Los Angeles Times

Some Democratic-led states easing mask rules

Governors get ahead of Biden and CDC in a bid to mollify those who oppose federal pandemic restrictio­ns.

- By Anumita Kaur and Erin B. Logan Times staff writer Eli Stokols contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — Several Democratic governors are moving to ease some indoor mask mandates, skipping ahead of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Biden administra­tion, which continue to urge Americans to wear masks indoors regardless of COVID-19 vaccinatio­n status.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul lifted her state’s indoor mask mandate for businesses this week, and New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy is ending the requiremen­t that students and school employees wear masks. California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, said he is relaxing his state’s universal mask mandate next week. Other Democratic-led states are following suit, just as a federal free mask program is in full swing.

The urgency of state officials to ease guidelines reflects recent polling showing growing frustratio­n with the Biden administra­tion’s pandemic response and the electorate’s broader impatience after two years of shifting public health guidelines. With November’s midterm elections looming, some Democratic officehold­ers aren’t waiting for the president, the CDC or scientific consensus as they take steps to neutralize a potential campaign liability that Republican­s have already seized upon.

Spokesmen for Hochul and Murphy both attributed their decisions to a drop in cases and hospitaliz­ations; Newsom also cited the Omicron variant’s wane as a reason to ease some restrictio­ns for vaccinated California­ns.

“Governors are picking up on a sense that voters simply won’t tolerate mask mandates any longer,” said Julia Lynch, a political scientist at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. “They are worried about how much longer voters are willing to abide by restrictio­ns.”

Americans are increasing­ly critical of the COVID-19 response from elected and public health officials, and 60% of U.S. adults polled say they’ve felt “confused” as a result of changes to public health officials’ recommenda­tions on how to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s, up 7% since the summer, according to a January Pew Research Center poll.

Just last month, as Omicron cases soared, the CDC upgraded its stance on highqualit­y masks, emphasizin­g that N95 or KN95 masks offer far more protection than cloth face coverings. President Biden launched a program to distribute 400 million free N95 masks to the public. More than a hundred million masks have been distribute­d to pharmacies and community centers nationwide, according to the White House. And Americans have started receiving free athome rapid testing kits in another Biden administra­tion program.

The administra­tion continues to recommend indoor masking in areas of high transmissi­on, which, according to White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki, “is basically the entire country at this point.”

Psaki said the president would keep to his campaign promise — defer to the nation’s top scientists in how the federal government responds to the pandemic. Biden got burned for taking a victory lap on his administra­tion’s handling of the pandemic in July when cases were at a low point, only to see the Delta and Omicron variants sicken millions and fill hospitals. The spike in cases prompted federal and local officials to reinstate more restrictiv­e measures.

Still, Psaki acknowledg­ed that Americans had tired of restrictio­ns and said the administra­tion was developing plans to help the nation exit the emergency phase of the pandemic.

In a wide-ranging NBC News interview Thursday, Biden responded to whether states and cities were moving too quickly to loosen indoor mask mandates, telling anchor Lester Holt: “I’ve committed that I would follow the science — the science as put forward by the CDC, and the federal people. And I think it’s probably premature, but it’s, you know, it’s a tough call.”

But Biden acknowledg­ed that the waves of coronaviru­s variants “have had a profound impact on the psyche of the American people.”

Last week, as the National Governors Assn. met with Biden at the White House, Murphy and others pressed the president to give guidance on how states can live with the coronaviru­s.

“What does the road from pandemic to endemic look like, and how do we keep score?” Murphy told reporters. “There was broad agreement that’s the task before us.”

Meanwhile, there is some disagreeme­nt among public health experts on how soon the nation should ease restrictio­ns.

Carolyn Cannuscio, an associate professor of family medicine and community health at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, said it’s premature for states to lift mask mandates since there are still high rates of community transmissi­on and many hospitals are still overwhelme­d.

Though case counts are on the downturn, the country should “be taking advantage of the decline to try to enter into a period of recovery and rest, and masks are an important way for us to continue to reduce transmissi­on,” Cannuscio said.

Lifting mask mandates now may most severely impact marginaliz­ed communitie­s, including people of color and immunocomp­romised Americans, she said.

“We need to keep preventive policies in place in order to allow these people to participat­e fully in society,” Cannuscio said.

Dr. Leana Wen, a public health professor at George Washington University, said because the public can get widely available vaccines and high-quality masks, they’re in a better position to individual­ly “decide the level of risk that they’re willing to take instead of this being a government mandate.”

Wen said that governors’ announceme­nts to ease mask mandates ahead of any new CDC guidance is a result of slow decision-making at the federal level.

“The states have been asking the CDC for months about guidance for what the metrics are for when masks should go from required to optional. The CDC doesn’t even have a timeline even now for when that change is going to be forthcomin­g,” Wen said. “I think the states frankly said, ‘We can’t wait anymore.’”

N2 America, a centerrigh­t nonprofit, is already running TV ads in battlegrou­nd states to appeal to swing-voting parents skeptical of Democrats’ response to the pandemic. One advertisem­ent shows kids wearing masks in classrooms and learning remotely. “Democrats are putting kids last,” the ad reads. “Teachers unions are putting kids last.”

Zack Roday, a senior advisor to the nonprofit, said that the pandemic has wholly shifted the political landscape. It has animated not just the Republican base but also independen­t voters, both of whom will have a long memory regarding their leaders’ COVID-19-related decisions when election season comes, he said.

“Whether that equals a red wave ... that is the million-dollar question,” Roday said.

Democratic strategist Jeff Horwitt said the ad doesn’t speak to the reality in schools and reminds voters of the Trump administra­tion’s slow response to the pandemic. “It’s sad they’re trying to attack teachers and trying to score political points,” he said.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Pool Photo ?? CALIFORNIA Gov. Gavin Newsom said he is relaxing his state’s universal mask mandate next week.
Rich Pedroncell­i Pool Photo CALIFORNIA Gov. Gavin Newsom said he is relaxing his state’s universal mask mandate next week.

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