Undercurrent

After CDC says vaxxed can (mostly) ditch masks, NV businesses told it’s up to them

By: - May 14, 2021 7:07 am
mask down

(Nevada Current file photo)

mask down
Nevada’s Gaming Control Board issued a statement saying the board’s “agents will not attempt to confirm vaccination status of patrons.”  (Nevada Current file photo)

Following the CDC’s guidance that fully vaccinated people needn’t wear masks in most indoors situations, Nevada officials declared that mask requirements in casinos and other businesses will be left up to the businesses.

The state “neither requires nor prohibits private entities from confirming vaccination status of individuals,” officials added in the statement issued from the governor’s office.

The Nevada Gaming Control board issued a separate release saying the board’s “agents will not attempt to confirm vaccination status of patrons.” 

The Control Board’s statement, echoing the sentiment in the state’s release, noted casinos “may have mask policies that are more restrictive than the CDC guidance.”

“To be clear, however, a private employer’s policies regarding COVID-19 safety protocol are not Board policies,” the board said.

As restrictions have loosened and more of the public has become vaccinated, the resort industry has largely indicated it has no intention of confirming the vaccination status of customers.

Some businesses, including Smith’s grocery stores, have indicated they will continue to require masks, and the Las Vegas Chamber is encouraging businesses to “play it safe” and continues requiring masks, the Las Vegas Review Journal reported.

“COVID-19 is still very much a threat in our State and many Nevadans may choose to continue using masks based on their and their families’ personal health concerns. Others should respect this choice,” said the statement from Gov. Steve Sisolak’s office.

Still required on planes, trains and buses

The CDC’s updated recommendations announcement is a shift from earlier federal guidance, which had urged people who are vaccinated to continue wearing a face mask when indoors with anyone not vaccinated or when in large-group settings. 

With a larger share of Americans vaccinated and a growing stack of studies confirming the vaccines’ effectiveness, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said the science is clear on taking additional steps toward life before the pandemic. 

“We have all longed for this moment, when we can get back to some sense of normalcy,” Walensky said. “Based on the continuing downward trajectory of cases, the scientific data on the performance of our vaccines, and our understanding of how the virus spreads, that moment has come.”

The policy change applies to people who are “fully” vaccinated. That means at least two weeks have passed since receiving a second COVID-19 vaccine dose, for those who got the Pfizer or Moderna shot, or after getting the one-dose Johnson & Johnson shot. 

One key exception to the new mask recommendation is for public transportation. Masks still must be worn on airplanes, trains and buses.

The CDC guidance doesn’t alter state and local rules for mask-wearing. The agency noted that individuals still must follow those local regulations and any rules enacted by private businesses, which may continue to require masks.

The announcement follows a growing wave of criticism that the CDC has gone too slowly in loosening its guidance on what vaccinated people should and should not do, and where face masks need to be worn.

Public health experts have lambasted the agency’s instruction on mask-wearing at summer camps as needlessly strict. A New York Times analysis was skeptical of the agency’s claims on outdoor transmission, calling it “misleading” and inflated.

Asked if the agency was responding to changes in science or to the public backlash, Walensky cited the plummeting tally of U.S. infections, which have dropped by one-third in the last two weeks. She also pointed to the increase in vaccine availability and the broader eligibility for those as young as 12 years old.

The eased guidelines are not intended as another technique to incentivize those who have not yet received a vaccine, Walensky added, saying the agency sought to follow the science available. 

More than 46% of the entire U.S. population has received at least one vaccine, and 35% are fully vaccinated, according to CDC data. President Joe Biden has set a goal of having 70% of U.S. adults receive at least one dose by July Fourth, and so far, 59% of that age group has one shot.

Dropping masks among vaccinated Americans will be one of the most visible steps toward resuming pre-pandemic activities. 

The excitement around doing so could be seen at the White House, where Biden met Thursday afternoon with a group of Republican senators, including Sens. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, Mike Crapo of Idaho, and Roy Blunt of Missouri. 

GOP lawmakers told reporters afterward that they took off their masks in the Oval Office when they heard the CDC’s announcement — and that Biden did the same.

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