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Lifting DC鈥檚 Strict Indoor Mask Mandate Triggers Mix of Confusion, Anxiety and Relief
鈥淲e have a bunch of rule followers,鈥 says Claire Bengur, the owner of Atlas Salon. 鈥淚 am so thankful that my salon is in D.C.鈥 (Krishna Sharma/KHN)
Postcard From the Nation鈥檚 Capital

Lifting DC鈥檚 Strict Indoor Mask Mandate Triggers Mix of Confusion, Anxiety and Relief

A mile northeast of Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., along what鈥檚 known as the H Street corridor, about half the people crowding the sidewalks are wearing masks. Perhaps it鈥檚 because they know that when they step into any business or establishment here, they will have to put one on anyway. The capital, after all, is one of the few remaining cities or states nationwide that mandate masks for public indoor spaces 鈥 at least it has, until today.

鈥淲e have a bunch of rule followers,鈥 said Claire Bengur, the owner of Atlas Salon, which has been in the neighborhood since 2018. 鈥淚 am so thankful that my salon is in D.C.鈥 She鈥檚 been glad to have a mask requirement, she said, because it鈥檚 impossible to do clients鈥 hair without standing close to them.

Bengur is unsure how to feel about Mayor Muriel Bowser鈥檚 decision to roll back the mandate. As the covid-19 pandemic has worn on, many Washingtonians have come to view masking as something between a habit and a security blanket. Even when the rule was lifted for about two months starting in May, many people continued to use masks in places like grocery stores. While face coverings will still be required in such as public transit and schools, the District of Columbia will no longer require them in private businesses like Atlas Salon. And that has triggered mixed feelings.

Claire Bengur, owner of Atlas Salon on the H Street corridor in Washington, D.C., has operated here since 2018. She is unsure how she feels about the rollback of the city鈥檚 mask mandate. (Krishna Sharma/KHN)

Bengur had been debating whether to continue to ask clients to wear masks because the district gives businesses that option. But at the same time, 鈥渢here is a certain level of excitement 鈥 like I don’t want to wear masks forever.鈥 She ultimately decided to let clients choose for themselves. Bengur and her staff feel more at ease than they did earlier in the pandemic because her salon requires proof of vaccination.

A block away at the H Street Northeast location of Solidcore, a boutique fitness chain that started in the district, CEO Bryan Myers had an it鈥檚-about-time take. 鈥淭his will be game-changing for our clients鈥 comfort while working out and the health of our industry,鈥 he said.

H Street in northeast Washington, D.C., is a bustling corridor of small local businesses, from live music venues and pie shops to salons and fitness clubs. (Krishna Sharma/KHN)

On the whole, Washington has been especially cautious when it comes to covid, which has helped the city avoid the worst of the pandemic. Now, the mayor is moving away from ordering protective measures and instead offering recommendations based on vaccination status.

This change can partly be explained by adjustments in the district health department鈥檚 goal, which no longer is to reach zero cases. Viewing covid as more of an 鈥渆ndemic鈥 disease 鈥 one regularly found in particular populations 鈥 Bowser explained her decision this way: 鈥淭his does not mean that everyone needs to stop wearing their masks. But it does mean that we are shifting the government鈥檚 response to providing you risk-based information.鈥 While she鈥檚 reserved the right to reinstate the mandate, Bowser has doubled down on her decision. 鈥淨uite frankly, I don’t expect many D.C. residents will change their current behavior,鈥 she said Friday during an interview on a

The shift has some residents feeling perplexed, if not nervous, especially given the timing.

Children ages 5 to 11 just became eligible for vaccination, so they are not fully immunized yet, and infections are likely to climb with the holidays coming. Cases . That neighboring Montgomery County reinstated its mask mandate over the weekend leaves some people all the more baffled. A pushing the mayor to reconsider. Meanwhile, the White House, just steps from the mayor鈥檚 office, is not lifting its mask requirement, noting that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends one .

鈥淚’m a little bit iffy about the whole thing,鈥 said Sandra Basanti, co-owner of Pie Shop, which offers fresh pies and live music on H Street.

Basanti has two young children who are not yet fully vaccinated. She鈥檚 unsure whether she鈥檒l require customers to wear masks but expects to 鈥 at least at first. She鈥檚 hesitant because staffers received pushback when Pie Shop became one of the first venues in town to impose a vaccine requirement. She would like to see Washington follow New York City鈥檚 example and require proof of vaccination to enter public spaces such as shopping centers, sports arenas and theaters.

Sandra Basanti co-owns Pie Shop, which offers fresh pies and live music on H Street in Washington, D.C. She is unsure whether she鈥檒l require patrons to wear masks. (Krishna Sharma/KHN)

鈥淲e were just kind of waiting for the city to make that call for us so that we wouldn’t have to fight people on it, and they never did,鈥 said Basanti. 鈥淚 just don’t want to make the staff feel like they now also have to be the mask police again.鈥

鈥淏eing the mask police sucks,鈥 she added.

The owner of the dive bar across the street agrees. 鈥淚’m very exhausted with arguing with people about masks and all the different things,鈥 said Tony Tomelden of the Pug, which will not require patrons to wear masks but will insist that they be vaccinated. 鈥淥nce a week, at least, there’s some kind of argument with some customer.鈥

Tomelden worries that talk of endemic covid means leaders are moving on without addressing all the pandemic-induced needs of small businesses beyond masking. 鈥淚’m so tired of begging for a break on bills and for grants and that kind of thing, but we’re still not fully recovered,鈥 he said.

Like residents, public health experts are not in agreement on whether the district is acting prematurely.

鈥淚t makes sense,鈥 Dr. Lynn Goldman, dean of the Milken Institute School of Public Health at George Washington University, said of the mayor鈥檚 decision. She reasoned that, thanks to vaccination, the district has few covid hospitalizations and deaths. 鈥淎t the same time 鈥 we don’t really know how it’s going to go.鈥

About half the people walking along H Street in northeast Washington, D.C., are wearing masks.(Krishna Sharma/KHN)

Meanwhile, Dr. David Dowdy, an associate professor of epidemiology at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said he generally recommends against easing restrictions at a time like this. 鈥淢y expectation is that we’re likely to see something of an increase in cases over the winter,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd then this probably is going to become after that point in time something of an endemic disease.鈥

鈥淲e鈥檝e come this far. It probably is not too difficult to keep our guard up for a couple more months,鈥 he added. 鈥淏ut the flip side of that is we’ve been doing this for a really long time and people are very tired.鈥

Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, sees Washington鈥檚 experience as emblematic of what can happen when leaders do not clearly explain their response to covid or why mask mandates are imposed or withdrawn.

Part of the challenge, Osterholm said, is that the explanations are unsatisfying. 鈥淲e do not understand why surges start or stop,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hy they start and stop surely can’t be tied to human mitigation strategies. What can be tied to those is how big those surges get.鈥