ADVERTISEMENT

Iowa City requires masks in city-owned buildings

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
77,434
58,932
113
As the rate of COVID-19 transmission worsened Thursday from “moderate” to “substantial” in Johnson County according to federal data, Iowa City announced that anyone going inside a city-owned facility now must wear a mask regardless of vaccination status.


The directive follows a similar one issued Tuesday by the city of Cedar Rapids, there the virus transmission rate is even worse. Linn County is rated “high” by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention based on the number of new cases per capita.


“The decision to require that masks be worn in City facilities was made for the health and safety of visitors to public facilities and for the staff who serve them,” an Iowa City news release said.


The city said all its buildings will remain open to the public. But people also have the option of conducting business online and by phone if they want to avoid entering city buildings, the city said.


The Iowa City Public Library also will remain open for its usual hours and scheduled events won’t be disrupted. However, patrons going to the library or Bookmobile must wear masks, the library said.


Iowa City lifted its local mask requirement for all indoor buildings — including those not owned by the city — in May, following CDC guidance at the time that vaccinated people did not need to wear masks indoors.




Flourish logoA Flourish map



But on July 27, the CDC changed the guidance, advising that both vaccinated and unvaccinated people should wear masks indoors in counties with a substantial or high rates of transmission. As of Thursday afternoon, 90 of Iowa’s 99 counties met that criteria.


According to state data released Wednesday, Johnson County added 109 COVID-19 cases in the last seven days, an average of 16 new cases a day. The CDC said that represents nearly an 85 percent increase in per capita cases since the week before.


Earlier this year, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds signed a bill into law that prohibited local governments from enforcing mask mandates indoors. But the law does not prohibit cities from requiring masks in their own facilities.


More details on Iowa City’s coronavirus response can be found on the city website’s coronavirus page at icgov.org.

 
Bunch of weak minded liberal piece of shits making decisions around here. Iowa City and Johnson County politicians are beyond sad and pathetic, the worst of the worst.
 
Bunch of weak minded liberal piece of shits making decisions around here. Iowa City and Johnson County politicians are beyond sad and pathetic, the worst of the worst.

If they could, we’d be in a state of lockdown with them deciding everything.
 
It is about time. Please and by the way, do not cough in my face. Just in case.

Do not wear a seat belt and when you die in an automobile accident when premiums

go up... Run up six figures, Insurance, who pays?

What about someone that is injured in an accident, heart attack? No emergency room doctors no ICU beds?

Oh yeah, just the flu.

and btw when you willing and put some kid or senior in the hospital because of the Corana Virus, Covid 19, the Delta or some other strain? God forbid. They die?

Just saying.

Wrongful death suit, my lawyer friends will come after and cash in. (Potential criminal violations)
 
  • Haha
Reactions: Pinehawk
We just reinstated ours here in Oregon for all indoor places starting Friday. My county is setting pandemic daily case records about every other day as we have quite a few idiots not willing to get vaxxed. Contrary to the right wingers on here it's not the fault of minorities (hardly any in southern Oregon), but is directly the MAGA crowd which we have tons of (Trump won my county bigly).
 
  • Like
Reactions: cigaretteman
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest posts

ADVERTISEMENT