The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has updated its guidance on mask-wearing to concentrate on COVID hospitalizations, hospital capacity, and newly reported infections, permitting most of the state to drop the mandate.
However, after New York saw the number of new COVID-19 cases rise nearly 40 percent in the past week, the CDC has advised certain areas of the state to re-enact mask mandates.
The CDC also offers a color-coded map — with counties designated as orange, yellow, or green — to help guide local officials and residents.
In green counties, local officials can drop any indoor masking rules. Yellow means people at high risk for severe disease should be cautious, and orange designates places where the CDC suggests masking should be universal, regardless of vaccination status.
As of Monday, April 25, these New York counties were in the “orange” zone:
- Albany;
- Rensselaer;
- Clinton;
- Broome;
- Tioga;
- Chemung;
- Steuben;
- Yates;
- Orleans;
- Monroe;
- Niagara;
- Erie;
- Seneca;
- Wayne;
- Cayuga;
- Seneca;
- Onondaga;
- Oswego;
- Jefferson;
- St. Lawrence;
- Herkimer;
- Oneida;
- Madison;
These counties were in the “yellow” zone:
- Nassau;
- Westchester;
- Schenectady;
- Saratoga;
- Warren;
- Essex;
- Franklin;
- Hamilton;
- Cortland;
- Tompkins;
- Livingston;
- Wyoming;
- Genesse;
- Fulton;
- Jefferson;
- Lewis.
“The good news is we have tools to address this,” State Health Commissioner Dr. Mary T. Bassett stated. “I urge all New Yorkers to remain vigilant and take steps to protect themselves and their families.”
CDC Director Rochelle Walensky previously cited protection from immunity rising both from vaccination and infection as reasons for altering the guidance on masks.
“Anybody is certainly welcome to wear a mask at any time if they feel safer wearing a mask,” she said during an earlier news briefing to announce the changes.
“We want to make sure our hospitals are OK and people are not coming in with severe disease,” she continued. “Anyone can go to the CDC website, find out the volume of disease in their community and make that decision.”
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