Tag Archives: school mask mandate

Mayor Eric Adams says he’ll make decision on Key 2 NYC, school masks next week; state school masking mandate lifts March 2

NEW YORK CITY (WABC) — New York state is dropping it’s school masking mandate Wednesday, but for now, masks will remain in New York City public schools.

Mayor Eric Adams said he will decide next week if students and staff inside city schools can unmask after he takes a look at the numbers this week.

He said he will look at the same indicators before deciding if the Key2NYC mandate, which requires vaccines for restaurants, gyms and entertainment venues, could also go away.

Adams said he is giving businesses the week to adapt while monitoring the numbers, while the city employee vaccine mandate will remain in place for now.

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For many, this is a step in the right direction.

“We think it’s a fantastic thing,” Keuka Kafe and Wine Bar owner Olga Sakhmo said. “People should come out and enjoy themselves.”

Adams released a statement on Sunday, saying in part:

I want to thank the millions of New Yorkers who have gotten vaccinated to help stop the spread. New Yorkers stepped up and helped us save lives by reaching unprecedented levels of vaccination. I also want to thank Governor Hochul for her partnership in the fight against COVID-19 and for making clear that parents should be part of this conversation. Additionally, New York City’s numbers continue to go down day after day, so, as long as COVID indicators show a low level of risk and we see no surprises this week, on Monday, March 7 we will also lift Key2NYC requirements. This will give business owners the time to adapt and will allow us to ensure we are making the best public health decisions for the people of New York.”

Catholic schools in the Archdiocese of New York announced that in light of the announcement made by Governor Kathy Hochul, they are no longer legally obligated by New York State to mandate mask-wearing in school as of Wednesday March 2, and that effective March 2, the wearing of a mask by an adult or children in all Catholic Schools in the Archdiocese of New York will be recommended but not required.

In addition, most school districts outside the city are lifting their mandates starting Wednesday.

“My friends, the day has come,” said Hochul, citing recent CDC guidance which classified much of the state as “low risk” for coronavirus infection.

Hochul said there will be additional guidance for counties that have a higher positivity rate.

“We will lift the statewide requirement based on all the data,” Hochul said. “However, there are some counties that have higher rate of transmission. We will allow them to determine what is best for their county.”

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She added that parents will have the choice to continue to send their children to school with masks and urged people to not bully those who still chose to wear them.

Hochul also said certain indoor settings like adult care facilities, nursing homes, correctional facilities homeless shelters, domestic violence shelters, and public transit will still have masking guidance.

This announcement moves the original timetable up about a week. Hochul pointed to the CDC guidance and current metrics for making the decision sooner.

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Illinois lifting mask mandate for some by Feb. 28, Gov. JB Pritzker says schools, jails, hospitals will be exceptions

CHICAGO (WLS) — Gov. JB Pritzker announced plans Wednesday to partially lift Illinois’ indoor mask mandate by the end of February.

Pritzker said Illinois has handled COVID better than almost every other state in the Midwest, in part because people wore their masks. He cited improving hospitalization metrics as the driving force behind his decision to ease the statewide mandate.

“We are now seeing the fastest rate of decline in our COVID-19 hospitalization metrics since the pandemic began,” Pritzker said. “If these trends continue, and we expect them to, then on Monday, Feb. 28, we will lift the indoor mask requirement for the state of Illinois.”

Pritzker said that local jurisdictions and businesses may still require stricter rules than the state, and must be respected.

WATCH: Gov. Pritzker plans to lift indoor mask mandate in some locations this month

Pritzker said the changes will impact malls, restaurants, bars and places of business, but not schools. Schools are governed by a separate mandate, and will be addressed separately.

“We still have the sensitive locations of K-12 schools, where we have lots of people, who are joined together in smaller spaces, and so that’s something that will come weeks hence,” Pritzker said Wednesday.

A downstate judge’s ruling against the school mandate and the governor’s subsequent appeal have led to protests and confusion in districts across the state.

The changes will also not impact congregate settings like prisons or nursing homes, Pritzker said, or healthcare facilities or public transit, which are under a federal mask mandate.

RELATED: School mask policies in chaos after ruling; parents plan protests

Colleen McNeal is a CTA commuter, who is happy to keep her mask on when riding the L.

“Just because there are rush hours. It’s so many people boarding the train. There’s limited seating. There’s a lot going on, especially on the Green Line, with people smoking and things of that nature,” she said.

The governor reinstated the indoor mask mandate in late August after COVID hospitalizations started to rise again. The governor has always said the mask decision was driven by hospitalization data, and hospitalizations statewide have been falling consistently for the past seven days, and by more than 60% statewide in the past month.

Most regions in the area are out of the warning zone, or close to it, for hospital bed availability.

That has been the key metric the governor’s office has focused on in making mask mandate decisions.

“Very importantly, things are getting better across the state of Illinois,” Pritzker said.

With Democratic governors on the west and east coasts lifting their mask requirements, Pritzker is facing mounting pressure.

Illinois House Republican Leader Jim Durkin wrote him a letter saying in part, “Governor, it has been a long two years and the people deserve to know what you are doing…Your lack of plan has forced people to give up hope that they can ever have a normal life in Illinois.”

