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D.C.

As Other Big Cities Tighten Mask and Vaccine Mandates, D.C. Becomes a Surprising Island of Relative Sanity

The nation's capital has perhaps the least intrusive pandemic policies of any big, blue American city.

Christian Britschgi | 12.13.2021 3:50 PM

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reason-bowser3 | Lenin Nolly/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom
(Lenin Nolly/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom)

America's Democratic governors and mayors are once again tightening their pandemic rules, this time in reaction to the new omicron variant.

Starting today, New Yorkers statewide will have to wear masks at any indoor public place that doesn't require proof of vaccination as a condition of entry. The affected places include not just bars and restaurants, but also offices, houses of worship, and the common areas of residential buildings.

That new mandate, announced Friday by Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul, follows New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio's tightening of the city's vaccine requirements. De Blasio's order requires all private-sector employees in the city to be vaccinated beginning December 27. People will also need at least two doses of the vaccine to dine out or to visit gyms, bowling alleys, or other public venues. Children 5 and up will need to be vaccinated to participate in school sports or a school band.

Not to be outdone, Philadelphia announced today that anyone entering an establishment that sells food or drink will need to be vaccinated. The new rules apply to convention centers, but only if food is being served.

The new policy doesn't cover children under 5. It also allows people to claim medical and religious exemptions. But all those exempted groups will still have to show a negative COVID test taken with 24 hours to enter public venues that have a capacity for 1,000 or more people.

It's a similar story in the bluest parts of America. Oregon still requires masks in indoor settings, and health authorities there are drafting a permanent mask rule to replace a temporary mandate that's set to expire in February. Washington state likewise requires masks in most indoor settings. (It includes exemptions for children under 5, people who are deaf or have another disability that makes it difficult to wear a mask, and people who are literally unconscious.) Both San Francisco and Los Angeles have adopted indoor mask mandates and requirements that people be vaccinated to enter indoor venues. And while Massachusetts' Republican governor, Charlie Baker, ended his state's mask mandate months ago, the city government of Boston is keeping its requirement in place. It even applies to Santa Claus:

Don't forget, masks are required in all of Boston's indoor public spaces regardless of vaccination status, even for Santa! pic.twitter.com/pR2ReVIe8t

— City of Boston (@CityOfBoston) December 6, 2021

Standing athwart all these late pandemic mandates shouting "eh, not right now" is, improbably, Washington, D.C.

In the nation's capital, the city government has chosen not to reimpose a mask mandate it repealed last month. Nor has it tried to impose the general vaccine requirements for public venues or private-sector workers that other cities have adopted.

Instead, city officials have offered a surprisingly sane message that COVID-19 is not going to disappear anytime soon and that the city's residents need to start moving on with their lives.

"This does not mean that everyone needs to stop wearing their mask," said D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser at a November press conference announcing the mask mandate's repeal. "But it does mean we're shifting the government's response to providing you this risk-based information."

LaQuandra Nesbitt, the direct of D.C. Health, sounded a similar note at the same press conference, saying that the district expected COVID-19 to become endemic, similar to the flu, and that government's strategy would involve fewer mandates and more provision of data to help people assess their own risk for engaging in certain activities.

"We want to be able to help people understand sort of the long-term strategies for monitoring infectious disease that we [expect] will likely be endemic, always present in our community sort of the same way that influenza is," said Nesbitt, according to the New York Post.

To be clear, D.C. is hardly a libertarian paradise when it comes to COVID-19 policy—or any other kind of policy. Masks are still required on public transportation and in rideshare vehicles. You also have to wear them at schools, libraries, child care facilities, and government buildings where city employees interact directly with the public (i.e., the DMV). Vaccines are required for city workers, health care workers, and staff and frequent visitors to schools (including private schools). And Bowser has endorsed the Biden administration's order that private-sector employers with 100 or more employees must require them to be vaccinated or test negative for COVID-19.

These lingering requirements aren't great. But compared to the rest of blue America, they're not nearly as bad as they could be.

It's worth noting that the city's stance that businesses can adopt their own voluntary mask and vaccine mandates is also more respectful of private property and freedom of association than the policies in Florida and Texas that prohibit private vaccine requirements.

I have no special insight into why D.C. has somehow managed to clear the (admittedly very low) bar to earn the title of best big liberal city on COVID-19 policy.

It's one of the most liberal places in the country, with 92 percent of city voters supporting Joe Biden in the last presidential election. And it's not as though the place was particularly good on such issues previously in the pandemic: It was quick to reimpose a mask mandate in late July after the delta variant sparked a rise in COVID cases, even though COVID-19 deaths and hospitalizations remained low and basically flat during that time.

Bowser's administration has also been pretty indifferent to businesses' pleas for flexibility throughout the pandemic. Earlier in the year, it ignored requests from some music venues that they be allowed to restart live performances if they required patrons and performers to be vaccinated. The city also rejected gyms' request that they be exempted from the (now repealed) mask mandate if they required vaccination for entry.

