COVID restrictions still in place in 2023

COVID Restrictions Still in Place: A Familiar Echo

It may‌ be ‌2023, more⁣ than three years after the pandemic began, but COVID restrictions remain a mandatory part ⁤of life for many.

Some schools,⁢ employers, and government entities are forcing students, ‌workers, and the public to comply with COVID measures in a familiar echo of last year, and the year before that, and the year before that.

Mask ​Mandates Persist in Certain Areas

The city of San Francisco is still requiring people who⁣ work in health care or at ⁢jails to wear a ‌face ‍mask.

Even in ⁣deep-red Alabama,⁢ three court buildings in ⁤Dallas County have resurrected their⁢ mask​ mandate for the public after several ‌cases of the virus cropped up in the buildings.

In Florida, Governor Ron DeSantis (R) criticized ⁤the idea of ⁤going back to ​COVID restrictions and promised​ Florida will not do‌ so.

Vermont is pushing ​back as ⁣well. The state will no longer​ allow school ‌nurses ⁣to test students for COVID, according to the Vermont⁤ Department of Health,⁤ signaling ⁣that they are viewing the virus as more like a seasonal flu.

Deja Vu‍ in Schools

The ⁣return of COVID restrictions‌ comes amid ⁣an ⁢uptick of virus ⁢cases and hospitalizations as ​we head into the⁣ colder months, but the outbreaks appear to be concentrated in hotspots ‌and are ⁢well below the peaks we saw at the height of the ‍pandemic.

With the school year kicking off and students returning to​ classrooms and⁢ campuses, several ⁢schools are giving​ students deja vu with their own‌ mandatory — and strict ⁤— pandemic ⁢rules.

This week, a Maryland elementary school reinstated its face ‌mask mandate after several students ​tested positive for COVID.

Rosemary Hills Elementary School just north of Washington, D.C., is ‌ requiring the third-grade ⁣class ‌and school staff to wear⁢ masks for 10 days after “three or more” third graders ⁣tested positive for the virus.

The young students must wear masks “except⁤ when eating​ or ⁢drinking,”​ and the school is providing KN95 masks to students and staff in the “identified classes or activities.” Parents‌ will also be sent at-home rapid COVID tests, and Rosemary Hills is asking them to report any positive test results to⁢ the school attendance office.

In Alabama, Kinterbish Junior High announced an indefinite mask mandate last month,⁤ and students ⁣appeared ‌to still be wearing masks last week based on Facebook photos.

In‍ Georgia, Morris Brown College, a private, historically black liberal arts school in Atlanta announced a two-week⁤ mask mandate last month.

There ⁤were no active COVID cases on ‍campus, but several students at the other three colleges in the Atlanta University Center system had tested positive after students returned to campus.

Morris Brown students were ‍required⁣ to practice social distancing and were prohibited from having parties or large gatherings.​ They were also required to get their temperature checked when they arrived on⁣ campus, comply with contact‌ tracing efforts, and ​isolate for at least five days if they tested positive.

Dillard University, another private, historically black university in ⁣New Orleans announced ​a two-week mask‍ mandate last‍ month, citing a jump in virus cases.

COVID Impact on Schools and Beyond

Meanwhile, two ⁣California high schools canceled their upcoming ⁤football games ‍over COVID cases among students.

Esparto High School west of Sacramento canceled its ⁢game after‌ six players ⁣contracted the ​virus and seven more players⁤ were out due to injuries. Likewise, Santa Paula High School north‌ of Los Angeles ⁢canceled its football game due to 20 positive COVID cases⁣ within the football and cheerleading teams.

Some parents were⁣ frustrated that their kids will miss out after months of lockdowns.

“She couldn’t go to the movies. Couldn’t do nothing; locked down with a ‌Chromebook,” a⁤ Santa Paula ​parent told a local outlet. “It⁢ was horrible.‍ Totally affected her​ life.”

Mask Mandates Extend Beyond Schools

A major Hollywood movie studio brought back its mask‍ mandate last month as well. Lionsgate,​ reinstated its mask mandate for ‌most of its Santa Monica office employees after several employees ⁤tested positive for COVID. Lionsgate said⁢ it would also do contact tracing and give out ⁤free COVID test kits, and the studio also asked employees to self-screen for​ COVID before coming to‍ work.

Late last month, though,⁣ Lionsgate said it would lift its mask ⁣mandate again.

Hospitals are bringing back their mask mandates as well. In California, Kaiser Permanente imposed a mask mandate at its hospitals and medical offices in Santa Rosa for not only doctors and patients​ but also visitors.

In New York, a group of hospitals have brought back mask mandates as well, including United Health Services, Auburn Community Hospital, and University Hospital in Syracuse.

Public Response and Political Stances

Most of the new mask mandates do not specify whether certain kinds of⁣ face masks are unacceptable. As long ago as 2021, CNN’s medical analyst Dr. Leana Wen said cloth face masks were “little⁤ more than facial decorations,” and​ urged people to wear “at least a ⁤three-ply surgical ⁣mask.”

The current COVID variant, which is‍ descended from Omicron, has been spreading for months, and experts have⁤ said it is not any more dangerous than previous variants.

Even so, the White ⁣House is‍ putting out warnings about COVID⁤ as fall approaches.

Biden has not ‍tried‌ to get Americans to return to face mask mandates broadly, but his administration is still strongly pushing ⁢the COVID vaccine.

The‍ Biden administration recently⁣ recommended that many people get not only a COVID ⁣booster shot, but also a flu shot and a shot for RSV, a respiratory virus that ‌can be dangerous for infants and elderly adults.

One doctor ‍who is an advisor to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)⁣ compared an ⁤annual COVID booster to “a seatbelt in a‍ car,”‍ saying it is good to keep⁤ using it.

Former president Donald Trump slammed the ‍return of COVID restrictions late last month.

The 2024 Republican frontrunner promised that ⁣if re-elected, he‍ would “use every available authority⁢ to cut federal ‍funding to​ any school, college, airline or public transportation system⁤ that imposes a mask mandate or a vaccine mandate.”

Even during ⁤the height of the pandemic, policies like mask mandates, lockdowns, ⁤and vaccine mandates faced spirited opposition.

Now that ⁢the pandemic ‍is three years old, it’s doubtful⁤ Americans ⁢have any⁢ appetite⁢ left for more restrictions.

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