The BulleTin • Thursday, July 29, 2021 A13 Brown weighs vaccine mandate for state workers BY SARA CLINE Associated Press/ Report for America PORTLAND — Oregon Gov. Kate Brown is “examin- ing” whether to require that state workers get vaccinated, as the highly transmissible delta variant continues to spread across the state and COVID-19 cases spike. Elsewhere, in California and New York, officials an- nounced state employees will be required to be vaccinated or undergo weekly tests for COVID-19. In addition, the Department of Veterans Af- fairs on Monday became the first federal agency to require vaccinations, for its health workers. “We are examining the actions taken this week by California, New York City and the VA, and determin- ing what further actions can be taken in Oregon,” Brown’s deputy communications di- rector Charles Boyle wrote in an email on Wednesday. As cases continue to in- crease across the country, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention an- nounced updated masking guidelines on Tuesday, rec- ommending that people — vaccinated or not — return to wearing masks indoors in parts of the U.S. where the delta variant is rampant. The CDC also recom- mended masks for all teach- ers, staff, students and visitors inside of schools, regardless of vaccination status. The Oregon Department of Education has not immedi- ately required the state’s public schools to adopt indoor mask mandates, and it remains un- clear whether it will do so at all. “The Oregon Department of Education, Oregon Health Authority and governor’s of- fice are reviewing the CDC’s guidance,” said Marc Siegel, a spokesperson for state’s top education agency. “Any up- date would come only after thorough review and consul- tation.” Under current guidelines from the state’s department of education, individual districts can decide whether to require students, staff and faculty to wear masks inside school buildings. Portland mayor calls for vaccine, COVID-19 testing mandates Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler said Wednesday he will push to require municipal workers to get vaccinated or submit to weekly coronavirus tests, a move that would reverse the city’s policy against such mandates issued only days ago. Surging COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations nationwide have already prompted the state of California, some large companies and cities such as New York City and Los Angeles to create vaccine or testing requirements for employees. Meanwhile, Oregon health officials recom- mended Tuesday that everyone should return to wearing a mask when in a public, indoor space af- ter hospitalizations caused by the virus increased 25% in a single day and new daily cases topped 1,000. Wheeler said he does not believe he has the same legal authority as mayors in other U.S. cities to independently impose public health mandates on city workers. That, he said, would require City Council approval. — The Oregonian Jill Toyoshiba/AP file A sign on the door of a hair salon informs patrons that masks are re- quired to be in the business in Kansas City, Missouri. Masks Continued from A1 On Wednesday, some said they were struggling just to wrap their heads around the CDC’s message. Susan Sch- maeling, who owns a public relations company and lives in Houston, said she rejoiced when she got the single-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine in March. Now, she doesn’t know what to think. “I’m vaccinated and I’m sup- posed to put a mask on to be in a bookstore or wherever? What is the CDC telling us now, that the vaccines don’t work?” she said. “I haven’t had COVID and I don’t want to have COVID, so I’ll wear a mask. But it’s absurd.” While the CDC recom- mended vaccinated people wear face masks indoors in parts of the U.S. where the coronavirus is surging, the Or- egon Health Authority recom- mended universal mask use in public indoor settings through- out the state. Experts have warned for weeks that a broad return to masking may be necessary to rein in delta, which CDC di- rector Rochelle Walensky said is “one of the most infectious respiratory viruses we know of.” Facing a spike in cases, Los Angeles County became the first major metropolitan area to reinstate indoor mask require- ments when officials brought back the rules in mid-July. St. Louis followed suit last week, while Kansas City, Missouri, and Savannah, Georgia, rein- stated their mask mandates af- ter the CDC’s announcement. Other cities and states are hold- ing off for now, instead issuing voluntary recommendations. “We need to wear masks in- doors to control the spread of the variant,” Scott Ratzan, a public health expert at the City University of New York, said in an email. “As masking rec- ommendations do not seem to work as well as mask man- dates, the cities (and county in L.A.) are making the prudent decision to reinstate mandates ASAP.” But the