Even if the statewide mask mandate is lifted, individual municipalities can continue to impose their own rules.

Separate announcements are expected in the coming days from Chicago and suburban counties.

Some business owners are eager for the mandate to be lifted.

The owner of Eggcited Pancake House in Naperville was anticipating this decision, and welcomes it.

“It’s a very unpleasant situation to be in as a business owner because, again, we have staff that are not comfortable with it, that want it to be off and then staff that do want to continue to be wearing masks,” said Filiz Sav, owner.

She expects some staff and customers may still decide to wear masks, at least for a while.

Moon Rabbit Acupuncture in the West loop has been carefully navigating through the pandemic, complying with any and all COVID safety mandates.

“It’s with a big feeling of relief to get back to normal. I think a lot of the other business owners are just gonna be so excited,” said Gudrun Snyder, with Moon Rabbit.

With wellness in mind, Owner Snyder still wants her customers to feel comfortable when the mask mandate is lifted.

“If they wanna continue to wear their masks, they should, but people who don’t want to once the mask mandate is lifted, we welcome them to come in and show us their smiles,” she said.

Some people are still leery, believing the governor was too hasty.

“I will still continue to wear my mask,” said Dana Garland. “I will still continue to wash hands and do all the things that prevent others from being sick. I would rather have some protection than none, and I would hope that others follow along.”

And medical experts encourage that kind of attitude.

“If you find yourself in a crowded indoor setting, a mask will continue to help protect you,” said IDPH Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike. “We will continue to recommend masks as we move forward in a world where we will coexist with COVID.”

Restaurant Owner and Chairman of the Illinois Restaurant Association Sam Sanchez said lifting the mask mandate and even the vaccine mandate as quickly as possible is essential to keep more restaurants from closing.

“By removing the mask mandate and the vaccine mandate, our customers will feel comfortable and confident it’s safe to come out, and then our business will flourish,” he said.

Medical experts worry mask mandate will be lifted too soon

ICU beds are empty again at St. Anthony Hospital, but not long ago the community hospital on the border of North Lawndale and Little Village was full of COVID patients.

“Even though cases have gone down recently, it was devastating over the holidays, we saw rises and so many deaths,” said nurse supervisor Fabian Vigil.

Vigil has been on the front lines for the entire pandemic and is concerned lifting the mandate will result in another surge.

“You would almost think we would be immune to it but it still hurts,” he said. “Every COVID death, it affects us in a different way, every time.”

Infectious disease specialist Dr. Alfredo Mena-Lora said if mask mandates are going away, more people must get vaccinated. Until then, masks remain prudent.

“We are still nationwide at a point where there are 2,000 cases, 2,000 deaths a day, and it’s primarily folks who are unvaccinated,” he said.

Pediatric specialists are worried about children 5 and under who can’t get vaccinated yet, and immunocompromised patients.

“I understand people are tired of wearing masks, I’m tired of wearing masks, I think people want to get back to normal, unfortunately the virus doesn’t care what we want,” said Dr. Taylor Heald-Sargent, Lurie Children’s Hospital.

Many on the front lines say we are not yet out of the woods and suggest holding onto our masks a bit longer.

Copyright © 2022 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.



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Judge’s Ruling Based on ‘Poor Legal Reasoning,’ Governor Says – NBC Chicago

The state of Illinois filed a notice of appeal Monday challenging a temporary restraining order issued by a downstate Sangamon County judge that prohibits school districts from enforcing a statewide mask requirement.

Speaking at a news conference, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker called the ruling by Judge Raylene Grischow “out of step with the vast majority of legal analysis,” saying it “cultivates chaos for parents, families, teachers and school administrators.”

The judge issued the order preventing enforcement of the statewide mask requirement in schools Friday, explaining Pritzker overstepped his legal authority by implementing such a mandate.

In the ruling issued in response to a lawsuit filed by a group of parents and teachers in more than 140 school districts, Grischow also determined several more of Pritzker’s emergency orders to combat the spread of COVID-19, including one issued last year that mandates vaccinations for school employees, are “null and void.”

READ: Full ruling issued by Judge Raylene Grischow.

Pritzker said he has directed Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul to seek to have the ruling overturned “with all possible speed.” Raoul filed a notice indicating the defendants – the Illinois State Board of Education, the Illinois Department of Public Health and their leaders, as well as Pritzker – intend to appeal, but the process could take weeks or months.

For millions of Illinoisans, Pritzker said, wearing masks has never been about what was “required by the governor or any other authority.”

A downstate judge’s decision to halt Illinois’ mask mandate in schools has prompted confusion and frustration for parents across the state. NBC 5’s Kate Chappell reports.

“Masks are, for most people anyway, have been about doing what’s right for yourself, for your loved ones, for others, for your community as a whole,” he said. “Nowhere is that more true than in schools, community hubs where parents and grandparents, teachers and staff interact with each other every day.”

Continuing his criticism of the ruling, Pritzker claimed Grischow has “created a tremendous amount of confusion” in regard to the way the decision was written.

