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Key Lawmaker Saya Statewide Mask Mandate In Schools Wouldn't Stand

Dan Konik
/
Statehouse News Bureau

Children’s hospitals say they’re worried about rising cases of COVID in kids, with nearly half of all Ohio students not required to wear masks in schools. But that’s unlikely to change unless local officials make decisions to do that.

There won’t be a statewide mask mandate for Ohio schools, according to Gov. Mike DeWine. And he says that’s not because he doesn’t want one, but because he says if he issues one, Republican legislators who have supermajorities in the House and Senate will invoke a new law giving them the power to overturn his health orders.

“It’s clear that, they’ve made it very clear that if we put a mask order on, they’re going to come out and take that off. If I thought otherwise, I would certainly have taken action myself.”

The law that allows the General Assembly to rescind a governor’s health order was vetoed by DeWine after it passed in March, and that veto was promptly rejected. Only Republicans voted for the veto override, with one House Republican and two Republican Senators voted against the override.

Things are different now – in March, COVID cases spiked up but then started to trend downward as more people became eligible for vaccines. For the month of March, the daily confirmed case average was around 1050 – the daily confirmed case average for the last month is more than three times that. And a quarter of the new COVID cases in Ohio in the last few weeks have been in kids under 18.

But Senate President Matt Huffman says his fellow Republican, Gov. Mike DeWine, has read the room correctly.

“I don't think there is any push or anyone in favor, at least in the Senate Republican caucus, I shouldn't say anyone, I haven’t asked everybody, but there's very little likelihood that the Senate Republican caucus is going to support a mask mandate for public schools.”

Huffman says schools are free to impose mandates. And a third of all districts have, including the state’s largest districts, so 54% of Ohio public school students are required to be masked in class. And though medical experts worried about COVID spread in kids are pushing for masks in schools, Huffman says if superintendents don’t want to require masks, it’s not up to the legislature to change that.

And DeWine says he’s told districts that they can institute temporary mask mandates to be removed when the surge of COVID cases in children subsides. While some, including Dayton mayor and Democratic candidate for governor Nan Whaley, have called for DeWine to issue a mask mandate and then go to court over it, DeWine has said that might confuse people.

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