shifting advice from federal health officials may have hindered some of those efforts, Ratzan added. “Unfortunately, the CDC has fumbled on the masking com- munication — from messaging to the policy recommenda- tions,” he said. “This has made it a challenge for health officials and policymakers to get people to remask — or make it a norm to mask while the coronavirus delta variant (and likely other variants) continue to spread.” Walensky acknowledged this week that the decision to issue the new guidance was a painstaking one. Barely two months had passed since the agency said vaccinated individ- uals didn’t need to wear masks in most settings. But with delta raging, the new guidance was necessary, she said. “It is not a welcome piece of news that masking is going to be a part of people’s lives who have already been vaccinated,” Walensky said. “This new guid- ance weighs heavily on me.” While the vaccines are highly effective at preventing severe illness and death, vacci- nated people can still contract coronavirus in what is known as a breakthrough infection. Walensky said people who have these infections from the delta variant might have as much viral load as an unvaccinated person, suggesting they may be able to spread it to others. In Nevada, the state’s Dem- ocratic governor, Steve Sisolak, brought back the state’s man- date just hours after the an- nouncement from the CDC. Starting Friday, the state will require face coverings be worn indoors in public in counties with “substantial or high trans- mission.” Twelve of Nevada’s 17 counties — including Clark, home to Las Vegas — fit that criteria, the state said. The Nevada Gaming Con- trol Board reinforced the new mandate, telling casinos and other businesses it issues li- censes to in a notice that it would “continue to ensure that best practices are used in the mitigation of COVID-19.” The board reminded casinos and other licensees that they were required to have signs about where masks need to be worn. In compliance with the man- date, MGM Resorts, the larg- est operator on the Las Vegas Strip, said it would require “all guests and visitors” to wear masks indoors in public areas starting Friday, a spokesman said in an email. MGM re- quires its employees to either be vaccinated or be tested regu- larly, the spokesman said. Workers in Las Vegas, and throughout Clark County, had already been required to wear masks since the county enacted a mandate earlier this month, which excluded patrons. There’s widespread agree- ment among infectious-disease experts that masking slows the spread of the virus by stopping droplets carrying virus par- ticles from traveling through the air and infecting others. It’s especially important indoors, where poor ventilation and gathering in close quarters can facilitate the spread of the vi- rus. “Masks are the best policy we have in the face of COVID. No one wants to close busi- nesses or schools this fall,” Julia Raifman, a health policy expert at Boston University. But significant segments of the public remain skeptical. In Miami-Dade County, where the mayor on Wednes- day revived indoor mask re- quirements at county facili- ties, Natalia Gonzalez, 28, said she doesn’t think the mandate should extend to restaurants, bars and stores. “It’s unnecessary,” she said. “I think it should be a personal choice.” Rasheed Powell, who works at a Miami pop art store, said he recently stopped wearing his mask at work. Now he’s waiting to see if his bosses require them again. But even in light of the delta variant, he’s tiring of what he said were mixed signals from officials. “When I heard about the delta strain, it didn’t shake me up any more than other news about COVID,” said Powell, 36. “I feel they are fearmonger- ing us all the time. It’s like they want to push an agenda.” In Los Angeles, the first ma- jor city to bring back its indoor mask mandate, Bellanira Reyes said she doesn’t like wearing face coverings but will follow the city’s guidelines if it means keeping people safe. She’s aware of the threat from the delta variant and worries about the virus spiking again. “It’s uncomfortable the mask, really uncomfortable. But it’s something that protects us,” the 34-year-old mother of three said. “I don’t want to wear it, especially when it’s too hot, but it’s OK.” Marcus Chavez 24, of Los Angeles, said he too intends Wave The U.S. Department of Vet- erans Affairs, as well as the states of California and New York, have issued requirements that workers be either vaccinated or face weekly testing for the vi- rus. President Joe Biden was ex- pected Thursday to announce similar requirements for all fed- eral employees. Gov. Kate Brown’s office over the past two days has said it was studying actions elsewhere and consulting with the Centers for Disease Control and Preven- tion. Late Tuesday, the Oregon Health Authority suggested resi- dents in all counties wear masks in