“As for this specific case, poor legal reasoning should not take one of our most effective tools off the table,” he said.

The judge’s decision led to uncertainty at school districts statewide over the weekend, prompting administrators to scramble and decide which actions, if any, to take ahead of the start of the school week Monday.

At least one district canceled classes altogether, multiple others shifted to remote learning and numerous districts decided to strongly recommend – but not require – masks following the decision.

Others, such as Elgin Area School District U46, opted not to drop face covering requirements.

U46 Supt. Tony Sanders explained the district’s school board approved COVID-19 mitigations, including a mask mandate, before the governor’s mask requirement in schools was issued, and noted Grischow’s ruling “recognizes the independent authority of school districts.”

Dr. Allison Arwady fielded questions about Chicago’s vaccine and mask mandates as the city sees a downward trend in COVID cases. NBC 5 political reporter Mary Ann Ahern reports.

Students named in the lawsuit and those with medical exceptions don’t have to adhere to the requirement, he said.

Masks will stay on in other school districts, including Chicago Public Schools, as a mask mandate is included in a collective bargaining agreement between the district and Chicago Teachers Union. Such agreements remain enforceable, according to the ruling.

“The court’s ruling does not prohibit CPS from exercising its authority to continue its COVID-19 mitigation policies and procedures,” CPS CEO Pedro Martinez said in a statement.

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NC Coronavirus update September 14: School districts diverge on COVID 19; some add more precautions, others relax guidelines

RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) — North Carolina, like many other states across the country, is seeing an uptick in COVID-19 cases.

TUESDAY MORNING HEADLINES
Some parents in Johnston County will meet ahead of Tuesday’s school board meeting to call for the elimination of the district’s COVID-19 mask mandate.

The Center for Disease Control and Prevention still recommends students older than 2 wear masks in school to help reduce the spread of COVID-19, which is now infecting children at higher rates than ever before seen.

Why children under 12 are not yet eligible for COVID vaccines

Yesterday, parents who oppose mask mandates met ahead of the Harnett County School Board’s meeting.

That board voted 3-2 to make masks optional starting October 5.

‘The hospital is full:’ COVID-19 cases still climbing in hospitals as emergency visits start to slow

The Orange County School Board also met Monday. However, it took more steps to limit the spread of COVID-19 among its students.

The district talked about shutting down some high school sports for a couple weeks, but ultimately did not move forward with that. Instead, it approved limitations on fans: each athlete can have 2 spectators and all fans must wear masks.

All athletes, regardless of vaccination status, must also wear masks on and off the field.

In addition, Orange County Schools is requiring all staff to be vaccinated by September 23.

MONDAY
11 p.m.
During a Monday meeting, the Orange County school board heard recommendations for its athletic programs amid the pandemic.

Recommendations included high risk programs being closed immediately following guidance from NCDHHS and the Orange County Health Department. The closure of these programs include those actively participating in-season and those offering off-season practices or workouts.

High risk programs include football, basketball, wrestling and competitive cheerleading. The closed period would last from Sept. 14 to 30.

All student-athletes in these programs who are eligible to be vaccinated must be fully vaccinated in order to participate when programs restart.

Cheerleading, softball, baseball, volleyball, soccer, tennis doubles and lacrosse are considered medium risk for transmission. Recommendations from the meeting included a face mask requirement for athletes on and off the field regardless of vaccination status.

Fans attending the programs must be masked indoors and outdoors. Attendance would be limited to parents or guardians (no more than two).

All athletes in the medium risk programs must be fully vaccinated or participate in a bi-weekly testing program.

Cross country, tennis singles and swimming programs are considered low risk. Masks will only be required when off the field of play. Athletes in these programs mus be vaccinated or participate in a required bi-weekly testing program.

The board did not vote on a pause for athletic programs Monday evening, but did vote on fan limitations and a mask requirement for athletes.

8:40 p.m.
The Harnett County School Board voted 3-2 Monday night to make face masks optional in schools starting Oct. 5.

6:20 p.m.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Harris Teeter announced new store hours.

Effective Wednesday, Sept. 15, until further notice, Harris Teeter’s temporary Store Hours of Operations will be 6 a.m. – 9 p.m. Currently, many stores are open until 11 p.m.

Also effective Wednesday, Sept. 15, 2021, until further notice, the Fresh Foods Market Service Counter revised closing time will be 8 p.m. All amenities close at 7 p.m.

The Butchers & Fisherman’s Market Service Counters revised closing time will be 8 p.m.

5:30 p.m.
At Duke University, for the week of Sept. 6-12, there were 37 positive tests — 28 students and 9 faculty/staff — on the university side.

The university announced that, because of the declining trend, effective immediately, masking is no longer required outdoors in most circumstances on the Duke campus.

Masks are still strongly recommended in outdoor settings with a gathering of people.

Masks will continue to be required for large outdoor events on campus and must still be used indoors in classrooms and public spaces.

The number of students and employees who tested positive peaked at 364 during the second week of fall classes. Afterward, Duke instituted new safety measures including masking indoors and outdoors, suspending indoor group dining and discouraging larger gatherings.

