Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
White House Extends Mask Mandate For Airlines, Public Transit A Month
The White House on Thursday announced it would extend the current federal mask mandate for passengers on airplanes and public transit for another month 鈥 the third extension of the mandate since it was imposed in January 2021.聽The requirement, which had been set to expire March 18, will now extend through April 18, according to a Biden administration official, with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention spending the next month examining how best to proceed.聽(Wehrman, 3/10)
In other updates on covid mandates 鈥
A group of truckers and others opposed to pandemic-related mandates looped the Capital Beltway for a fourth day Thursday, this time with Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.), who rode shotgun in the lead truck. Cruz visited the 鈥淧eople鈥檚 Convoy鈥 at the Hagerstown Speedway, telling crowds their voice was being heard. He then boarded a truck and detoured just pass noon to head into Washington, where he and convoy organizers called for an end to such mandates. (Silverman, Elwood, Hedgpeth and Lazo, 3/10)
Six Chicago Public Schools teachers are once again challenging the district鈥檚 rules requiring employees receive the COVID-19 vaccination or undergo weekly testing. The six women are 鈥渟uffering continuing harm in that each is being subjected to an unlawful vaccination or testing policy without being provided their statutorily protected rights of due process of law,鈥 according to paperwork downstate attorney Tom DeVore filed Thursday in Sangamon County court. DeVore is seeking a temporary restraining order against the Chicago Board of Education. A hearing has been scheduled for Tuesday, he said. (Swartz, 3/10)
Legislation preventing most private and public entities in Idaho from discriminating against people who haven鈥檛 received the coronavirus vaccine cleared a Senate panel on Thursday. The Senate Judiciary and Rules Committee approved the measure that prevents employers from requiring employees get the vaccine or entities requiring visitors or attendees be vaccinated. (Ridler, 3/10)
The Kentucky House voted Thursday to prevent state and local governments and public colleges from requiring employees or students to disclose their COVID-19 immunization status. The measure also would allow parents to opt out of a coronavirus vaccine for their school-aged children on the basis of 鈥渃onscientiously held beliefs.鈥 The proposal won 71-22 House passage and moves on to the Senate. Republicans hold supermajorities in both chambers. (Schreiner, 3/10)