Yet for whatever reason, the city now seems wedded to a policy of merely encouraging, not requiring, residents to mask, vaccinate, and generally be cautious about COVID. It is sticking to this approach even as most other urban areas embrace wider and wider vaccine passport systems and mask mandates. It's not ideal, but it sure beats living in L.A.

Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.

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NEXT: A Judge Has Ordered Him Released From Prison—Twice. The Government Still Won't Set Him Free.

Christian Britschgi is a reporter at Reason.

D.C.Mask MandatesVaccine mandatesMasksCoronavirusPublic Health
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  1. Chumby   3 years ago

    Does Mayor Bowser have an upcoming social event planned?

    1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

      This guy gets it.

      1. Caridad Seim   3 years ago

        Seriously I don’t know why more people haven’t tried this, I work two shifts, 2 hours in the day and 2 in the evening…FIPh And i get surly a check of $12600 what’s awesome is I m working from home so I get more time with my kids.

        Try it, you won’t regret it........CASHAPP NOW

  2. Michael Ejercito   3 years ago

    It has already been twenty-one months.

    How long do these people feel is long enough?

    1. Chupacabra   3 years ago

      Just two decades to bend the curve!

      1. JesseAz   3 years ago

        See South Park: Post Covid

        1. Dillinger   3 years ago

          not until they don't make me pay Paramount extra for it. assholes.

          1. JesseAz   3 years ago

            I watch paramount plus more than any other streaming. Canceled everything but that and Amazon.

            1. Dillinger   3 years ago

              I get the draw, but paramount doesn't deliver toothpaste in 20 minutes and South Park was on for 23 years at the cost of my cable bill only. they shouldn't have moved to the script side

              1. Kevin Smith   3 years ago

                Paramount+ is a heck of lot cheaper than my cable bill ever was. Even adding HBO Max (where the rest of South Park is) is still cheaper

      2. GreenBeanMarine   3 years ago

        The best way to flatten the curve is through diet and excessive. Being a little curvy is ok, but obesity is the killer. COVID is just a co morbidity factor.

    2. Longtobefree   3 years ago

      Until all individual spirit has been crushed, and all small/non corporate businesses have been shuttered for good.
      Fascists need only large corporations to do their bidding; small business just won't play the game.

    3. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   3 years ago

      All this lockdown panic started as a what-sticks-on-the-wall flood to find some way to get back at Trump, the true Teflon™ President. One they found he couldn't get in their way and they could portray him as a do-nothing-while-everybody-dies President, they stuck with it, fuck science.

      These lockdowns will disappear the instant Trump is no longer a potential President.

      1. Granite   3 years ago

        Nah we were saying that when he was president. The lockdowns will never end.

        On a side note, the best l place to inoculate yourself without vaccinating it seems would be Santa’s lap.

  3. Rev. Arthur L. Kuckland   3 years ago

    Because the polititions and their corners have a seperat set of rules for themselves

    1. Commenter_XY   3 years ago

      Bingo!

    2. GreenBeanMarine   3 years ago

      Which is why the tittle of this article should read "relative hypocrisy", not relative sanity.

  4. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

    D.C. Becomes a Surprising Island of Relative Sanity

    Are we including the House and Senate in this?

    1. Dillinger   3 years ago

      Reason: stretching "relative" as far as the eye can see.

      1. GreenBeanMarine   3 years ago

        I think they mean relative to other democrat run cities. I know that isn't saying much.

  5. MP   3 years ago

    While the rest of America looks on, mask free, and say "damn, what a bunch of totalitarian nitwits."

  6. Terry Anne Lieber (Don't Feed Tony)   3 years ago

    But not for thee!

  7. HorseConch   3 years ago

    Since they don't suck as bad as the other assholes, they love freedom. If any of these rules worked, wouldn't there be WAY more dead people in all of the locations that haven't implemented them?

    1. ElvisIsReal   3 years ago

      Shhhhhh! You're questioning The Science!

      1. HorseConch   3 years ago

        I would never question Zee Science.

  8. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

    I'm trying to figure out what 3d chess move this is about.

    1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

      I mean, come on:

      Bowser's administration has also been pretty indifferent to businesses' pleas for flexibility throughout the pandemic. Earlier in the year, it ignored requests from some music venues that they be allowed to restart live performances if they required patrons and performers to be vaccinated. The city also rejected gyms' request that they be exempted from the (now repealed) mask mandate if they required vaccination for entry.

      Yet for whatever reason, the city now seems wedded to a policy of merely encouraging, not requiring, residents to mask, vaccinate, and generally be cautious about COVID.

      What's the big Change of Heart?

      That's like Gavin Newsom becoming a staunch defender of the 2nd amendment.

      Something is up.

  9. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

    From Gallup

    Using these adjusted figures, we calculate that the hospitalization rate for the vaccinated population is 0.01% (or 1 in 10,914), and the rate for unvaccinated adults is 0.89% (or 1 case in 112 people). In both cases, therefore, the correct answer is less than one percent, but the implied efficacy rate of vaccination is 99% at preventing hospitalizations. This is calculated as the hospitalization rate for the unvaccinated minus the hospitalization rate for the vaccinated, divided by the unvaccinated rate. In other words, it is the percentage decrease in hospitalization risk. This high rate of protection -- even against Delta -- is consistent with a recent article published in the Lancet, which reviewed large-scale empirical data from the United States and around the world.

