Burning Man mulling mandatory COVID-19 vaccines for August
RENO, NEV. >> Burning Man festival organizers have said that they are considering requiring attendees to prove they have been vaccinated for COVID-19 if the organizers move forward with plans to hold this year’s counter-culture festival in the Nevada desert.
The organizers backed off an earlier statement indicating that they had already decided to make the shots mandatory.
They say they won’t decide for sure until the end of the month whether the event that was canceled last year because of the pandemic will take place this summer.
Burning Man CEO Marian Goodell said in a video message posted on the group’s website on April 8 that “vaccines will be required to come to Burning Man.”
She erroneously said at that time that the state of Nevada requires that people have proof of being vaccinated at large gatherings.
She acknowledged last weekend in an updated statement on the group’s web site that she “misspoke.”
Citing a backlash from many longtime attendees at the annual event that draws more than 80,000 people to the Black Rock Desert about 100 miles north of Reno, Goodell clarified that organizers had been formulating their own guidelines on mandatory vaccinations as part of the health and safety plan they must submit to state and county officials.
“We are weighing the gravity of what that does,” Goodell said. “And we know that challenges the concept of ‘radical inclusion.’ ”
She said civic responsibility is an important part of organizers’ guiding principles but that they realize people in some countries haven’t had access to vaccines, nor have most children.
“That’s not quite figured out yet,” she said. “There are plenty of people that are challenging whether it is necessary.
“We hear you. The question of vaccines and how to basically require them, and even from a logistical standing, frankly — all of that, we’re taking a look at.”
Goodell said organizers also have not decided whether to require or provide testing at the event.