U.S.
government agencies start dropping mask requirements
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[March 03, 2022]
By David Shepardson and Idrees Ali
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Defense and
Justice departments are no longer requiring masks be worn indoors at
Washington-area facilities, they said on Wednesday, following the latest
COVID-19 guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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Other agencies are expected to follow suit this week.
The change affects about 20,000 military and civilian employees at
the Pentagon.
The Justice Department said masks are no longer required at its
operated buildings in Washington and will implement new workplace
policies, "including a phased increase in onsite presence, over the
next two months." Facilities outside Washington must follow the
CDC's community level guidance, it added.
The White House told federal agencies late on Monday they can stop
requiring employees and visitors to wear masks in federal buildings
in much of the country, according to a document first reported by
Reuters.
The White House-led Safer Federal Workforce Task Force said Monday
federal facilities in counties with low or medium COVID-19 community
levels can drop the mask requirement, regardless of vaccination
status. About 70% of U.S. counties covering 72% of the U.S.
population are listed as having low or medium levels.
The White House directed agencies to revise federal employee masking
and testing rules no later than Friday.
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The District of Columbia, where most federal
agencies are based, is listed as having low
COVID-19 community levels, along with nearby
suburbs of Virginia and Maryland, which are home
to the Pentagon, Central Intelligence Agency and
many other agencies.
The White House Tuesday lifted requirements for
fully vaccinated individuals to wear masks on
the White House campus, but testing, providing
vaccination information, and other COVID-19
protocols remain in place.
Federal mask requirements at airports, train
stations and on buses, airplanes and trains
remain in place at least through March 18 and
could be extended.
(Reporting by Idrees Ali, David Shepardson and
Diane Bartz; editing by Jonathan Oatis and
Richard Chang)
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