DENVER (AP) - Aspen has joined a few other Colorado communities in mandating that people wear masks in public.
On Monday, the Aspen City Council approved a public health order that requires face coverings inside businesses open to the public as well as outdoors whenever people cannot stay at least six feet apart. Children under 2 are exempt.
Councilwoman Rachel Richards, who works at Aspen’s City Market, said people are not wearing face coverings while they shop in the grocery store, the Aspen Daily News reported.
“It starts to feel silly that you are doing it but half of your customers aren’t,” she said.
Earlier this month, nearby Glenwood Springs mandated that face coverings be worn by people doing any essential activities outside their home. The order is set to expire Friday.
Last week, Wheat Ridge’s city manager issued an emergency order requiring anyone entering a business in the Denver suburb to wear a mask through May 30. City councilors backed the move and passed a resolution of their own requiring masks, city spokeswoman Sara Spaulding said Tuesday.
The city first took action at the urging of grocery store workers, who are required to wear masks by a state health order and wanted to be protected from customers who were not wearing masks, she said.
The moves come as the state begins to relax restrictions imposed to stop the rapid spread of the coronavirus, though more restrictions remain in place in much of the Denver area. Democratic Gov. Jared Polis has insisted that the success of the fight against the virus depends on people wearing masks when they are out in public.
While the state is not ordering the public to wear masks generally, both hair stylists and their customers will be required to wear masks when hair salons and barber shops are allowed to reopen Friday, said Patty Salazar, executive director of the state’s Department of Regulatory Agencies.
For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia and death. The vast majority of people recover.
In other developments:
- The Archdiocese of Denver said Tuesday that a ban on public Masses, set to expire Thursday, would be extended at least through May 8. It said it was developing guidelines to hold public Masses that would keep people safe and comply with the governor’s “safer at home” order, which limits gatherings in close quarters to 10 people or less.
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