Just before Abbott’s announcement, Austin’s top doctor said removing the mask mandate could lead to a “substantial surge.”
“The danger that we face by reducing some of those restrictions – particularly, (a) masking mandate … certainly has the potential to initiate a surge at the moment when we have the potential to really drive the numbers into the ground,” Dr. Mark Escott, interim medical director for Austin Public Health, said.
Travis County Judge Andy Brown and Austin Mayor Steve Adler released a letter ahead of Abbott’s news conference urging him to continue the mandate.
Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins urged people to continue wearing masks in public, tweeting that Texans “should focus on what doctors, facts and science say is safe; not on what gov. says is legal.”
Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo reiterated the call for Texans to continue wearing masks, saying “this is all on us now.”
Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner and San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg also decried the governor’s decision, suggesting it wasn’t backed by science and that it was a “huge mistake.”
Austin-area Democratic state Rep. Eddie Rodriguez said the decision served as a “dangerous distraction” from criticism over the state’s response to last month’s crippling winter storm.
“I think it’s way premature. I think people are potentially going to die because of it,” he said. “I think we’re going to see surges in Covid cases, and as usual, low-income people and people of color are going to be suffering because of it.”
While the state’s new orders preempt city and county restrictions, mask mandates on federal property and on public transit are still in effect. Capital Metro says it will continue to follow federal guidelines and require passengers to wear masks.
Editor’s Note: Andy Brown is on the board of the Capital of Texas Media Foundation, the parent nonprofit of the Austin Monitor.