While Other Governments Design and Implement Policies to Contain the Spread of the Delta Variant, Texas Governor Doubles Down and Bans Counties, Cities, and State Agency Officials from Doing So
Punishing Containment Measures with Fines |
It sounds preposterous, but here we go again. Texas Governor Greg Abbott once more invokes emergency powers under the Texas Disaster Act to thwart COVID-control measures by local governments that are designed to mitigate the declared disaster. Also decrees that local officials be subject to fines of $1,000 if they do not obey his order by imposing a face covering requirement.
Local Officials to be fined $1,000 for requiring masks |
The new order, denominated GA-38, is here: https://gov.texas.gov/uploads/files/press/EO-GA-38_continued_response_to_the_COVID-19_disaster_IMAGE_07-29-2021.pdf
The order re-states previously-imposed provisions, but also eliminates the 15% hospitalization threshold that allowed local officials to set capacity limits for businesses.
Response to GA-38 by Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins (D) |
AG PAXTON (R): NO TO VAX MANDATES |
REFERENCES
'Beyond reckless': Abbott faces backlash for executive order clarifying stance on masks. MYSANANTONIO 2021-07-30 by PRISCILLA AGUIRRE
On Wednesday, San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg and Bexar County Judge Nelson Wolff penned a letter to Abbott seeking his permission to allow schools to require face masks. Shortly after Abbott announced his new order, Nirenberg released a statement calling his action "tragically ironic.
"It is tragically ironic that Gov. Abbott continues his emergency order but has taken away the tools for us to mitigate that very emergency," Nirenberg said in a statement. "The governor has shown a callous disregard for life and safety in defiance of clear medical guidance and is risking the safety of our children and the recovery of our economy."
The new order comes as hospitalizations reached over 15% on Thursday in the Galveston region, according to the state health department. Other areas are increasing close to that threshold, such as the Belton/Killeen region at 14% and Bryan/College Station region at 12%, according to the state.
On Wednesday, WFAA reached out to county judges who said, at the time, still had the option to limit business capacity if hospitalizations were at 15%.Now, here can be no COVID-related limits for operating a business or any other establishment, the new order said. School districts or local officials also can't enact mask requirements.
As Texas COVID-19 cases surge again, some local officials urge everyone to wear masks and unvaccinated residents to stay home. Officials in Dallas, Harris and Travis counties want residents to take stronger precautions as the delta variant drives an increase in coronavirus infections across Texas. TEXAS TRIBUNE 2021-07-23 updated 2021-07-24 by COLLEEN DEGUZMAN
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