The university said that the vast majority of those who tested positive had no or very mild symptoms, and none required hospitalization, though the spike did require a rapid expansion of isolation space.

For the week ending Sept. 5, the total dropped to 126 – a 65 percent reduction from the previous week.

5:10 p.m.
Some parents and community members are urging the Harnett County School Board to drop its mask mandate. Several community members told ABC11’s Elaina Athans they should have a choice in the matter.

“I don’t want to be told what or what not to do with my children. These are my babies and I would like that choice and my choice is that I would like for my children not to have to wear bacteria filled cloth diaper on their face all day long, when they’re telling me they cannot breathe. They’re hot and they’re miserable,” said one mother of five.

A public meeting will be underway at 6 p.m.

5 p.m.
UNC Rex Hospital in Raleigh set up tents outside its Emergency Department.

Officials said the hospital is very busy, and the clinical teams in the Emergency Department are working hard to care for COVID and non-COVID patients.

The surge tents will allow UNC Rex to expand its Emergency waiting areas and treatment areas.

“The hospital is full,” said Rex Director of Emergency Services Kim Boyder. “We are like 90% or greater capacity in the hospital. So that means we also get backed up in the ER. So that means we need additional space for not only the volume but some of the boarding.”

4:20 p.m.
Wake County health officials confirmed a COVID-19 outbreak at a Cary assisted living facility. According to a news release from the health department, it is the third outbreak at The Templeton of Cary.

The previous outbreaks were in September and December 2020, before COVID-19 vaccines were widely available.

It is unclear at this time how many staff or residents have been infected as part of this outbreak.

2 p.m.
In the last two weeks alone, nearly half a million children have tested positive for COVID-19.

Last week, the U.S. reported more than 243,000 child COVID-19 cases, marking the second largest number of pediatric cases in a week since the pandemic began, according to a newly released weekly report from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the Children’s Hospital Association (CHA). (That total could be partially skewed by reporting delays over the holiday.)

Since the onset of the pandemic, nearly 5.3 million children have tested positive for the virus. COVID-19 cases among children have risen “exponentially,” this summer, the organizations wrote, and in the last month alone, the U.S. has reported more than 1 million pediatric cases. Additionally, since the first children returned to school for the 2021-2022 school year, in late July, more than 1.2 million children have tested positive for the virus.

1 p.m.
Public health officials with the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services are urging North Carolinians to vaccinated against Influenza as the state enters flu season while experiencing a surge of COVID-19 caused by the Delta variant.

“COVID-19 is still here, still sending North Carolinians to the hospital with severe illness and still causing deaths. As flu season begins, we all need to do what we can to be as healthy as possible,” said Dr. Elizabeth Tilson, NCDHHS State Health Director and Chief Medical Officer. “It is critically important to get your flu vaccine and your COVID-19 vaccine. Flu can be a serious and sometimes deadly disease. Getting vaccinated can prevent you from getting ill and keep you from needing a hospital bed.”

In North Carolina, flu infections are most common from late fall to early spring, with activity usually peaking in January or February.

12:30 p.m.
North Carolina surpassed 11,000 new daily COVID-19 cases on Saturday, a number that hasn’t been seen since the peak of the pandemic in January and February.

A total of 23,890 cases were reported Saturday through Monday.

The percent of positive tests in the state is at 11.8%.

172 more deaths were reported on Monday.

3,514 people are hospitalized with COVID-19 in North Carolina.

There are currently 894 adult ICU COVID-19 patients.

338 confirmed COVID-19 patients were admitted in the last 24 hours.

12 p.m.
UNC Rex Hospital in Raleigh is setting up tents outside its Emergency Department.

Officials said the hospital is very busy, and the clinical teams in the Emergency Department are working hard to care for COVID and non-COVID patients.

The surge tents will allow UNC Rex to expand its Emergency waiting areas and treatment areas.

The tents are scheduled to arrive around 1:30 p.m.

11:30 a.m.
The Chatham County Public Health Department has been working with multiple testing providers to offer new options across the county throughout the week. The department has partnered with Optum Health for two sites, one each in Pittsboro and Siler City, and StarMed Healthcare for three sites, one each in Pittsboro, Siler City and Goldston. Additionally, local urgent cares and pharmacies are also offering testing. Check the full list here.

The new Optum testing sites are:

Pittsboro:
Old Chatham County Agriculture Building (in front of Justice Center),
65 E. Chatham Street, Monday-Friday, 10 AM-6 PM
Siler City:
Chatham Hospital Medical Office Building (located behind Chatham Hospital),
163 Medical Park Drive, Monday-Friday, 5 PM-8 PM
Tests are free
Walk-ins welcome, or you can pre-register.

10:10 a.m.
One school board in North Carolina voted Monday morning to stop COVID-19 quarantines and contact tracing.

This is the school board in charge of Union County Public Schools, which is one of five public school districts in the state to not require masks for staff and students, according to local ABC affiliate WSOC.

As of Friday, 479 students and employees had tested positive for COVID-19. The district had 7,285 people in quarantine due to close contact with someone who had tested positive.

With the school board vote Monday morning, students and staff will now only be required to stay home if they test positive for the virus or have symptoms.

