will instruct agencies “to develop options for expanding public health measures for domestic travel and cross-border land and sea travel and calls for incentives to support and encourage compliance with CDC guidelines on public transporta­tion.”

The CDC previously outlined the reasoning behind its “strong recommenda­tion” to wear masks during travel.

“Travelling on public conveyance­s increases a person's risk of getting and spreading COVID-19 by bringing people in close contact with others, often for prolonged periods,” the CDC said.

“People should wear masks when travelling into, within, or out of the United States on conveyance­s,” the agency said in the earlier guidance. “Local transmissi­on can grow quickly into interstate and internatio­nal transmissi­on when infected people travel on public conveyance­s without wearing a mask and with others who are not wearing masks.”

Experts in psychology and decision-making said resistance to mask usage, including on planes, has been driven by politiciza­tion at the highest levels of the U.S. government and beyond, and is also fuelled by the inconsiste­nt messaging and the insidious nature of a virus that can be spread so easily by those who don't even know they are infected. Experts said one shortcomin­g has been a lack of careful testing of public health messages to make sure they are convincing.

Biden White House officials said their strategy will include “world-class public education campaigns” on mask-wearing, testing and vaccinatio­ns, which will be coordinate­d on the federal, state and local levels and include the private sector.

“They will be anchored by science and fact-based public health guidance. The Administra­tion will work to counter misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion by ensuring that Americans are obtaining science-based informatio­n,” the according to the strategy.

SAFETY IS THE FOUNDATION OF THE DEPARTMENT'S MISSION.

 ?? ALEX WONG / GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. President Joe Biden, with Vice President Kamala Harris, has ordered that masks be worn on many planes and other modes of transporta­tion, although some specifics, including how the order might be enforced, remain unclear.
ALEX WONG / GETTY IMAGES U.S. President Joe Biden, with Vice President Kamala Harris, has ordered that masks be worn on many planes and other modes of transporta­tion, although some specifics, including how the order might be enforced, remain unclear.

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