All students and school staff in the cities of Atlanta and Chicago will be required to wear masks upon return to the classroom this fall, regardless of vaccination status, state officials said Thursday.
Chicago Public Schools Interim Chief Executive Officer José Torres said in a letter to parents on Thursday that the decision was made based on recommendations from local, state and federal public health experts.
The letter also outlines further measures such as enforcing social distancing in the classroom and cafeteria from Aug. 30, when classes will resume for in-person learning in the Illinois city.
Torres said in a statement that the measures will “keep our communities safe while providing our students the high-quality, in-person education they deserve.”
Separately, in Georgia, Atlanta Public Schools announced the same day that it will implement a “universal mask wearing” policy in all of the system’s school buildings when classes resume on Aug. 5.
It comes amid a reported recent increase in COVID-19 cases caused by the Delta variant of the CCP virus, which is believed to be more transmissible than other versions and is quickly becoming the leading COVID-19 strain in many countries.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said on July 6 that the Delta variant is now likely the dominant strain in the United States, currently accounting for more than half of all recorded COVID-19 cases.
A CDC spokesperson said that the variant’s prevalence in the United States has grown to 51.7 percent of all cases during the period from June 20 to July 3, from 30.4 percent for the period ending June 19.
The AAP said that the policy would protect the unvaccinated, as much of the student population is not yet eligible for vaccines.
Senators in New Jersey, meanwhile, held a hearing earlier this month to explore the efficacy and negative effects of forcing children to wear face masks in schools; they said they think the scientific evidence doesn’t support such mandates.
Children under the age of 12 aren’t currently eligible for COVID-19 vaccines, according to the CDC. President Joe Biden told a town hall in Cincinnati on July 21 that children of that age group would be able to get vaccinated “soon.”
Both Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech started trials of their COVID-19 vaccines for children under 12 in March, the results of which are expected from the pharmaceutical companies in the fall.