Union County Public Health Director Dennis Joyner recently sent a letter to the school district saying that since the school did not require masks, quarantining students and staff exposed to the virus was the “best option to provide for the protection of student, teachers, staff and members of the community.”

Many parents in the district said they don’t want the school to mandate masks or quarantines because they don’t believe COVID-19 harms children.

UNC Children’s Hospital Department of Pediatrics Vice Chair Dr. Benny Joyner said they are wrong.

“I would say they need to come into my ICU. I’ve got six, now five, critically ill pediatric COVID patients. Two of them have breathing tubes inserted to basically breathe for them. Two of them are infants,” he told WSOC.

MONDAY MORNING HEADLINES
Parents in one North Carolina school district are planning to protest Monday against their children wearing masks in class.

Harnett County Schools Board of Education meets Monday afternoon, but it will not be alone. According to a flyer circulating online, a group of parents plans to be at the meeting.

Those parents will attempt to speak during the 6 p.m. meeting, voicing their disagreement with students having to wear masks–which health experts agree reduce the spread of COVID-19 when properly worn.

This comes as a record number of children are contracting the virus across the country.

“I haven’t seen anything like this in the 22 years I’ve been a pediatrician,” Dr. Bryan Kornreich said. “It’s never been this crazy, never been this busy. It’s exhausting all of us. And our biggest concern, of course, is that we’re worried that kids aren’t getting the care, sick kids aren’t getting the care they need.”

Children have largely been spared the worst of COVID-19 — hospitalizations and deaths are more rare for children than for adults — although children’s hospitals are filling up in COVID-19 hotspots around the country.

Timeline for younger children’s COVID-19 vaccines

Until the vaccine is approved for children, the vaccine chief for the Food and Drug Administration urged parents not to seek an adult vaccine for their children.

“My strongest advice is please don’t do that. Please let us do the evaluation that we need to do to ensure that when you do vaccinate your child, you vaccinate the child with the right dose and in a manner that’s safe,” Dr. Peter Marks said. “If you want to do something now for your child, make sure that you’re vaccinated, that your household is vaccinated, that all the people that come in contact with your children are vaccinated and that your child knows how to wear a mask.”

FRIDAY
5:40 p.m.
Cumberland County Schools Superintendent Dr. Marvin Connelly, Jr. announced a teacher in the district died from COVID-19.

“We are deeply saddened by the recent passing of one of our teachers, due to complications from COVID-19,” the statement said. “Our thoughts and prayers are with the employee’s family and loved ones. Schools are learning communities made up of employees, students and their families. Although the employee did not have the opportunity to teach this academic year, the school community is still feeling this loss. Please keep them in your thoughts as well.”

4:15 p.m.

Wake County Public Health has confirmed an outbreak of COVID-19 at UNC REX Rehabilitation and Nursing Care Center at 4210 Lake Boone Trail in Raleigh.

This is the facility’s fourth outbreak. The N.C. Department of Health and Human Services defines an outbreak as two or more people – residents or employees – testing positive for the virus.

3:30 p.m.
The CDC is out with three new studies showing that overall, vaccines are still dramatically reducing the risk of being hospitalized or dying of COVID-19 during the current Delta surge, as they did during the pre-Delta era.

Across the studies, vaccines remained 86-87% effective against preventing hospitalizations.

However, across any metric, vaccine effectiveness has dropped more for people ages 65 and older in recent months compared to the pre-Delta era, likely because of a combination of vaccine effectiveness fading over time, and the slight impact of the Delta variant on vaccine efficacy.

And vaccines are losing some of their effectiveness when it comes to preventing mild infections among the vaccinated (breakthroughs).

This new data will factor into the FDA and CDC discussions around booster shots, and whether they are necessary for everyone now or should perhaps be administered to specific groups first, such as older adults.

ABC’s Sasha Pezenik pressed the CDC director about this latest data at the White House COVID briefing and whether it accounts for the damage done by Delta.

Dr. Walensky said even accounting for Delta and other factors “it’s still well over 90% of people who are in the hospital are unvaccinated.”

She added there are “more than 10 times the number of people in the hospital who are unvaccinated compared to vaccinated.”

And earlier in the briefing, she gave this statistic:

“Those who were unvaccinated were about four-and-a-half times more likely to get COVID-19, are 10 times more likely to be hospitalized, and 11 times more likely to die.”

2:45 p.m.
A vaccine and COVID testing event will be held at Wheels Fun Park Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

The vaccination/testing event is being organized by several community organizations, with Duke Health being one of them.

1:30 p.m.
Next Sunday, September 19, the El Pueblo organization will hold an event at its offices located in Raleigh (2321 Crabtree Blvd.) that will include food distribution, COVID-19 testing and vaccines, and Zumba among other activities.

The outdoor event will be from 1 to 5 pm.

“We wanted to hold this fair because we know the more we take care of each other, the sooner we will get out of the pandemic together, without having to lose one more member of our community,” said Iliana Santillán, executive director of El Pueblo. “Our commitment as an organization is to help our Latinx community to always be protected and empowered.”

