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St. Louis County Council Expresses Support For Mask Mandate

St. Louis County Executive Sam Page removes his mask before talking with reporters on May, 8, 2020.
Bill Greenblatt I UPI
St. Louis County Executive Sam Page removes his mask before talking with reporters last year. Councilmembers have talking with Page about ending a stalemate over a mask mandate throughout the county.

Updated 6:15 p.m. on Friday with vote on mask mandate resolution

St. Louis County Council members Friday voted to support the county鈥檚 controversial mask mandate, which is currently being challenged in county circuit court.

Four Democrats approved a resolution to support the rule, which requires face coverings to be worn in public spaces. Three Republicans abstained from voting, saying the resolution was not legally binding.

County Executive Sam Page told the council that courts would decide whether the resolution had any effect on the enforcement of the mandate.

Page and St. Louis Mayor Tishaura Jones issued the mask order in late July to stem the spread of the coronavirus. The county council voted down the mandate, saying Page and health officials put it in place without first consulting elected representatives.

Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt has challenged the mandate. A preliminary injunction has kept the county from enforcing it.

A statement attributed to Page, and Councilwomen Rita Days, D-Bel Nor, Shalonda Webb, D-St. Louis County, Kelli Dunaway, D-Chesterfield, and Lisa Clancy, D-Maplewood, said that the county "has relied on women, especially mothers, to blunt the force of a virus that threatens to overwhelm our healthcare system, shutter our schools, and choke our economy."

"Our message is now clear: wear your mask to fight the virus," the statement said. "And get vaccinated when you are eligible."

Our original story:

After weeks of acrimonious debate, members of the
St. Louis County Council may be closer to consensus on whether to institute an indoor mask mandate.

St. Louis County Councilwoman Rita Days, D-Bel Nor, called a special meeting for 3 p.m. Friday to talk with St. Louis County Executive Sam Page about public health orders around indoor masking. That comes after councilmembers spoke with health department officials and medical professionals about the issue during a Thursday committee hearing, a step that's required under a new state law that restricts COVID-19 health orders.

Days said she鈥檚 been talking with Page鈥檚 office in an attempt to bring a resolution to the issue of masking.

鈥淐ommunication is key. Compromise is key. And we have to both be able to do that on both sides,鈥 Days said. 鈥淭hat is what we鈥檙e trying to accomplish here.鈥

Days said that the council wouldn鈥檛 likely vote on any legislation regarding mask orders. But it is possible that Page鈥檚 administration could issue an order requiring indoor masking and that Days and Councilwoman Shalonda Webb could support keeping that provision in place. Department of Public Health acting director Faisal Khan told councilmembers on Thursday he could soon reissue , but he didn鈥檛 give a specific timeline on when that would happen.

鈥淚f all things go well, as soon as possible from a public health perspective,鈥 Kahn said. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 comment on the timeline. But from my perspective as a public health professional, as soon as possible.鈥

Earlier this summer, Days and Webb A judge ruled earlier this month that, at least for now, that council action

Days had said she disapproved of how Page went forward with the mask mandate without input from the council. But she stressed that she鈥檚 not against masking or vaccination, and wants to come up with a comprehensive strategy to clamp down on COVID-19 鈥 including enacting policies that encourage vaccinations and encourage healthier choices.

She has spoken out against versions of a mask mandate with strict enforcement mechanisms that could include fines or imprisonment of individuals. Department of Public Health officials said they did not plan on leveling punishments on people who violate the mask orders, but added they may send particularly egregious incidents over to the county counselor鈥檚 office 鈥 such as spitting or intentionally coughing on someone.

鈥淲e鈥檙e having conversations. And we鈥檙e continuing to talk about it,鈥 Days said. 鈥淎nd as long as we have conversations and continue to talk about it, we may be able to come to some resolution on this. We鈥檝e said all along. I鈥檝e had no problems with masks. I have no problems with vaccines. None of that. I wear my mask, and I鈥檝e already been vaccinated.鈥

St. Louis County Council Chairwoman Lisa Clancy (left) and County Councilman Ernie Trakas (center) both have proposals to change the county's panhandling regulations.
Carolina Hidalgo
/
漏 2024 外网天堂
Councilman Ernie Trakas, shown in 2019, second from right, has been a vocal opponent of mask mandates.

'Support critical prevention measures'

Thursday鈥檚 meeting featured testimony from personnel from the Department of Public Health and at least one representative from an area hospital. Hilary Babcock, who serves as medical director of infection prevention and occupational infection prevention for BJC Healthcare, said masking could go a long way toward slowing down the spread of COVID-19.

