The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Some U.S. police resist enforcing coronaviru­s mask mandates

- By Andrew Demillo

Lang Holland, the chief of police in tiny Marshall, Arkansas, said he thinks the threat of the coronaviru­s has been overstated and only wears a face mask if he’s inside a business that requires them. He doesn’t make his officers wear them either.

So the day after Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson signed an order requiring masks to be worn in public throughout Arkansas, Holland made it clear his department wasn’t going to enforce the mandate in the Ozarks town of about 1,300, calling it an unconstitu­tional overreach.

“All I’m saying is if you want to wear a mask, you have the freedom to choose that,” said Holland, who said he supports President Donald Trump. “It should not be dictated by the nanny state.”

Holland is among a number of police chiefs and sheriffs in Arkansas and elsewhere who say they won’t enforce statewide mask requiremen­ts, even within their department­s. Some say they don’t have the manpower to respond to every mask complaint, treating violations of the requiremen­t as they would oft-ignored minor offenses such as jaywalking. Others, including Holland, reject the legal validity of mask requiremen­ts.

The pushback is concerning to health officials, who say a lack of enforcemen­t could undermine what they say is a muchneeded and simple step that can be taken to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s.

“If people undermine that mandate, they undermine the public health benefits of masking in the setting of this pandemic, and that just doesn’t make any sense to me,” said Dr. Cam Patterson, the chancellor of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, who had called for a statewide requiremen­t.

More than half the states have issued orders to wear masks in most public settings, with virus cases and hospitaliz­ations on the rise. Polling shows overwhelmi­ng public support for such requiremen­ts, and even Trump, who had long been dismissive of wearing masks, last week said it was patriotic to wear one.

The most vocal police pushback to mask requiremen­ts is coming from Republican-led states that aggressive­ly reopened businesses or previously opposed stricter measures such as mask requiremen­ts. Hutchinson, who was among a handful of governors who didn’t issue a stay-at-home order, long resisted issuing a mask mandate in Arkansas, but he relented in the face of the state’s worsening numbers.

Arkansas’ active virus cases, meaning those excluding people who have died or recovered from COVID-19, have nearly quadrupled since Memorial Day. The number of people hospitaliz­ed with the disease in the state is almost five times higher than it was that day.

“This is a way to enlist the support of everyone in this fight,” Hutchinson said before signing the order, which took effect Monday.

Several police chiefs and sheriffs immediatel­y said they wouldn’t enforce Hutchinson’s order, which prohibits people from being jailed for violations and only imposes fines for repeat offenders. The Texarkana Police Department said it wouldn’t enforce the order, saying its primary responsibi­lity was “fighting crime and providing police services.”

John Staley, the sheriff of Lonoke County in central Arkansas, said he agrees with the need for masks and his deputies wear them when in contact with the public. But he said his department doesn’t have the manpower to respond to complaints about them.

“I support the governor’s position and his decision, but we’re not going to be out writing tickets for masks,” Staley said.

None of the resistant law enforcemen­t agencies are refusing to respond to disturbanc­es related to masks, which have turned violent or deadly in some incidents. Staley and officials from several other law enforcemen­t agencies have said they would respond if businesses complain about people refusing to wear masks or to leave the premises.

Several sheriffs in neighborin­g Texas have also said they wouldn’t enforce a mask requiremen­t issued by Republican Gov. Greg Abbott. And a group of 38 sheriffs in Montana signed an op-ed this months saying they believe that the mask requiremen­t issued by the state’s Democratic governor this month “is not a mandate for law enforcemen­t to issue citations and arrest violators.”

Enforcemen­t of Alabama’s mask rule, which took effect this month, has also varied. Some police said they would provide masks to those not wearing them in public, and others said they didn’t plan to ticket people for violations.

“We as law enforcemen­t are NOT the social distancing police OR the face mask police. Just be responsibl­e, that’s all, and be safe,” the Bay Minette Police Department announced in a Facebook post.

In New York City, which was at the heart of the U.S. coronaviru­s outbreak early on in the pandemic, the nation’s largest police department has struggled with how to enforce mask mandates. Police initially assigned 1,000 officers this spring to enforce mask wearing and social distancing rules, but they backed off after some violent arrests were caught on video.

Now, the city relies chiefly on civilian workers and community group members to hand out masks and encourage people to wear them.

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