Education

NC is still mandating face masks in schools as it lifts most requirements elsewhere

Updated Friday with state announcing that masks will still be required at schools.

North Carolina health officials say it’s too soon to know when they’ll drop the indoor face mask requirement in the state’s public and private schools.

On Friday, Gov. Roy Cooper announced that he’s lifting most of the state’’s face mask and social distancing requirements. But face masks are still required at schools, child care centers and camps, officials said, because most children have not yet been vaccinated for COVID-19 or are not yet eligible for the shot.

Thursday was the first day that children ages 12 to 15 were eligible to get the Pfizer coronavirus vaccine.

“Up until yesterday, it was really only our high school seniors that were able to even be eligible to get vaccination,” Dr. Mandy Cohen, secretary of the state Department of Health and Human Services, said at a news conference Friday. “Just starting yesterday, our 12-to-15 year-olds are now eligible so that’s great news.

“They’re starting to get vaccinated, but we know it’s going to take some time. That still leave a large portion of our student body who is completely unvaccinated.”

DHHS recently ended the requirement that face coverings be worn outdoors at schools. But state Health Director Dr. Betsey Tilson told the State Board of Education on Thursday that it could be awhile, especially at elementary schools, before the indoor face mask requirement is lifted.

CDC changes guidance for vaccinated people

The state’s mask changes in non-school settings comes after new recommendations Thursday from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention saying people who are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 “can participate in indoor and outdoor activities, large or small, without wearing a mask or physical distancing.”

But Cohen noted Friday how the CDC still recommended that unvaccinated people continue to wear face masks. Due to the presence of large numbers of unvaccinated people, the state is requiring even fully vaccinated people to continue wearing masks inside school buildings.

“Our student population is just that,” Cohen said. “They are largely, largely unvaccinated again, other than our high school seniors So for the time being, we are going to continue to require masks in that setting,”

Some parents have lobbied school leaders, including State Superintendent Catherine Truitt, for the mask mandate to be lifted.

“What conditions need to be present in order for the masking order to be lifted in our schools?” Truitt asked DHHS leaders on Thursday. “Will it be different for elementary schools than 6 to 12, or do those conditions need to be the same for the entire K-12 population?”

Tilson answered that the pandemic is unprecedented so it’s hard to say what specific metrics would be used for lifting the school mask mandate. But she said “masks in schools are going to be really a good idea for a long time.”

On Friday, Cohen said they’ll weigh factors such as COVID metrics, how many people are getting vaccinated and who is eligible for shots before making any mask changes in settings such as schools.

Masks credited for reducing COVID in schools

Tilson pointed Thursday to data presented by the ABC Science Collaborative that credits face mask use for the low rate of COVID-19 transmissions in the state’s public schools. The ABC Science Collaborative is a partnership of Duke University and UNC-Chapel Hill that advises schools on how to deal with the pandemic.

“Schools are a low-risk environment if there is high fidelity of masking,” Dr. Danny Benjamin, co-chairman of the ABC Science Collaborative, said Thursday. “It’s high risk of transmission if we’re not masked.”

Benjamin called the face mask mandate “a crucial part” of the state’s school COVID plan. In contrast, he pointed to states such as Florida that he said have a high risk of COVID-19 transmission in schools because masks are not required.

In March, the North Carolina General Assembly passed a law requiring school districts to offer daily in-person instruction at elementary schools. For middle schools and high schools, districts were required to offer full-time daily in-person classes, called Plan A, or a mix of in-person and online classes, called Plan B.

Schools in Plan B are required to have 6 feet of distancing between students. Distancing isn’t required in Plan A.

Districts such as Wake County, Johnston County and Charlotte-Mecklenburg moved middle and high schools to Plan A. But other districts, such as Durham and Orange counties and Chapel Hill-Carrboro, are using Plan B for those grades.

Districts that used Plan A in middle and high schools had to report their COVID data to the ABC Collaborative. Preliminary data shows that Plan A schools that follow state health guidelines and the mask mandate “effectively mitigate within school transmission of COVID-19,” according to Benjamin.

Benjamin said there is no greater transmission of COVID-19 in Plan A than Plan B.

“There’s no medical safety reason to support Plan B compared to Plan A provided that the LEAs (local education agencies) adhere to the mask mandate,” Benjamin said.

This story was originally published May 13, 2021 at 5:25 PM.

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T. Keung Hui
The News & Observer
T. Keung Hui has covered K-12 education for the News & Observer since 1999, helping parents, students, school employees and the community understand the vital role education plays in North Carolina. His primary focus is Wake County, but he also covers statewide education issues.
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