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Morning Briefing

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Thursday, Dec 23 2021

Full Issue

Chicago, Boston, DC Get Vax Passport Rules; Utah Wants To Ban Them

In Chicago and Boston, proof of vaccination will be needed to access indoor spaces like gyms and restaurants. In D.C., people older than 12 will have to show a covid card to enter many businesses. But Utah lawmakers introduced bills aimed at banning "discrimination" over vax status.

Residents of Chicago and Boston will soon be required to show proof of full vaccination in order to enter indoor spaces like gyms, restaurants and entertainment venues, in the latest example of cities tightening public health rules to combat the spread of the omicron variant. The Chicago Department of Public Health announced Tuesday that beginning Jan. 3, the city will require everyone ages 5 and up to be fully vaccinated in order to access indoor dining, fitness and recreation venues. They must present either their vaccination card, a photocopy of it, a digital record or a printed record from their vaccine provider. (Treisman, 12/22)

People 12 and older will be required to show proof of coronavirus vaccination to enter many businesses in D.C., including restaurants, starting in mid-January under rules that Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) announced Wednesday. (Brice-Saddler, Weil and Portnoy, 12/22)

Two bills seeking to protect vaccine-hesitant Utahns from discrimination in the workplace or community are slated to debut in the 2022 session, which begins next month. HB 60 from St. George Republican Walt Brooks bans so-called 鈥渧accine passports.鈥 Private businesses could not require customers to prove they鈥檙e vaccinated against COVID-19. Government entities would also be blocked from requiring proof of vaccination. The bill bars employers from requiring employees to provide proof of vaccination status. They would also not be allowed to require individuals to get vaccinated under some circumstances. (Schott, 12/22)

In updates on mask mandates 鈥

A federal judge in Las Vegas on Wednesday dismissed a challenge to the Clark County鈥檚 School District鈥檚 student mask requirement, rejecting claims by parents of two students that the pandemic-driven mandate and its enactment violated their constitutional rights. U.S. District Judge Jennifer Dorsey鈥檚 ruling unsparingly denies the plaintiff鈥檚 various claims, citing precedents from U.S. Supreme Court rulings and other court jurisdictions both contemporaneous with the current COVID-19 pandemic and dating as far back as a 1905 Massachusetts case. (Dentzer, 12/22)

Amazon.com Inc. said all workers at its hundreds of U.S. warehouses will have to wear masks again starting Wednesday, a mandate prompted by the rapid spread of the coronavirus鈥檚 Omicron variant. (Needleman, 12/22)

A surge in Covid-19 cases -- believed to be the omicron variant - is triggering a mandatory mask order in Colorado ski country at the peak of the holiday travel season. The Eagle County Board of Health, meeting in an emergency session Wednesday, reinstated an indoor mask mandate 鈥渞egardless of vaccination status.鈥 The popular resort towns of Vail and Avon are located in Eagle County. (Del Giudice, 12/22)

As other states are mobilizing to respond to the rapidly spreading omicron variant, Gov. Greg Abbott is not budging on his hands-off approach to the coronavirus pandemic that was cemented months ago. In March, Abbott ended the statewide mask mandate, marking the beginning of a sharp shift toward preaching 鈥減ersonal responsibility鈥 and an outright rejection of any government mandate 鈥 whether state or local 鈥 to curb the pandemic. That philosophy carried the state through the delta variant this fall, even as hospitals were overrun and deaths climbed. Now as the state stares down the latest variant, Abbott remains unmoved, continuing to rule out any mask or vaccine mandates and business shutdowns. 鈥淲e鈥檙e moving forward with life as we know it,鈥 Abbott said Tuesday in a radio interview when asked about omicron. (Svitek, 12/23)

In related news about covid mandates 鈥

California鈥檚 roughly 2.5 million health care workers have until Feb. 1 to get a coronavirus vaccine booster shot or risk losing their jobs, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Wednesday. Newsom gave more details on the booster mandate during a Wednesday news conference at a vaccine clinic in Oakland. He had initially announced the new rule on Tuesday afternoon. (Beam, 12/23)

Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday pledged to keep California schools open in a statement he issued with the state's influential teachers unions the day after President Joe Biden said K-12 classrooms must not close. "As we approach the new year, we reaffirm our shared commitment to one another, to our parents and to our students: to keep each other safe and to keep our classrooms open," the joint statement said. It was signed by unions including the powerful California Teachers Association, one of Sacramento's biggest lobbying forces. (Luthi, 12/22)

The Washington Department of Corrections has been fined $60,000 for failing to enforce COVID-19 protective measures at the Stafford Creek Corrections Center in Aberdeen. The state Department of Labor & Industries said in a news release Wednesday that the agency began an investigation and inspection after a correctional officer tested positive for COVID-19 in June and died. (12/23)

A man who defied state orders and kept his restaurant open last year during the pandemic, partly to pay medical bills, has died of complications from COVID-19. John Parney, 62, operated the Quincy Diner in Quincy in southern Michigan. He was admitted to a hospital with COVID-19 in September, went home but quickly developed significant health problems that put him back in the hospital, according to a GoFundMe page. (12/23)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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