Biden administration will appeal lifting of mask mandate, if CDC agrees
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[April 20, 2022]
By Jeff Mason, Trevor Hunnicutt and David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe
Biden's administration said on Tuesday it would appeal a judge's ruling
ending a mask mandate on airplanes if public health officials deem it
necessary to stem the spread of COVID-19.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, to whom the
administration was deferring, said that it would continue to study
whether the mandates were still needed. The mandates apply to planes,
trains and other public transportation and, prior to Monday's ruling,
had been due to expire on May 3.
"We will continue to assess the need for a mask requirement in those
settings, based on several factors, including the U.S. COVID-19
community levels, risk of circulating and novel variants, and trends in
cases and disease severity," a CDC spokesperson said in a statement on
Tuesday.
The Justice Department said it would appeal Monday's ruling by U.S.
District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle that the 14-month-old directive
was unlawful, if the CDC determined the mandate was needed to protect
public health.
The ruling overturned a key presidential effort to reduce the spread of
COVID-19.
"If CDC concludes that a mandatory order remains necessary for the
public's health after that assessment, the Department of Justice will
appeal the district court's decision," the Justice Department said in a
statement.
The CDC reiterated that it recommends that people wear masks on public
transportation while indoors.
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People without masks arrive to the counter for check in at La
Guardia Airport after the Biden administration announced it would no
longer enforce a U.S. coronavirus disease (COVID-19) mask mandate on
public transportation, following a federal judge's ruling that the
14-month-old directive was unlawful, in New York, U.S., April 19,
2022. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
That came hours after Biden, on a
trip to New Hampshire, answered a question about whether people
should continue to wear masks on planes, by saying, "It's up to
them."
Monday's court decision, made in response to a lawsuit filed last
year in Tampa, Florida, means the CDC's public transportation
masking order is no longer in effect, a U.S. official said.
It comes as COVID-19 infections are rising in the United States, and
more than 400 people are dying daily from the airborne disease,
based on the latest seven-day average.
The ruling followed a string of judgments against Biden
administration directives to fight the infectious disease that has
killed nearly 1 million Americans, including vaccination or COVID
testing mandates for employers.
"Public health decisions shouldn't be made by the courts. They
should be made by public health experts," White House spokesperson
Jen Psaki said.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason, Trevor Hunnicutt and David Shepardson;
Editing by Scott Malone, Jonathan Oatis, Heather Timmons and Lincoln
Feast)
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