Santa Fe New Mexican

Mask laws not likely to return, even as cases rise

- By Bobby Caina Calvan and Steve Leblanc

NEW YORK — An increase in COVID-19 infections around the U.S. has sent more cities into new high-risk categories that are supposed to trigger indoor mask wearing, but much of the country is stopping short of bringing back restrictio­ns amid deep pandemic fatigue.

For weeks, much of upstate New York has been in the highalert orange zone, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention designatio­n that reflects serious community spread. The CDC urges people to mask up in indoor public places, including schools, regardless of vaccinatio­n status. But few, if any, local jurisdicti­ons in the region brought back a mask requiremen­t despite rising case counts.

In New York City, cases are again rising and this week crossed the city’s threshold for “medium risk,” indicating the widening spread of the subvariant knowns as BA.2 that has swept the state’s northern reaches. But there appears to be little appetite from Mayor Eric Adams to do an about face just a few months after allowing residents to shed masks and put away vaccinatio­n cards that were once required to enter restaurant­s and concert halls. Adams has said the city could pivot and reimpose mandates but has stressed that he wants to keep the city open.

“I don’t anticipate many places, if any, going back to mask mandates unless we see overflowin­g hospitals — that’s what would drive mask mandates,” said Professor David Larsen, a public health expert at Syracuse University in upstate New York, whose own county is currently an orange zone.

“People are still dying, but not in the same numbers,” he said.

Nationally, hospitaliz­ations are up slightly but still as low as any point in the coronaviru­s pandemic. Deaths have steadily decreased in the last three months to nearly the lowest numbers.

The muted response reflects the exhaustion of the country after two years of restrictio­ns and the new challenges that health leaders are facing at this phase of the pandemic.

An abundance of at-home virus test kits has led to a steep undercount of COVID-19 cases that were once an important benchmark. Researcher­s estimate that more than 60 percent of the country was infected with the virus during the omicron surge, bringing high levels of protection on top of the tens of millions of vaccinatio­ns. Hospitaliz­ations have increased but only slightly.

“If a mask mandate were reinstated right this minute, I don’t think it’d be very successful,” said Jim Kearns, a videograph­er at the State University of New York in Oswego, another upstate New York community in the CDC’s orange zone.

“I think a lot of people are just over it,” he said. “If I saw death rates and hospitaliz­ations going up in crazy numbers, and if I felt that there was a danger to me and my family, I would put it on in a heartbeat. But it has been a long two years.”

In Boston, even as COVID-19 cases began to tick up again, there’s been little drive to reimpose the indoor mask mandate city officials largely lifted two months ago. Boston still requires masks in schools and on school buses. A statewide mask mandate was lifted for schools at the end of February.

The city is now focused on what Boston Mayor Michelle Wu has described as recovery efforts, including attracting workers and visitors back to the city’s downtown. Health officials continue to urge caution.

In Maine, there have been few efforts to reinstate COVID-19 precaution­s, even after Democratic Gov. Janet Mills tested positive for COVID-19 at the end of April.

One of the most jarring reactions came in Philadelph­ia, which last month abandoned its indoor mask mandate just days after becoming the first U.S. metropolis to reimpose compulsory masking in response to an increase in COVID-19 cases and hospitaliz­ations.

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