Some cited caution and confusion, while others who have rarely worn
masks rolled their eyes at the advice from the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Thursday that fully
vaccinated people do not need to wear masks outdoors and can mostly
avoid wearing them indoors. The looser mask guidance does not apply
to situations such as public transportation and prisons.
The CDC said the updated guidance would allow life to begin to
return to normal and hopes it will prod more people to get
vaccinated against an illness that has killed more than half a
million Americans.
"I'm nervous about it," said a masked Allison Douma, 24, out walking
her dogs in Washington, D.C. She was fully vaccinated last month. "I
just don't feel safe because vaccination rates are going down, and
I'm worried about the mutations," she said of more contagious virus
variants widely circulating.
Over 1,600 miles (2,575 km) away in Lubbock, Texas - where
Republican Governor Greg Abbott lifted a statewide mask mandate in
March - the CDC guidelines were largely met with a shrug.

"I don't think masks worked as well in stopping the virus as the
media would have you believe. People did not even wear them properly
in the first place," said Riker Beauchamp, 20, a pizzeria worker in
Lubbock.
Beauchamp, yet to be vaccinated, said he wore a mask if a business
asked but did not where owners did not care. He accused liberals of
fear mongering over the need to wear masks.
In many parts of the United States, people have not been wearing
masks for months. A January survey by the University of Southern
California Dornsife Center for Economic and Social Research found
that even at a peak time for COVID-19 infections, half of Americans
were not wearing masks when mixing with the public.
More states had relaxed mask mandates and other restrictions in
recent weeks as COVID-19 cases dropped.
In New York City, Maggie Cantrick, 39, who works at an arts center,
said she was not ready to shed her mask in places such as a grocery
store. "I am fully vaccinated. I can just take off my mask? This is
crazy!" she said.
U.S. supermarket chain Kroger Co said it will continue to require
customers to wear masks, while it reviews current safety practices
and the new CDC guidance.
Another food chain, Trader Joe's, said it would immediately drop its
mask mandate for customers who are fully vaccinated.
[to top of second column] |
 With the new federal guidance,
it will be up to people to decide how to protect
themselves now that vaccines are readily
available, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky
said on Friday.
"If you are vaccinated and you're making the
decision to take off your mask ... you are safe.
If you are unvaccinated, then you've made the
decision to take that risk."
Unvaccinated people are still encouraged to get
their shots to protect themselves and others
against the coronavirus that is still
circulating even as cases decline, she said.
'I'LL WEAR THE MASK'
Chuck Schutte, a 60-year-old retired electrical
lineman drinking at the bar of the Ancient
Mariner pub and restaurant in Ridgefield,
Connecticut on Friday, said he had no immediate
plans to get vaccinated.
"I think it (vaccine development) was rushed and
I see people have side effects," Schutte said.
"I'm not going to say I'm not going to get
vaccinated but I'm definitely not doing it right
away. I'll wear the mask."
Jeri Kelly, who was visiting Washington, DC,
from Portland, Oregon on Friday, said she was
concerned about being able to identify whether
someone was vaccinated.
"So, to go into a public space, to be less than
six feet distance, because I'm vaccinated, I am
just concerned that the next person, how honest
are they going to be?" she said as she and her
husband headed in the National Museum of African
American History and Culture.
Dr. Walid Gellad, a professor at University of
Pittsburgh's medical school, said he believed
the CDC guidance came two or three weeks too
early.
"The problem is that there's no mechanism to
identify who's vaccinated. So, someone's going
to be in a store. No one's going to be wearing
masks, and some of those people will be
unvaccinated - that's just the reality," Gellad
said.
Ahmad Erfani, 70, who runs Le Caprice bakery in
Washington, said he would still ask indoor
customers to keep their masks on. "You don't
know who is or isn't vaccinated," he said.
(Reporting by Susan Heavey, Caroline Humer, Tim
Reid, Julia Harte, Maria Caspani, Jeff Mason,
Brad Brooks, Lisa Baertlein, Nathan Layne,
Deborah Lutterbeck, Gershon Peaks, Julio-Cesar
Chavez, Aishwarya Venugopal, Hilary Russ, David
Shepardson and Michael Erman;Editing by Donna
Bryson, Alistair Bell and Bill Berkrot)
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