鈥淲e therefore continue to support critical prevention measures to keep our community and our patients safe,鈥 Babcock said. 鈥淰accination is saving lives every single day. But vaccination takes time. If every eligible person got a first dose of a two-dose vaccine series tomorrow, it would take three to four weeks before they completed the series and another two for their immune system to build up to full protection.鈥

But several Republican councilmembers questioned whether a mask mandate would make much of a difference if people weren鈥檛 required to wear specific face coverings 鈥 such as N95 masks.

鈥淚f we care about the people in St. Louis County, why aren鈥檛 we mandating a N95 mask or better and leave it at that?鈥 said Councilman Mark Harder, R-Ballwin. 鈥淲hy would we take anything less than that? It鈥檚 like saying 鈥榦perate with this knife, but it鈥檚 a little rusty. But it will still make a cut.鈥 But it鈥檚 a rusty knife in a surgery. Why would you even recommend that?鈥

In response, Spring Schmidt with the St. Louis County Department of Health said: 鈥淚f someone has access to a N95 and wants to wear them, that鈥檚 fine. But we also don鈥檛 think that we should make public health orders that are any more restrictive or specific than necessary.鈥

鈥淭here is choice,鈥 Schmidt said. 鈥淚 wear cloth masks. I wear surgical masks. I have a N95 mask. I don鈥檛 wear it very often because most of my interactions are with the general public just conducting my business as normal.鈥

Councilman Ernie Trakas, R-St. Louis County, sought to adjourn the meeting, in part, because he felt it was called under false pretenses. He also said that the meeting was rushed and that members of the council didn鈥檛 have time to prepare questions or secure particular witnesses.

鈥淚t is obvious that this meeting is a farce scheduled only to provide the appearance of honest inquiry and deliberation,鈥 he said.

Trakas鈥 bid to pull the plug on the meeting was unsuccessful.

Councilman Tim Fitch, R-St. Louis County, said the nearly four-hour discussion on Thursday was the most thorough discussion about a mask mandate since Page's July order. He said that Page may have been able to avoid the impasse had held a similar meeting before issuing the order.

"But we didn't get that chance," Fitch said. "You all just threw it out there and said 'here's the mandate 鈥 live with it.' ... That's why we're in this position now. This could have been addressed over a month ago."

St. Louis County Councilwoman Kelli Dunaway
File photo / David Kovaluk / 漏 2024 外网天堂
Councilwoman Kelli Dunaway, D-Chesterfield, says a mask mandate is imperative with the spread of the delta variant, especially with so many children unable to get vaccinated.

Thawing relations?

The masking dispute showcased the longstanding divide between Webb and Days and Councilwomen Kelli Dunaway, D-Chesterfield, and Lisa Clancy, D-Maplewood. Clancy and Dunaway have been generally supportive of Page, while Days and Webb have joined with at least two Republican members to form a majority coalition against Page.

Tuesday鈥檚 meeting did showcase, perhaps, that there鈥檚 a concerted effort to bridge the divide between the two factions of the council鈥檚 Democratic caucus.

鈥淎nd whether it's easy or hard, whether we agree or disagree鈥 we want to show that we can work together, that we don't have to be ugly towards one another,鈥 Webb said.

Days added on Tuesday: 鈥淧erhaps it is my legislative experience that leads me to think that compromise is the best outcome.鈥

鈥淲e are looking for a comprehensive approach to dealing with the pandemic. One size fits all, is not the solution,鈥 Days said. 鈥淭his approach includes vaccinations, masks, and addressing comorbidity issues which run rampant in our community.鈥

Days and Webb鈥檚 comments came after Dunaway made an impassioned plea for mask mandates, primarily as a way to protect schoolchildren who aren鈥檛 eligible to be vaccinated at this point in time.

鈥淲e're hearing reports of thousands of quarantines in schools around the country, schools even shutting down over outbreaks,鈥 Dunaway said. 鈥淒on't we want to do everything we can to prevent that from happening here? If our children can wear a mask all day long, the grown-ups can put one on, too. If the children don't like it, they suck it up and do it anyway because they'd rather be living out there at school and at home stuck inside.

鈥淣ow it's time to listen to the parents of young children, not yet eligible for the vaccine,鈥 she added. 鈥淵ou see, we are no longer at our breaking point. We are broken.鈥

Follow Jason on Twitter: @jrosenbaum 

Jason is the politics correspondent for 漏 2024 外网天堂.
Sarah Fentem is the health reporter at 漏 2024 外网天堂.