It marks a singular milestone in the COVID-19 pandemic: Friday morning, Gov. Tim Walz signed an executive order to undo the state's mask mandate.To get more news about medical mask stock, you can visit tnkme.com official website.
The announcement comes after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that people who are fully vaccinated no longer have to wear masks outside or inside in most cases.Anyone who is fully vaccinated — people who are two weeks out from their second shot if they got a Moderna or Pfizer vaccine, or their only shot if they got a Johnson & Johnson vaccine — no longer have to wear masks outside or inside, under most circumstances.
There are caveats: If you're in a medical building — like a hospital or long-term care facility — you still need to mask. If you're on a plane or a bus, you still need to mask. And schools will continue to follow state education department guidance that requires masks in school buildings until the end of the academic year.The cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul are continuing with their masking rules despite changing guidance from the state and federal government. But other Minnesota cities are making different decisions.
The city of Duluth says it will stop enforcing its mask ordinance immediately. The City Council plans to vote to repeal the ordinance on May 24.Duluth, Winona, Rochester, Manakato and others, implemented mask rules last summer before the statewide mask mandate went into effect last July 22.St. Cloud says its mask rule was rendered null and void when Walz initiated the statewide mask mandate. The city does not plan to revisit a new mask rule.
But Minneapolis and St. Paul say they are keeping their mask rules in place pending advice from public health officials.
Despite Walz's decision to undo the state's mask mandate, cities, businesses and private organizations have the option to implement their own mask rules.The announcement came just a week after Gov. Tim Walz announced that he would drop Minnesota's mask mandate on July 1, or when 70 percent of Minnesotans 16 or older had been vaccinated, whichever came first.
Walz said the CDC announcement Thursday took him by surprise. And he emphasized that there are still a lot of people in the state who need to be vaccinated.He said he doesn't think the new CDC guidance is a disincentive to getting vaccinated. The state will just continue to double down on reaching people who haven't gotten shots yet.Health Commissioner Jan Malcolm says she's not entirely comfortable with the federal guidance.
"People who are not vaccinated still are at risk,” she said. “My concern about this is that there are a lot of people in Minnesota who are not vaccinated.”Municipalities and private businesses still have the ability to enact their own mask-wearing rules, but the lifted mandate leaves the decision to wear masks largely in the hands of individuals.
Health Commissioner Jan Malcolm said Thursday that she has mixed feelings about the news.On one hand, she said, the science is increasingly clear that the vaccines not only prevent illness but also prevent transmission. This, she said, is great news.
But she also said she worries people won't abide by these new rules — that people who aren't vaccinated won't wear masks, endangering people who aren't yet eligible for the vaccine, like kids under 12, and giving the virus more opportunities to continue to circulate.
"We don't have nearly enough people vaccinated to keep this virus suppressed,” she said. “It will come back if we don't continue to build up more vaccination.”
She said she worries that if the rule is lifted, people will assume that not wearing masks is a safe bet. But, she said, the state isn’t near where it needs to be, when it comes to vaccinations, which help tamp down the virus’ spread.