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Judge鈥檚 Ruling on the CDC Mask Mandate Highlights the Limits of the Agency鈥檚 Power

The role that the federal government plays in containing future epidemics will hinge on the outcome of an appeal of this week鈥檚 court ruling that overturned the mask mandate for travelers on airlines, trains, and the nation鈥檚 mass transit systems.

A federal court judge in Florida said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had overstepped its authority in requiring masks on public transportation, a mandate that legal experts considered well within the bounds of the agency鈥檚 charge to prevent the spread of covid-19 across the nation.

The CDC said late Wednesday that it had asked the Department of Justice to appeal the decision 鈥 a move the DOJ left up to the agency. That will put the issue before one of the nation鈥檚 most conservative-leaning appellate courts, the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Public health experts worry the ruling, unless overturned, will hamper the agency鈥檚 ability to respond to future outbreaks.

鈥淚f CDC can鈥檛 impose an unintrusive requirement to wear a mask to prevent a virus from going state to state, then it literally has no power to do anything,鈥 said public health law expert , faculty director of the O鈥橬eill Institute for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown University.

The outcome of the appeal will shape what the agency does the next time an outbreak occurs. And the ongoing debate highlights a civics lesson: The U.S. gives most responsibility for public health measures to states. The federal role has been more limited but could be further clarified by Congress.

鈥淐ongress has authority to pass a law,鈥 said , executive vice president at the State Policy Network, a coalition of mainly conservative and libertarian groups. 鈥淚f they think the CDC does not have enough power, give them more. If they think it has too much, they should curtail it.鈥

But the case also comes as Congress 鈥 and the country 鈥 remains sharply divided over just about everything having to do with covid, so passing any kind of legislation could prove impossible. That leaves the courts to interpret what is already on the books.

The latest case, filed in Florida by a group opposed to medical mandates, centers on a federal law called the Public Health Service Act of 1944. The law gives federal officials the to prevent the spread of communicable diseases. Those could include 鈥渋nspection, fumigation, disinfection, sanitation鈥 and other measures that in its 鈥渏udgment may be necessary."

Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle, a Trump administration appointee to the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida, ruled Monday that the CDC had exceeded its authority under that law. A large section of discusses whether masks meet the definition of a 鈥渟anitation鈥 measure.

Federal judges are often called to consider whether a federal administrative action meets statutory requirements. Mizelle鈥檚 ruling, while giving a nod to the importance of controlling the covid epidemic, said that wearing a mask 鈥渃leans nothing鈥 and at most only 鈥渢raps virus droplets,鈥 concluding that it 鈥渘either 'sanitizes' the person wearing the mask nor 'sanitizes' the conveyance."

It isn鈥檛 the first time during the pandemic that the CDC has had its authority questioned. The agency suffered a blow last year when the Supreme Court said it by imposing an eviction ban during the pandemic.

, with the conservative American Legislative Exchange Council policy group, sees connections between the eviction and mask mandate cases. 鈥淭he CDC used its authority or at least argued that its authority should extend to much more broad public health emergency responses than was actually granted,鈥 he said.听The recent ruling, Hauenschild argued, simply offers further definition of the powers the CDC and local jurisdictions have 鈥 even during an emergency.

鈥淲hat this case does is it kind of establishes a baseline that says, 鈥榃e're going to keep the public health authorities to their statutory grant of authority,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat's an important distinction because state legislatures or even Congress have weighed the policy implications. They've realized there's a balance here.鈥

Other legal experts say this case is a bit different because the CDC鈥檚 authority over interstate travel is more clear-cut than any power it might have over rental units. 鈥淭he transportation mask mandate was a textbook example of CDC鈥檚 mandate and its legitimate powers,鈥 Gostin said.

Meanwhile, the requirement to wear masks on planes, trains, and subways is on hold 鈥 and major airlines wasted no time in telling domestic passengers they can take them off.

States, not the federal government鈥檚 CDC, have the broadest authority over public health efforts to control disease. Their public health agencies, or elected officials, have a range of authorities, including the ability to require masks in schools or businesses. Governors can issue stay-at-home orders during public health emergencies. And health departments routinely track outbreaks of communicable diseases and inspect restaurants for pathogens or vermin.

But states don鈥檛 have authority over interstate commercial flights.

鈥淧ublic health is primarily governed at the local level, but the minute a disease crosses a state line or crosses our national borders, then the federal government has a role,鈥 said Dr. , executive director of the American Public Health Association.

The pandemic has caused even state authority to be questioned. Backlashes to local mask mandates and other requirements have prompted more than half of states to roll back public health officials鈥 powers.

鈥淥ne day there will be a really scary virus that will come to the shores of the U.S. and we will look to the CDC to protect us and what we鈥檒l find is an agency that is frightened to act, gun-shy, and always looking over its shoulder,鈥 Gostin said.

He and other public health experts said it might also be time for Congress to review and clarify the agency鈥檚 authority.

鈥淭raditionally, CDC鈥檚 got very little power,鈥 said , co-director of the Center for Health and Risk Communication at the University of Georgia. He spent more than a decade working in communications at the CDC, including during the 2009 H1N1 flu pandemic.

鈥淢ost of what CDC does really is about, 鈥楬ere's our recommendation 鈥 we strongly urge you to comply,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淎nd then it's up to typically state and local health departments or states in general to figure out how you're going to achieve high compliance.鈥

But such recommendations rely on trust in agencies, something that has cratered during the pandemic. And, said Nowak, public health measures at all levels 鈥 federal, state, and local 鈥 have landed in court, in part because of misperceptions about how willing the American public would be to comply. 鈥淎 lot of it was based on assumptions about compliance 鈥 that there would be high compliance by the public, that they would share the sense of urgency, and would place a high priority on stopping the spread of a virus,鈥 Nowak said.

The American Public Health Association鈥檚 Benjamin said there鈥檚 little time to waste. He said the reason public health officials need established lines of authority is because public health emergencies 鈥 whether that鈥檚 the emergence of a new variant of covid-19 or some future pandemic 鈥 require quick action.

鈥淲e will not have time to fool around with the courts making a decision,鈥 he said.

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