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US divided over mask wearing and schools reopening as coronavirus cases surge

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Divided Americans clashed anew over mask mandates and the reopening of schools on Friday, with states and localities choosing conflicting strategies in the face of surging coronavirus cases.

In the state of Georgia, Governor Brian Kemp sued Atlanta’s mayor to prevent her from mandating masks, while Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot, leader of the country’s third-largest school district, unveiled a plan to offer both in-person and remote instruction over the objection of the teachers’ union.

“Everybody saying that (wearing a mask) is a violation of their freedom – no, it’s not because a seat belt is mandated and that’s to save your life,” said Sharon Taylor, 48, a cardiothoracic nurse in Atlanta.

With school set to resume in a few weeks, educators across the country have announced a variety of plans to restart teaching amid the pandemic.

California Governor Gavin Newsom, who until now has allowed school districts in his state of 40 million people to set their own policies, issued guidance on Friday that schools could start in-person instruction if they are in counties that have stayed off the state’s monitoring list for 14 days. That list focuses on counties with worsening trends.

But 30 of the state’s 58 counties are on the “watch list” and schools there must remain closed. Among them are Los Angeles, Sacramento and San Diego counties, accounting for nearly 40 percent of the state’s population, where school districts already announced they were opting for full remote learning.

Amid the patchwork of policies, the United States reported a daily global record of more than 77000 new infections on Thursday, raising the total to more than 3.5 million cases, with nearly 140 000 deaths.

Through it all, President Donald Trump has urged a return to normal, stressing the importance of reigniting the economy. The Trump administration and some health experts argue children are better off in classrooms for their development, and also to allow parents to return to work.

But the Chicago Teachers Union contends classes should only be taught remotely because “there is no safe way to reopen anything during a pandemic,” union President Jesse Sharkey said.

Public health experts have pleaded with people to cover their mouths and noses amid a wider cultural divide in the United States.

Trump and his followers have resisted a full-throated endorsement of masks and have been calling for a return to normal economic activity following pandemic-induced shutdowns.

Top US infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci on Friday said he “would urge the leaders – the local political leaders in states and cities and towns – to be as forceful as possible in getting your citizenry to wear masks.”

Kemp, a fellow Republican and Trump supporter, urged all Georgians to wear masks for at least four weeks but said mandates were unenforceable and suggested they would hobble the economy.

“Brian Kemp does the bidding of President Trump,” Atlanta’s Democratic Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, who has tested positive for the coronavirus, told CNN on Friday. “Over 130 000 people in our state have tested positive for COVID-19 … and this governor is taking taxpayer money to sue me personally.”

Louis Charles, 68, of Altanta sided with the mayor on Friday as he wore a mask, all alone, sorting through his mail outside a post office.

“It’s wrong,” Charles said. “The mayor is trying to help people. This is a pandemic. How much worse does he want it?”

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