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Sunday, March 16, 2025

Even as COVID cases rise, mask mandates stay shelved 

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1047 days ago
20220504
FILE -City residents wait in a line extending around the block to receive free at-home rapid COVID-19 test kits in Philadelphia, Monday, Dec. 20, 2021. Philadelphia is ending its indoor mask mandate, city health officials said Thursday night, April 21, 2022, abruptly reversing course just days after city residents had to start wearing masks again amid a sharp increase in infections.(AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

FILE -City residents wait in a line extending around the block to receive free at-home rapid COVID-19 test kits in Philadelphia, Monday, Dec. 20, 2021. Philadelphia is ending its indoor mask mandate, city health officials said Thursday night, April 21, 2022, abruptly reversing course just days after city residents had to start wearing masks again amid a sharp increase in infections.(AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

By BOB­BY CAINA CAL­VAN and STEVE LeBLANC-As­so­ci­at­ed Press 

NEW YORK (AP) — 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 high-alert 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 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% 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. Dur­ing April’s run­ning of the Boston Marathon, which drew tens of thou­sands of com­peti­tors, race or­ga­niz­ers and city of­fi­cials rec­om­mend­ed run­ners take steps to stop the spread of the virus by get­ting vac­ci­nat­ed, test­ed for COVID-19 and not ac­cept­ing wa­ter from spec­ta­tors. 

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. The 74-year-old, who had re­ceived a sec­ond boost­er, said she be­lieves that’s “one of the rea­sons why I am still feel­ing well” and en­cour­aged oth­ers to get vac­ci­nat­ed. 

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. 

City of­fi­cials, who had said they want­ed to head off a new wave of in­fec­tions, abrupt­ly back­tracked af­ter what they said was an un­ex­pect­ed drop in the num­ber of peo­ple in the hos­pi­tal and a lev­el­ing-off of new in­fec­tions. The turn­about came amid ris­ing op­po­si­tion to the re­in­state­ment, but city of­fi­cials said the de­ci­sion was about da­ta, not pol­i­tics. 

In­ac­tion by cities comes af­ter a fed­er­al judge in Flori­da last month struck down a na­tion­al mask man­date for trav­el­ers on planes, trains and bus­es. The CDC still urges peo­ple to wear face cov­er­ings but the Trans­porta­tion Se­cu­ri­ty Ad­min­is­tra­tion said it would stop en­forc­ing mask man­dates at air­ports and on flights, even as the White House said it would ap­peal the rul­ing. 

In March, Ver­mont’s largest city, Burling­ton, end­ed its in­door mask man­date fol­low­ing a drop in COVID-19 cas­es. Burling­ton was one of more than two dozen Ver­mont com­mu­ni­ties that re­quired mask­ing af­ter the Leg­is­la­ture in No­vem­ber gave towns and cities the au­thor­i­ty to do that. Even as the masks came off, COVID made a re­turn in the state. 

Half of Ver­mont’s 14 coun­ties have now been rat­ed as hav­ing high com­mu­ni­ty lev­els of COVID-19, ac­cord­ing to the CDC. The rank­ings are based on a hand­ful of fac­tors, in­clud­ing new hos­pi­tal ad­mis­sions for the virus. 

Chica­go’s in­fec­tion rate is al­so ris­ing, even though like in most places hos­pi­tal­iza­tions and deaths re­main low. 

But the in­creas­ing num­ber of in­fec­tions caused enough con­cern that the school dis­trict sent a let­ter to par­ents alert­ing them to the pos­si­bil­i­ty that with the rise, Cook Coun­ty, which in­cludes Chica­go, “may be mov­ing from ‘low risk’ to a ‘mod­er­ate risk’ cat­e­go­ry in the com­ing days.” 

The let­ter did not say if the school dis­trict could again re­quire stu­dents and staffers to wear masks or re­turn to re­mote learn­ing. 

AP writer Don Bab­win in Chica­go and Michelle L. Price in New York con­tributed to this re­port. LeBlanc re­port­ed from Boston. 

 

COVID-19Mask mandateCOVID-19 casesCovid vaccines


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