Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

CDC will require face masks on public transit

Waiting areas such as airports also affected

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ATLANTA — Travelers on airplanes and public transporta­tion like buses and subways will be required to wear face masks starting next week to curb the spread of COVID-19.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a mask-wearing rule late Friday that builds on an order announced Jan. 21 by President Joe Biden.

The rule “will protect Americans and provide confidence that we can once again travel safely even during this pandemic,” said Dr. Marty Cetron, director of CDC’s division of migration and quarantine, who signed the order.

The 11-page CDC order takes effect just before midnight Monday. It makes refusal to wear a mask a violation of federal law, enforced by the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion and other federal, state and local authoritie­s.

The rule applies to passengers on airplanes, trains, subways and buses, and in taxis and ride-shares. It says travelers must wear a mask that covers their nose and mouth while riding and while getting on and off rides. The order extends to waiting areas such as airports, train platforms and subway stations.

Airlines already require masks and have banned more than 2,000 passengers for refusing to wear one. Flight attendant unions have said a federal rule will make it easier for crews to enforce the requiremen­t.

The order exempts children under 2 and people with a disability that makes it unsafe to wear a mask. Airlines struggled with an exemption for safety and stopped allowing it. The CDC said transporta­tion operators can require medical documentat­ion.

Travelers will be allowed to remove masks while eating or drinking.

The CDC said some face coverings aren’t enough to comply with the rule. The list includes face shields, bandanas, masks with exhalation valves and masks that are too big or otherwise don’t fit properly.

The CDC said transporta­tion operators may require a negative COVID-19 test from passengers. Cetron said this week that the agency is considerin­g requiring testing of passengers on flights within the United States, but the airline industry is fighting a testing requiremen­t out of fear that fewer people will fly.

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