12 p.m.
5,877 new daily COVID-19 cases were reported in North Carolina on Friday.

The percent of positive tests in the state is at 12.1%.

3,756 people are currently hospitalized with COVID-19.

There are 909 adult ICU COVID-19 patients.

There were 445 confirmed COVID-19 patients admitted into North Carolina hospitals in the last 24 hours.

11:45 a.m.
State data shows unvaccinated individuals are nearly 4 times more likely to get COVID-19 as vaccinated individuals.

Unvaccinated individuals are 13.6 times more likely to die from COVID-19 than vaccinated individuals, when adjusted for age.

6% of all cases between January and the end of August were in vaccinated people.

Of the more than 4.8 million North Carolinians who were vaccinated as of the end of August, 0.82% had gotten COVID and 0.005% had died from COVID.

WEDNESDAY MORNING HEADLINES
Duke University will require face coverings at all Duke sporting events.

Indoor, outdoor, vaccinated, unvaccinated — it doesn’t matter. Facemask will be required at all home sporting events involving Duke University.

The policy change comes ahead of Duke’s home football opener against North Carolina A&T, which is set to kick off at 8 p.m. Friday in Wallace Wade Stadium.

Meanwhile, UNC is set to host its first football game of the season Saturday. That’s when the Tar Heels will take on Georgia State looking to rebound from their season opening loss against Virginia Tech.

Masks will be encouraged inside Kenan Stadium, but only required when fans are at indoor locations–such as the Blue Zone, bathrooms, etc.

Before the game, UNC will host a free COVID-19 vaccine clinic. Tents will be set up from 4 – 7 p.m. outside Kenan Stadium near Gates 5 and 6.

Anyone who receives a COVID-19 inoculation will also receive two free tickets to an upcoming home UNC football game.

Those plans come on the heels of President Joe Biden issuing his sternest COVID-19 warning to date. The president laid into the 80 million eligible Americans who are not yet vaccinated, saying their refusal to get the shot has cost the country dearly.

“We’ve been patient, but our patience is wearing thin. And your refusal has cost all of us,” he said. The unvaccinated minority “can cause a lot of damage, and they are.”

Biden went on to expand vaccine rules effectively mandating the vaccine for as many as 100 million Americans or requiring them to be tested for the virus weekly.

THURSDAY
9:17 p.m.

The Waren County school board voted unanimously to require all employees and student-athletes to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 and for student-athletes to be tested for COVID-19 at least once a week.

Employees and student-athletes have 30 days (until Oct. 9) to get their first shot of the COVID-19 vaccine and 60 days (until Nov. 8) to get their second dose, if it’s needed to be fully vaccinated.

If there is a medical or sincerely held religious reason why they cannot receive the COVID-19 vaccine, they may request an exemption to the vaccination requirement.

Exempted employees will be required to be tested once a week. Exemptions for student-athletes will require them to be tested twice a week, whereas vaccinated student-athletes are only required to be tested once a week.

As a further incentive to get vaccinated, student-athletes who are fully vaccinated and not showing any symptoms of illness will not be required to quarantine if they are exposed to someone with COVID-19. This provides the best chance for a team to complete its season without having to forfeit games because players are quarantined.

3 p.m.
Gov. Roy Cooper begged for North Carolinians to step up and get vaccinated to end the COVID-19 pandemic during a news conference Thursday.

“How many people need to get sick and die because people don’t get this miraculous vaccine?” Cooper said. “How many people need to witness the cruel death of a loved one?”

He added that the vast majority of hospitalizations are happening in people who are not vaccinated. “If you’re hesitant, get off social media and get on the phone with your doctor,” he added.

State Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mandy Cohen echoed Cooper’s sentiments, laying out the latest COVID-19 data for the state.

She pointed to the rapid rise in cases over the summer due to the Delta variant–the sharpest increase in cases the state has seen thus far during the pandemic. She added that the number of people hospitalized with COVID-19 was extremely worrisome and that more than a third of people hospitalized were younger than 49.

While more than 59% of North Carolinians older than 12 have been vaccinated, just 35% of teenagers and 40% of young adults between 18 and 24 have gotten the vaccine. Cohen recommended that people add layers of protection, given the high rate of community spread, such as wearing a mask.

“We are 18 months into this pandemic and almost 9 months into the time that vaccines have come onto the scene,” Cooper said. “The key to ending this pandemic of course is the vaccine. There’s still time to protect yourself.”

Cooper added that more than 96% of students in North Carolina schools are in districts where masks are required. Just three school districts are not requiring masks at this time.

“We know that keeping kids learning in the classroom is the most important thing for our students right now. Getting vaccinated, wearing a mask in public indoor settings and following the science is what we need to do,” Cooper said. “The faster we put this pandemic behind us, the sooner we can all rest easy and stay healthy.”

Thursday’s briefing, meanwhile, comes ahead of another weekend of big outdoor events, including college football and kickoff to the NFL season. Asked if he would attend events like that, including the North Carolina State Fair, the governor said he would – because he’s vaccinated.

“If I go, I am going to be careful and if I am around a lot of people outside, I am going to have a mask on,” Cooper said. “I am not immunocompromised. Everyone should look at their own situation and make decisions for themselves, particularly for people who have not gotten a vaccination.”

