Orlando Sentinel

Oregon’s mask fight is leaving its mark

Residents seethe as state officials eye extending mandate

- By Sara Cline

PORTLAND, Ore. — As states around the country lift COVID-19 restrictio­ns, Oregon is poised to go in the opposite direction — and many residents are fuming about it.

A top health official is considerin­g indefinite­ly extending rules requiring masks and social distancing in all businesses in the state.

The proposal would keep the rules in place until they are “no longer necessary to address the effects of the pandemic in the workplace.”

Michael Wood, administra­tor of the state’s department of Occupation­al Safety and Health, said the move is necessary to address a technicali­ty in state law that requires a “permanent” rule to keep current restrictio­ns from expiring.

“We are not out of the woods yet,” he said.

But the idea has prompted a flood of angry responses, with everyone from parents to teachers to business owners and employees crying government overreach.

Wood’s agency received a record number of public comments, mostly critical, and nearly 60,000 residents signed a petition against the proposal.

Opponents also are upset government officials won’t say how low Oregon’s COVID-19 case numbers must go, or how many people would have to be vaccinated, to get the requiremen­ts lifted in a state that’s already had some of the nation’s strictest safety measures.

“When will masks be unnecessar­y? What scientific studies do these mandates rely on, particular­ly now that the vaccine is days away from being available to everyone?” said state Sen. Kim Thatcher, a Republican from Keizer, near the state’s capital. “Businesses have had to play ‘mask cop’ for the better part of a year now. They deserve some certainty on when they will no longer be threatened with fines.”

Wood said he is reviewing all the feedback to see if changes are needed before he makes a final decision by May 4, when the current rules lapse.

Oregon, a blue state, has been among those with the country’s most stringent COVID-19 restrictio­ns and now stands in contrast with much of the rest of the nation as vaccines become more widely available.

At least six states — Alabama, Iowa, Mississipp­i, Montana, North Dakota and Texas — have lifted mask mandates, and some never implemente­d them.

In Texas, businesses reopened at 100% capacity last month.

In January, Virginia became the first in the nation to enact permanent COVID-19 workplace safety and health rules.

“While the end of this pandemic is finally in sight, the virus is still spreading — and now is not the time to let up on preventati­ve measures,” Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam said following the announceme­nt.

Besides mask and distancing requiremen­ts, Oregon’s proposal includes more arcane workplace rules regarding air flow, ventilatio­n, employee notificati­on in case of an outbreak and sanitation protocols.

It dovetails with separate actions issued by Democratic Gov. Kate Brown, using a state of emergency declaratio­n, requiring masks in public statewide — and even outside when 6 feet of distance can’t be maintained — and providing strict, county-by-county thresholds for business closures or reductions in capacity when case numbers rise above certain levels.

More than a third of Oregon’s counties are currently limited to indoor social gatherings of six people, and the maximum occupancy for indoor dining, indoor entertainm­ent and gyms is 25% capacity or 50 people, whichever is less.

And many schools are just now reopening after a year of online learning.

The workplace rule is “driven by the pandemic, and it will be repealed,” Wood said.

“But, it might not need to go away at exactly the same time the State of Emergency is lifted,” he said, referring to Brown’s executive orders.

Amid pandemic frustratio­n and deprivatio­n, the issue has gained a lot of attention. A petition on change.org opposing the rule gained nearly 60,000 signatures and spread on social media, drawing even more interest to the proposal.

More than 5,000 public comments were sent to the agency, smashing its previous record of 1,100.

“The majority of comments were simply hostile to the entire notion of COVID-19 restrictio­ns,” Wood said. “The vast majority of comments were in the context of, ‘You never needed to do anything.”’

Justin Spaulding, a doctor at the Cataract & Laser Institute of Southern Oregon, is among those who raised concerns about the proposal in public comments.

“I do not understand these new guidelines for business,” he wrote. “We have a large subset of patients that are unwilling (or) hostile with the current guidelines, and making them permanent will only make it worse.”

For Thatcher, the GOP state lawmaker, the most concerning part is “OSHA’s lack of clarity” on when the rules will be lifted.

Officials said they have every intent to repeal the rule, and that decision will be made based on a complex mix of factors, including case counts, vaccinatio­n rates, case severity and advice from the Oregon Health Authority.

 ?? GILLIAN FLACCUS/AP ?? Residents wearing masks sit in Lake Oswego, Oregon, on April 11 as the state weighs indefinite­ly extending rules requiring masks.
GILLIAN FLACCUS/AP Residents wearing masks sit in Lake Oswego, Oregon, on April 11 as the state weighs indefinite­ly extending rules requiring masks.

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