New York State ends COVID-19 mask mandates on trains, transit

FILE PHOTO: Subway riders wearing protective face masks exit the shuttle train during the coronavirus pandemic at the Times Square stop in New York City, U.S., March 11, 2021. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
New York state on Wednesday (Sep 7) ended a 28-month-old COVID-19 mandate requiring masks on trains, buses and other modes of public transit, as well as at airports and in ride-share vehicles, Governor Kathy Hochul said.
"Starting today masks will be optional," Hochul said at a news conference, citing recent revised guidance from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "We have to restore some normalcy to our lives ... Masks are encouraged but optional."
Hochul said the mask requirements were also being lifted for taxis and ride-share vehicles, airports, homeless shelters, correctional facilities, and detention centers.
New York first adopted the mandate in April 2020 as COVID-19 was rampaging in the New York City area.
"It's always been a visible reminder that something is not normal here, and it was there for the right reason. It protected health and now we're in a far different place," Hochul said.
In recent months, however, many riders in New York had stopped observing the mask policy.
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) said it had updated electronic signs on subways and in stations to make clear mask use is now optional.
"It became more and more difficult to justify and to enforce a mask requirement as so much of the city and so many other places were opening up," MTA Chief Executive Janno Lieber said at a news conference.
In April, the Biden administration decided to no longer enforce a US mask mandate on public transportation after a federal judge in Florida ruled the directive was unlawful. New York declined to adopt the Biden policy in April.
Hochul said masks will still be required in some places like adult care facilities and some other medical facilities.
The Justice Department appealed the Florida judge's ruling invalidating the transportation mask mandate, but a federal appeals court has not yet set the case for oral arguments.
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