public spaces indoors. But underlined that it was not a di- rective. Oregon’s latest rise in cases comes less than a month after a celebratory announcement that nearly all pandemic restrictions on business and social activi- ties in the state would be lifted on June 30. Brown had said she would remove the risk-level re- strictions on all counties in the state, regardless of infection lev- els, if 70% of residents statewide had received at least one shot of vaccine. While just short of the goal, Brown announced that she would give the green light to reopen the state in time for the “near normal” July 4th holiday sought by President Joe Biden. The announcement also seemed to be a truce in the po- litical wars over Brown’s emer- gency orders that had been in place since March 2020. OHA would continue in an advisory role, help get vaccines to centers that wanted it, and compile re- cords on the pandemic. But county health officials would now be empowered to determine what was best for their communities. Any actions needed to curb the virus would be decided by county commis- sioners. The blanket lifting of re- strictions came despite a wildly different rate of infection and vaccinations across the state. Several counties in the Willa- mette Valley, Deschutes County and some northern coastal ar- eas were above the 70% mark. A high vaccination rate in the three-county Portland metro area inflated the overall state numbers. Elsewhere, vaccination rates were under 40%,especially in Eastern and Southwest Ore- gon. Many of the counties had small populations, but the list also included Umatilla County, which includes Pendleton, and Douglas County, which includes Roseburg. But as some inde- pendent epidemiologists had forecast, the lifting of restric- tions on counties regardless of their individual infection and vaccination levels created a spike in new cases in areas where most residents were not vacci- nated. The result has been an explo- sion of cases. Hospitals started to fill up, with at one point just 8 of 81 intensive care unit beds east of the Cascades unoccupied. The number of patients on ventila- tors in Oregon went from 16 on to follow the rules. He’s fully vaccinated, he said, but he un- derstands the risks in crowded places. “I’m not one to tell peo- ple what to do,” he said, “but I strongly suggest it so, just from a scientific point of view.” In Salt Lake City, which lifted its mask mandate for vac- cinated people in May, parents dropped their children off at a bustling summer day camp at Sugar House Park on Wednes- day morning. Few wore masks as they streamed in and out. Megan McGee, 34, said she’s strongly against the CDC’s new guidance on wearing masks indoors in public spaces, even though COVID-19 made her the sickest she’s ever been. Mc- Gee said she is not vaccinated. “People don’t know who to listen to, or what’s good infor- mation,” said McGee, a spe- cial-education teacher. Luther Creed, 72, was one of the few people who wore a mask as he brought his grand- son to camp. A retired physi- cian, Creed, 72, said he worries Continued from A1 July 21 to 40 Wednesday. The length of the current spike isn’t yet known, but Ore- gon, which reported more than 1,000 new cases on Tuesday, had not reported over 1,000 cases in a day since a brief spike in April. While the current increase is still forming, Oregon had not aver- aged over 1,000 cases per day since Jan. 21. Brown and state health of- ficials have said that while the state does have ultimate author- ity over public health, for now it would continue the policy of lo- cal autonomy. Oregon Health Authority Di- rector Pat Allen said last week that the state did not want to make blanket directives on the “highly political” issue of man- datory vaccinations and other requirements. The current Oregon Health Authority count shows that 68.6% of eligible adults over the age of 18 have had one shot of vaccine. The state percentage is actually somewhat higher be- cause some federal programs ar- en’t captured by the state count. The new goal was set of 80% vaccinations, or just over 2.72 million adults by Aug. 31. That is looking unlikely at current pace. The state needs just over 389,000 more shots to hit the mark. To reach the goal, OHA says it would need to be inoculating 11,443 new people per day. The latest 7-day average is 2,064. e e gwarner@eomediagroup.com Reporter Bryce Dole of the East Oregonian and Editor Jayson Jacoby of The Baker City Herald contributed to this report. about the virus continuing to mutate, and believes wearing a mask is critical — including this winter. He agrees that the CDC has bungled its messaging around the vaccine. But the mindset of putting personal freedom ahead of the greater good will have consequences, the retired physician said. “It’s all about ‘Me.’ It’s not about protecting your neigh- bor or your family members,” he said. “We’re going to pay a price.”