12:50 p.m.
6,290 new COVID-19 cases were reported in North Carolina on Thursday.

The percent of positive tests in the state is 11.3%.

3,815 people are currently hospitalized with COVID-19 in North Carolina.

That’s 25 more people than Wednesday.

North Carolina surpassed 15,000 COVID-19 deaths on Thursday.

110 more people were reported from Wednesday.

There are currently 919 adult ICU COVID-19 patients.

456 COVID-19 patients were admitted in North Carolina hospitals in the last 24 hours.

11:35 a.m.
A popular music festival in downtown Raleigh will be a completely outdoor event because of current COVID-19 metrics.

The Hopscotch Music Festival will have two main stages, more than 30 bands and more than 90 vendors.

The shows begin at 3:45 p.m. on Thursday and Friday and then at 1 p.m. on Saturday.

Festival officials said they expect the rain to slack off before the shows begin. Any possible delays or changes due to weather will be announced on the festival website and social media pages.

Click here for current weather updates

People who attend the festival will have to provide proof of vaccination or provide a negative COVID-19 test from the past 72 hours. Masks will be required in any indoor setting and are strongly encouraged regardless of vaccination status and seating location during the outdoor shows.

Last year, organizers canceled the event because of the pandemic.
If you already bought tickets but you do not want to attend because of the updated protocols, you can receive a refund or roll your tickets over to next year. For more information click here.

9:50 a.m.
Some South Carolina cities are bringing back indoor mask requirements as the state’s coronavirus outbreak rivals the height of the pandemic last winter before vaccines were widely available.

The cities of Columbia, West Columbia and Cayce in central South Carolina have all adopted requirements that people wear masks in indoor public places except while eating and a few other exceptions.

South Carolina has never had a statewide mask mandate but it allowed local governments to do so in 2020. Most of the mandates faded away after Gov. Henry McMaster ended a 14-month COVID-19 state of emergency in June when the state was seeing about 150 new cases a day.

Now, South Carolina is seeing about 5,400 new coronavirus cases a day, similar to the pandemic’s peak in January.

9:40 a.m.
President Joe Biden is toughening COVID-19 vaccine requirements for federal workers and contractors as he aims to boost vaccinations and curb the surging delta variant that is killing thousands each week and jeopardizing the nation’s economy.

That’s according to a person familiar with the plans, who spoke on condition of anonymity. Biden has signed a new executive order to require vaccination for employees of the executive branch and contractors that do business with the federal government. The step comes in advance of a speech Thursday afternoon outlining a six-pronged plan to address the latest rise in coronavirus cases and the stagnating pace of COVID-19 shots.

Biden has encouraged COVID-19 vaccine requirements in schools, workplaces and university campuses. The White House hopes the strengthened federal mandate will inspire more businesses to follow suit.

9:30 a.m.
President Joe Biden will unveil a new strategy for battling the spread of COVID-19 today.

The plan will be centered around six points, including vaccinating the unvaccinated.

There will be a focus on furthering protection for those who are vaccinated, keeping schools open safely and stepping up requirements for COVID testing and the wearing of face masks.

Finally, the president will focus on protecting the country’s economic recovery and improving care for those who have been infected with the virus.

8 a.m.
United Airlines says more than half its workers who weren’t vaccinated last month have gotten the shots since the airline announced it will require proof of vaccination.

The airline is detailing rules around its requirement that employees get vaccinated against COVID-19 by late September. United officials say employees with an exemption from vaccination because of medical conditions or religious beliefs will be placed on unpaid leave in early October. Those whose exemption requests are denied, and who still refuse to get the shots, will be fired.
United is citing “dire” statistics around the COVID-19 outbreak in the United States in explaining its new policy.

THURSDAY MORNING HEADLINES
One in four new COVID-19 cases are among children, according to new data from the American Academy of Pediatrics.

That new stat has Durham Public Schools considering taking classes outside.

The company Hobbs Architects proposed new outdoor learning spaces that could be built in a way to take more classes outside during the pandemic and long after.

The company said the proposed outside learning centers could be engineered in a way that protects the children from natural elements.

Durham students recently filed a petition for more virtual classes, due to the uptick in COVID-19 cases.

In Wake County, it will likely be another two weeks before the school board makes a decision about mandatory COVID-19 testing and vaccines.

Tuesday night’s board meeting was emotionally charged and members said they have a lot to consider before casting their vote.

Meanwhile, at Appalachian State University in Boone, all unvaccinated students are now required to get weekly COVID-19 tests.

The university said 52 percent of students and 89 percent of employees are fully vaccinated. That means more than 9,000 students are unvaccinated.

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Illinois mask mandate: Gov. Pritzker announces school mask requirement, vaccine requirement for some state workers

CHICAGO (WLS) — Gov. JB Pritzker announced a statewide school mask mandate Wednesday afternoon as the delta variant spreads in Illinois. It will apply to all K-12 schools and daycares, both public and private.

Pritzker made the announcement after watching key COVID indicators going up – and after seeing so many school districts across the state deciding to make masking optional.