    Now square that with 800,000 dead Americans with adjacent to from COVID.

    Now, take a look at this fact check which does the exact same thing so many press "fact checks do".

    "Well, yeah, that's what she said, but... but she was speaking broadly so ruling: mostly false"

    “Everybody who’s listed as a COVID death doesn’t mean that that was the cause of death, but they had COVID at the time of death,” Ezike said at the press briefing.

    She said a hospice patient who was dying from another illness but was found to have COVID at the time of death would be listed as a COVID-19 death.

    A Facebook post containing a video of Ezike’s comments has racked up 400,000 views.

    Since Ezike made the comments, however, the way COVID-19 deaths are counted has become more precise, Arnold said.

    “We have worked to review death-certificate data from the beginning of the pandemic to identify any COVID-19 deaths in which the cause of death listed on the death certificate clearly indicates an alternative cause, such as due to motor vehicle accidents, overdoses or gunshot wounds, and have removed those deaths from our counts,” Arnold said.

    So we removed the gunshot victims and a few auto accidents, but we haven't removed the guy who died of a heart attack while being positive for COVID.

    Ruling: Mostly false.

    1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   3 years ago

      Nice article by Gallup.

    2. Eeyore   3 years ago

      Tangential article.
      61% of Americans favor vaccination requirements for air travel
      53% in the U.S. support them for dining in a restaurant
      56% favor these requirements at their office or work site

      Americans are pieces of shit.

      1. MK Ultra   3 years ago

        Holy shit is that frightening.

        1. Eeyore   3 years ago

          I hope it is bias in the sample.

          1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

            There was bias. They asked Americans.

            1. mad.casual   3 years ago

              "We're here at this local restaurant in NYC to ask your average American if they agree with vaccination and mask mandates..."

      2. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

        This is literally no surprise to me. In my area, 100% of the people I saw outside, walking on the street, in the pouring down rain were wearing masks. 100%. All of them. I sat at the intersection and I was completely dumbfounded.

        Remember, the reason you had to hide Anne Frank in the attic wasn't because a majority of German citizens were trying to help the Jews.

        1. Chumby   3 years ago

          Dutch.

          Occasionally will see out of staters wearing a mask in the car. Solo.

          We have a “Don’t mask, don’t tell” order and we ignore the telling part.

    3. ElvisIsReal   3 years ago

      Using these adjusted figures, we calculate that the hospitalization rate for the vaccinated population is 0.01% (or 1 in 10,914), and the rate for unvaccinated adults is 0.89% (or 1 case in 112 people).
      -----------------
      Actual risk reduction: 0.88%.

      1. mad.casual   3 years ago

        Actual risk reduction: 0.88% 88% effective at a 1% reduction.

        FIFY

  10. JeremyR   3 years ago

    It's because they don't want to inflict it on themselves. It's like dogs not pissing their beds

  11. CE   3 years ago

    Not that surprising.
    One set of rules for me, and a different set for thee.

    Politicians don't want to be caught breaking their own rules.

    1. TJJ2000   3 years ago

      ^THIS....

  12. JHR   3 years ago

    In big American cities, there are two parties: hardcore leftists and moderate democrats. Most of the D.C. City Council is the former, but fortunately, Bowser is the latter.

    It's probably also helpful that in D.C., she doesn't have to posture in opposition to any Republicans in state office.

  13. GreenBeanMarine   3 years ago

    The idea of mask mandates could be considered debatable, but mask mandates based on vaccination status can not be justified by any credible science considering the fact that vaccinated people still contract, carry and spread the virus. I light of this fact, I am awestruck by the number of people who lack the intelligence to realize there is no way vaccines will end it. They say "follow the science" while not looking at it themselves.

  14. GreenBeanMarine   3 years ago

    When a capitol does not follow the same rules they expect others to follow, it is not "sanity", its hypocrisy.

  15. GreenBeanMarine   3 years ago

    It says a lot when the most "sane" liberal run city is far less sane than the worst of conservative run cities.

  16. NOYB2   3 years ago

    The nation's capital has perhaps the least intrusive pandemic policies of any big, blue American city.

    That's for the same reason its roads are good, its museums are nice, and public transit works pretty well relative to other big, blue American cities: the elites living in DC like it that way. Do as I say, not as I do.

  17. n00bdragon   3 years ago

    "Lefty shithole isn't getting worse than it already is." What an achievement. Do you think that deserves a cookie? DC is still shit with coronovirus restrictions. "Good for a democratic machine town" doesn't mean "good". What a complete non-achievement. Will your next article be about which murderers deserve a good boy point for not killing a new victim today?

  18. DaveM   3 years ago

    Please stop drawing attention to this sane policy in DC. We don't want it cancelled. Likewise in Chicago, where the Mayor has come to the same conclusion. Instead, please write about New York, Philly, or anywhere in Florida.

    Remember, first, do no harm.

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