ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan called on the State Board of Education on Thursday to stop requiring face coverings in schools.
Hogan cited the state’s improving health metrics, a well as the widespread availability of vaccines for school-age children.
“A growing number of medical professionals, parents, and bipartisan state officials throughout the nation are calling for an end to school mask requirements,” the Republican governor wrote in a letter to Clarence Crawford, the board’s president. “In light of dramatic improvements to our health metrics and the widespread availability of vaccines, I am calling on you to take action to rescind this policy.”
Hogan sent the letter on the same day he announced that COVID-19 hospitalizations in Maryland have fallen below 1,000. The governor noted that hospitalizations have dropped by 71% since peaking last month just below 3,500.
While the pandemic has presented challenges for everyone, the governor wrote that ’it has been perhaps most difficult and disruptive for children.”
“The consequences include failing grades, regressed social development, and increased mental health challenges,” Hogan wrote. “If these trends are not reversed quickly, we face the unthinkable prospect of a generation left behind, both academically and socially.”
Hogan also pointed out that Maryland ended the state’s indoor mask mandate in May. While he praised Crawford for supporting in-person instruction and emphasizing social-emotional health, the governor wrote that “now, it is critical to move toward normalcy for students and families by rescinding the school masking policy.”
The policy was adopted by the State Board of Education in Dec. 2021, and enacted by the Maryland General Assembly’s Administrative, Executive, and Legislative Review Committee.
“We must all learn to live with this virus, not in fear of it,” Hogan wrote.
For more information, visit The Washington Times COVID-19 resource page.
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