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Utah counties consider implementing their own mask mandates after April 10th

UPDATED: MARCH 19, 2021 AT 10:10 AM
BY
KSLNewsRadio

SALT LAKE CITY — It remains to be seen if any of the 29 counties in Utah will implement their own mask mandates after the statewide order goes away on April 10th.

Salt Lake County was the first county in the state to enact a mask order last June. Mayor Jenny Wilson said she’s worried about what will happen when the order expires.

Utah’s pandemic ‘endgame’ law says, if the state meets certain benchmarks of ICU numbers, cases, and vaccination doses, then public health orders go away.

“We are S.O.L in my opinion after the tenth of April,” Wilson told the County Council last week.

“We don’t have the ability to have a mask mandate for groups under ten, or everything is lifted when these three conditions are met,” she said.

The new law says the entire state needs a 14-day caseload of less than 191 per 100-thousand people, less than 15% ICU occupancy, and 1.63 million doses of vaccine delivered to the state.

Utah is already close to those thresholds.

Utah mask mandates

Mayor Wilson says she is worried about children, who aren’t getting vaccinated yet.


Dropping mask mandate in April is too soon, county mayor says


“I wouldn’t want to be a parent of a young child and have to make a choice of taking them into a grocery store and leaving them in a hot car, which we wouldn’t do. There’s some risk of going into a grocery store without mask mandates,” she said.

She made those comments to the council before several Utah grocery store chains said they would keep the mask requirements in place after April 10th.

Wilson also spoke to KSL’s Dave and Dujanovic recently and said she thought April tenth was too soon. 

Summit and Grand Counties also had their own mask mandates last summer. Then-Governor Gary Herbert put in new statewide guidance in October and then a statewide mask mandate in November.


How To Prevent the Spread of COVID-19 Coronavirus

COVID-19 coronaviruses transmitted from person to person. It is a virus that is similar to the common cold and the flu. So, to prevent it from spreading:

Local resources

KSL Coronavirus Q&A

Utah’s Coronavirus Information

Utah State Board of Education

Utah Hospital Association

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

Utah Coronavirus Information Line – 1-800-456-7707

National Resources

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Commonly asked questions, World Health Organization

Cases in the United States