The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ARE MASKS REALLY A ‘BRIDGE TOO FAR’?

REQUIRING GEORGIANS TO TAKE PRECAUTION­S IS JUST GOOD COMMON SENSE

- The Editorial Board

Why?

That’s the question Georgians concerned about their own health and lives — and those of their neighbors, families and others — should ask of Gov. Brian Kemp, given his latest order neutering local government requiremen­ts that people wear face masks during this pandemic.

It’s hard to see this latest move — and a related lawsuit filed Thursday against the city of Atlanta — as anything other than underminin­g both public health and the local-government-is-best beliefs that the Gold Dome’s conservati­ve leaders used to tirelessly preach.

Kemp’s latest executive order explicitly forbids local or county government­s from enacting measures that require public mask usage. Instead, the state is encouragin­g — rather than mandating — Georgians to wear masks in public.

Again, why?

The governor has called such a requiremen­t “a bridge too far,” and his office has said local mandates are unenforcea­ble.

So for now, this “y’all please cooperate” approach seems as far as Kemp is willing to go to in the desperate effort to slow the spread of COVID-19, which has killed more than 3,000 Georgians to date.

Could it be that the governor is trying to mollify so-called “anti-maskers” — those who somehow see government conspiraci­es and Bill of Rights violations in commonsens­e efforts to slow the pandemic?

Otherwise, the move forbidding other government­s from acting in their own citizens’ best interests makes no sense.

All this while the red curve of new virus cases in Georgia and the U.S. continues to steeply rise. At a time when some states are acting far more assertivel­y than Georgia to try to limit COVID-19’s spread. And despite advice from doctors and other infection control specialist­s from corner medical offices on up to Washington, D.C. They’re passionate­ly urging use of face coverings, frequent hand-washing and social distancing to help defeat this virus.

Having been battered by the effects of COVID-19 on both consumers and workers, the business community, too, seems fully engaged in the anti-virus fight. Large retailers are increasing­ly doing what Kemp and other holdouts will not: requiring that customers wear face coverings.

Is it really a “bridge too far” to require that every Georgian take a minimal precaution when they are out in public breathing or coughing on others?

We don’t think so.

Letters to the editor must be no longer than 150 words and must include a daytime phone number for verificati­on. Letters will be edited for length and clarity and may be published in both print and digital formats. Emailed submission­s are strongly preferred. Please email to: letters@ajc.com.

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