Decided to separate this from other COVID news for the week to focus on the Texas angle.
Local mask mandates have spread beyond the Dallas and San Antonio
that were the focus of my blogging in last week's coronavirus roundup. As of the end of last week, state appeals courts
had upheld these mandates. The Fifth Circuit in Dallas
bluntly said Abbott was not entitled to relief. (Sadly, a district court over in Cowtown upheld Abbott there and FWISD does not appear to have appealed.) Other jurisdictions, including many larger school districts, have sued Abbott. Kenny Boy Paxton
has appealed the losses to the Texas Supreme Court even as federal education secretary Miguel A. Cardona has said that the feds stand with school districts on anti-masking and using federal education money as part of this. (AFAIK, no federal amicus brief has been filed, though.)
The Texas Supremes Sunday night
granted Paxton a temporary stay and writ of mandamus. Dallas ISD Superintendent Michael Hinojosa has said that, pending a Dallas County Aug. 24 hearing before a state district judge, it will be masks on ANYWAY. And, per my blogging from last week, if I know Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins, he'll file new orders and make new pleadings as needed. See his response to the Supremes' ruling:
There you go.
Jenkins then also said:
OK.
Update: A disability rights group is suing Abbott in federal court, claiming his ban on school mask mandates
violates the ADA by depriving disabled kids of the right to a full education.
Other Texas coronavirus news?
Abbott has also been
federally enjoined from sending state troopers to "tail and cage" buses with COVID-positive Ill Eagles.
Meanwhile, Texas nursing homes
are killing residents by not mandating staff vaccines, as well as being way behind the curve on vaccines for those residents.
Bell County (Temple, Belton, Killeen) is
arguably the state's most urbanized antimasking ground zero.
Denton city supposedly has a mask mandate but the mayor said he won't enforce it and in Kroger last Saturday I saw zero effectiveness.
No comments:
Post a Comment