Florida sheriff bans face masks among officers

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MIAMI, Aug 13, 2020 (AFP) – A Florida sheriff ordered his officers to not
wear face masks — and banned the safety gear from his office — even as the
southern US state has hit record daily coronavirus death tolls.

Sheriff Billy Woods, of central Florida’s Marion County, emailed deputies
Tuesday to tell them of the new mask prohibition, according to local paper
the Ocala Star Banner, citing the message.

“My order will stand as is when you are on-duty/working as my employee and
representing my Office – masks will not be worn,” the email read.

The sheriff allowed for certain exceptions, including for officers who
work in prisons, schools, hospitals or with people suspected of being
infected with the virus.

Woods added that his order was due to “the current events when it comes to
the sentiment and/or hatred toward law enforcement in our country today.”

Woods seemed to be referring to protests against racism and police
violence that swept across the country during the spring and early summer.

He also said that visitors to the sheriff’s office would not be allowed to
wear masks for the same reason: “for identification purposes of any
individual walking into a lobby.”

Mask-wearing is not compulsory in Florida — only recommended — but the
state is one of the most severe hotspots of the epidemic in the US. The state
registered 212 coronavirus deaths on Wednesday after 276 on Tuesday.

In total, 8,765 people have died of COVID-19 in Florida, out of more than
550,901 cases in the state of 21 million.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), like much of the
scientific and medical community, have recommended the use of face masks to
stop the spread of the new coronavirus.

Woods said in a Facebook post that he and other US law enforcement
officials had spoken on the phone to President Donald Trump, who himself did
not wear a face mask in public until months into the pandemic.

Several Facebook users commented on Woods’s post, deriding the sheriff’s
message.

“It’s one thing not to require mask wearing, but to explicitly ban it?
That takes a special kind of stupid,” one said.

Americans come from all over the country to retire in sunny Florida, and
about a third of the 355,000 residents of Woods’s Marion County are older
than 65 — the population most vulnerable to coronavirus.

Woods’s office did not respond to AFP’s request for comment Wednesday.