mask mandate

Too Early to Say If Mass. School Mask Mandate Will Be Extended, Baker Says

The governor said Massachusetts will first need "some understanding about how many we're going to need and where we think the primary locations will be" that the shots will be administered

Students sitting and wearing a face mask in class.
Getty Images

High school students at school, wearing N95 Face masks.

Gov. Charlie Baker is not yet saying whether Massachusetts' school mask mandate, currently in place through at least Nov. 1, should again be extended.

"We'll talk to you about that when we get toward the end of the month," Baker told reporters Monday afternoon.

In August, the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education authorized Commissioner Jeff Riley to require masks for students age 5 and up and school staff through at least Oct. 1, and Riley on Sept. 27 extended the requirement another month. Schools that have attested to at least an 80% vaccination rate among students and staff are now able to drop the mask requirement for vaccinated individuals only.

"The reason we put the 80% in is because we felt that was the point at which buildings could be considered appropriate for having vaccinated people unmask," Baker said. "We believe that unvaccinated people should continue to be masked and that's been our guidance to school districts all along, consistent with the CDC guidance about vaccines and masks generally."

Top Boston doctors talk about the "mix and match" approach to COVID vaccine booster shots, variations in vaccine efficacy and school mask mandates.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has now published a planning guide for pediatric COVID-19 vaccine programs, based on the assumption of federal authorization of at least one vaccine for kids younger than 12.

Before ordering any pediatric vaccines -- which will be in different doses than the shots for adults -- Baker said the state will first need "some understanding about how many we're going to need and where we think the primary locations will be" that the shots will be administered.

With many vaccinators now able to order directly from the federal government, Baker said the state itself will likely not be the main entity ordering kids' COVID-19 vaccines.

Copyright State House News Service
Exit mobile version