Nevada

Nevada to Require Masks After Rise in New Virus Cases

Nevada has reported more than 14,300 virus cases and 494 deaths since the onset of the pandemic.

Ethan Miller/Getty Images

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA – JUNE 18: (L-R) Russell Schenck of Saint Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands and Jayna Walker and Nellshawn Walker, both of California, play a video craps machine at the Westgate Las Vegas Resort & Casino after the property opened for the first time since being closed in mid-March because of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic on June 18, 2020 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Hotel-casinos throughout the state were allowed to open on June 4 as part of a phased reopening of the economy with social distancing guidelines and other restrictions in place. The Westgate, which first opened as the International in 1969, had planned to reopen with designated non-smoking, mask-required table games over half of its casino floor, as well as designated mask-required elevators. On Wednesday, citing updated guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Nevada Gaming Control Board issued an industry notice updating its health and safety policy. It dictates that all players at table and card games must wear face coverings if there is no barrier between the dealer and each player. The policy applies to spectators or anyone else within six feet of a game. Also, properties must offer face masks or cloth coverings to guests as they enter the casino or have dedicated signage alerting patrons that they are available. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

Gov. Steve Sisolak announced Wednesday that Nevada will mandate the use of face coverings in public places in an effort to stem an increase of coronavirus cases that has hit the state as casinos, restaurants and other businesses began reopening.

“No shirt, no shoes, no mask, no service,” Sisolak said, distilling the policy down to a tagline.

Nevada has reported more than 14,300 virus cases and 494 deaths since the onset of the pandemic. A downward trend in cases previously led Sisolak and health officials to move the state to a second phase of reopening before new cases began to rise.

“For Nevada to stay safe and stay open, we must make face coverings a routine part of our daily life,” the first-term Democratic governor said at a news conference.

When the mandate takes effect Thursday at midnight, Nevada will join California, North Carolina and Washington in requiring face-coverings, after those states’ Democratic governors implemented similar mandates.

Sisolak emphasized his intentions with the new rule weren’t partisan and only intended to contain the spread of the virus to protect residents and allow Nevada to reopening as quickly as possible.

“If back in March, before we shut down our economy, I said to you: we can keep our economy open if everyone agrees to wear masks and maintain 6 feet in person-to-person distance, who would have not accepted that offer?” Sisolak said.

The face-covering mandate will apply to all indoor and outdoor spaces where people convene. Individuals with medical conditions and disabilities, and children 2 to 9 will be exempt from the mandate, Sisolak said.

Businesses not following the mandate will be cited by licensing and regulatory authorities as well as Nevada’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Sisolak said he hoped individuals would abide by the mandate so penalties for not doing so wouldn't be necessary.

“This is a mandate so enforcement language is necessary. However, ideally there won’t be any criminal or civil sanctions against individuals,” he said.

The governor's directive doesn't specify an end date for the mask requirement, but Sisolak said all plans to move forward with his reopening plan were on hold. Sisolak said he had no intention to implement quarantine requirements on out-of-state visitors to Nevada — like those in place in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut — because he was confident requiring masks would prevent the virus from spreading.

With the spread of the virus showing no signs of slowing yet, Sisolak said the economic reverberations would likely continue to force severe cuts from the state budget.

To stem a $812 million shortfall for the budget year that ends June 30, Sisolak and state lawmakers approved drawing from the state rainy day fund, cutting expenses and calling off one-time appropriations lawmakers passed in 2019.

If the pandemic persists, Sisolak said, it’ll require even more severe cuts to the state budget in the next fiscal year and, based on projections, lead to a $1.27 billion shortfall — an amount about a fourth the size of Nevada’s annual budget.

The announcement followed days of health officials throughout Nevada asking people to cover their faces in public places. After Washoe County, home to Reno, saw an uptick in new cases reported daily, county health officer Kevin Dick called the numbers “alarming” and said they could reflect another surge.

“It’s very important the public take this seriously. We are in the midst of a worldwide pandemic. It is not something that is going to be over soon and it not going to be easy to address,” Dick said hours before Sisolak's announcement.

Nevada’s contact tracing efforts have so far revealed that 11% of individuals who’ve tested positive have been to a mass gathering and 12% have been to a “civic activist event,” said Julia Peek, an official with the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services who’s spearheading the state’s contact tracing efforts.

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AP writer Michelle L. Price contributed from Las Vegas. Metz is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on under-covered issues. Sonner reported from Reno.

Copyright The Associated Press
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