Alabama County reinstates mask mandates for government buildings.
An official in Dallas County, Alabama, said the county re-implemented a mask mandate in county buildings that are open to the public, an indicator that mask mandates may return en masse across the United States.
Probate Judge Jimmy Nunn stated this week that the policy was instated due to a reported increase in COVID-19 cases nationally and locally. There have also been isolated COVID-19 cases in county buildings, he claimed, according to a local media outlet WAKA-TV.
“At this point in time it is only being taken effect in the government buildings that the public come into. And that will be the three buildings that we have. The courthouse, the annex and the administrative building. These three buildings in which the public come in and we provide services to the public,” said Mr. Nunn, without providing more details.
The risk of contracting COVID-19 in Dallas County, which is located in central Alabama and has the county seat of Selma, is currently considered relatively “low,” according to data from the Covid Act Now nonprofit and tracker. As of Friday, the data showed that there were 6.6 weekly hospital admissions with COVID-19 per 100,000, while 1 percent of hospital beds are occupied by COVID-19 patients.
The Epoch Times contacted Dallas County for additional comment.
Other Mandates
Last month, at least one school district in Alabama mandated masks. Officials at the Kinterbish Junior High School in Cuba, Alabama, released a message on social media saying that “due to the slow raise [sic] of COVID cases in the area, students, employees, and visitors are asked to wear facial masks.” It did not say for how long it would remain intact.
The Talladega City Schools said via Facebook that masking is being encouraged among staff members and students. Face coverings are not required, it said in a subsequent post that attempted to clarify the matter.
Several public school districts in Kentucky and Texas have also canceled classes after COVID-19 cases led to reported widespread student absences in recent weeks.
“We’re seeing a lot of illness being reported consistent with COVID and influenza,” Scott Lockard, public health director for the Kentucky River District told ABC News last month. “Lee County had a surge of cases and attendance dropped below the threshold needed to stay open, so they closed.”
In neighboring Georgia, a small Atlanta college last month implemented a mask mandate for two weeks. In an update to media outlets, Morris Brown College’s president confirmed on Sunday that the rule ended.
More controversially, a school in Silver Spring, Maryland, announced it would require masks for a kindergarten class, including students and teachers, after several students tested positive for COVID-19.
“Additional KN95 masks have been distributed and students and staff in identified classes or activities will be required to mask while in school for the next 10 days, except while eating or drinking,” Rosemary Hills School Principal Rebecca Irwin Kennedy said in a letter, dated Sept. 5, announcing the mandate.
Elsewhere in the United States, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said last week that the state would be giving schools more masks and COVID-19 tests. Districts need to review the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s guidance, she added, for COVID-19 and schools, which doesn’t currently mandate masks.
As mandates return in some places, several top Republicans said that Americans should not comply or would not be bringing the rules back. On Thursday, for example, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis appeared in a news conference, where he decried the mandates at schools and promised that Florida wouldn’t be following suit.
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