“Far too few school districts have chosen to follow the federal Centers for Disease Control’s prescriptions for keeping students and staff safe, though I want to commend the districts in Edwardsville, Champaign, Peoria, Springfield, Elgin, Chicago and others for already doing the right thing for their students,” Pritzker said. “Given the CDC’s strong recommendation, I had hoped that a statewide school mask requirement wouldn’t be necessary, but it is.”

WATCH | Gov. Pritzker announces school mask mandate

The decision is being praised by school mask advocates, and criticized by those favoring choice.

“I think he didn’t want to take the responsibility and accountability for this to begin with, because he didn’t want the blowback,” said Ronak Maisuria, a parent in Wheaton Warrenville District 200. “I give him credit for finally issuing a mandate, but he should have done it from the beginning.”

“My position is, it’s the parents’ choice,” said Meredith Darbyshire, the parent of two children in Glen Ellyn District 89. “And I believe that it should be optional, and it should be left up to the parents to make that decision for their family and what is best for their children.”

Pritzker also announced that effective Oct. 4, vaccines will be mandated for state employees who work in in congregate settings, including veterans’ homes, long-term care facilities, correctional facilities, developmental centers and psychiatric hospitals.

“They run the risk of carrying the virus in to work with them, then it’s the residents who end up seriously sick or hospitalized or worse,” Pritzker said. “It’s a breach of safety, it’s fundamentally wrong and in Illinois it’s going to stop.”

Republican leaders criticized the mandate, saying the decision should be left up to local officials and parents. They also criticized him for not including lawmakers in the action.

After a year and a half of COVID-related disruptions, there are many things Ariel Shorter, 17, is looking forward to going into her senior year at Gwendolyn Brooks College Prep. But wearing a mask while in class is not one of them.

“They have forced us to wear masks which puts us in an awkward situation. It makes us uncomfortable,” Shorter said. “I actually told my principal if we had to wear masks I would rather stay at home because I’d rather be comfortable while learning.”

Reaction to the governor’s mask mandate has been swift and mixed. A former science teacher, Jurema Gorham, made the decision to homeschool her 9-year-old son last year. She’s now moved him out of CPS and into Hyde Park’s St. Thomas the Apostle Grade School. Chicago’s Catholic Schools were not going to require masks for vaccinated students and staff, until now.

“I do believe it needs to be done, especially when you don’t know where everyone coming into one space is coming from,” Gorham said.

And while CPS had already announced that masks would be required in the fall, debate on both sides of the school masking issue has been raging in the suburbs. A meeting of Villa Park’s School District 45 got contentious Tuesday night, with many of those in attendance refusing to wear masks.

“It’s horrific our children that they are injuring their own children with having to wear a mask,” attendee Bradley Donald said. “But even more horrific, you want to harm someone else’s child to have them have a mask on.”

A lobbyist for public school families statewide, Cassie Cresswell said she for one is glad the decision has been taken out of the hands of individual school districts.

“They are not epidemiologists, they are not immunologists. That’s not an area of expertise you should expect your school administration to have,” Cresswell said.

Both the Illinois Federation of Teachers and the Chicago Teachers Union today expressed their support for the governor’s mandate.

COVID vaccine Chicago: Business lead charge in requiring masks, shots

It used to be “no shirt, no shoes, no service,” but, with cases of COVID rising, some businesses are now saying “no shot, no service.”

Metro Chicago, a concert hall in Wrigleyville, just announced that anyone attending shows there will be required to show proof of vaccination, unlike Lollapalooza, which allowed unvaccinated people to enter by providing a current negative COVID test.

Metro also said patrons will be required to show a government-issued photo ID, and it’s recommended that everyone wear masks.

If you want to dine in restaurants and bars in NorthHalsted like D.S. Tequila Co. and Sidetrack, you better have proof of COVID vaccination, as it’s now required to get in.

More and more restaurants and nightclubs around the Chicago area are making that move as COVID cases once again surge, driven by the spread of the delta variant, especially in unvaccinated populations.

RELATED: Some Chicago restaurants requiring masks, COVID vaccinations as cases increase

The move to require masks and ask for vaccination status is supported by Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady, even as she insisted the city has no plans yet to follow New York’s move to mandate proof of vaccination for all indoor dining and fitness centers.

“I want to thank them for doing that. It is clearly one of the most important things they can do for reducing the risk for everybody in the restaurant,” Arwady said.

The city is working on a way for people to digitally prove their vaccination status.

“We have a lot of people who lose their cards,” Arwady explained. “We want people where there are settings that are wanting to either mandate vaccines or be checking vaccines as folks are coming in. I want to make that as technologically easy as possible in a way that protects everybody’s privacy.”

The Illinois Restaurant Association hopes individual restaurants will be allowed to make their own decisions, and pointed out that restaurants operating at high capacity or that are in neighborhoods with lower vaccination rates would be catastrophically affected by a vaccine mandate.

“We’re still behind,” said Sam Sanchez. “Every time you open the door and you’re not operating at 100%, you’re losing money.”

Businesses see vaccine mandates as way to protect staff

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