Riders queue up for the Vineyard Transit Authority bus last summer.
Ray Ewing

Boards of Health Set to Revisit Indoor Mask Mandate

Martha’s Vineyard boards of health will take up the question of whether to continue the mandatory Islandwide indoor mask mandate this week, as regional and national guidance shifts toward a looser approach to face coverings in public.

Martha’s Vineyard boards of health will take up the question of whether to continue the mandatory Islandwide indoor mask mandate this week, as regional and national guidance shifts toward a looser approach to face coverings in public.

The six boards of health have posted a meeting for noon on Wednesday. The meeting will be held over Zoom.

Indoor mask mandates returned to all six Island towns in mid-August, after a brief reprieve last summer. But with case counts steadily low in recent weeks and a changing picture both on and off-Island, public health officials health are now set to revisit the mandate.

Speaking to the Gazette by phone Monday, Edgartown health agent Matt Poole, who is also a member of the Chilmark board of health, said it is likely that the mandate will eventually be lifted. Whether that comes as soon as Wednesday remains a question.

“We’re definitely headed toward no masks,” said Mr. Poole. “The timeline is a wild card.”

Vineyard public schools took the first steps to loosen mask requirements over the past two weeks, with school committees voting to suspend the mandates. But the final decision rests with the boards of health.

“I think the schools’ decision to fall back on local health is appropriate,” Mr. Poole said.

He also said it’s easy to forget how much progress has been made during the pandemic, including the introduction of vaccines.

“Two years ago a case of Covid-19 was a huge deal for anyone who learned they had it,” Mr. Poole said. “We’re recognizing the severity of the illness is not what it used to be.”

But a spike in cases early this year fueled by the Omicron variant brought the Vineyard’s highest weekly case totals to date and the first Covid-related death on the Island. At more than one point, the Martha’s Vineyard Hospital was treating several Covid patients at once.

Since the spike, steep declines in case totals have led to a leveling off of the virus in the past two weeks. In their regular report Monday, the boards of health said zero cases had been recorded on the Vineyard for two straight days.

Mr. Poole said he believes the direction the Vineyard is headed in is reassuring.

“I think we can be more optimistic than we’ve been in recent years,” he said.

Still, he said the pandemic may be long from over, and the conversation surrounding Covid may completely change in the coming months.

“I think we’ve underestimated the progress, but we’re not out of the weeds yet,” Mr. Poole said.

He added that Islanders need to remain vigilant, and he noted that risk assessment changes on a person-to-person basis.

“I think people really need to be thoughtful about the decisions they make,” Mr. Poole said, adding:

“We’ve absolutely come a long way.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 02/28/2022 - 16:23

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Howard Martha’s Vineyard& NY

How about following the DESE, MA Dept. of Public health and the CDC’s updated guidelines and lift the mandates immediately like other towns off island! If these 3 groups are in alignment, why aren’t we??? There is NO reason for delaying this!!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 02/28/2022 - 16:39

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CH Oak Bluffs

Great that the BOH is meeting to discuss the mask policy. We are definitely in a different place today than we were last summer and even a few months ago. This has become an endemic virus that we will have to learn to live with. While masking - using the N95 or equivalent and wearing it properly - can reduce the spread we need to face the reality that a lot of the masks are worn to be in compliance and offer less than 30% protection due to type; method of wearing; and lack of proper handling procedure - pockets; rearview mirrors; around the neck etc. Let's move to optional masks as soon as we can, and let residents own their own personal health decisions.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 03/01/2022 - 06:45

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CLC Edgartown, MA

Go mask optional and allow people to choose for themselves. Mandates of any kind must end now!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 03/01/2022 - 06:56

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Mark Edgartown

About time MV embraced the science and adopted policy that the rest of the country has instituted. No more fear mongering please.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 03/01/2022 - 08:49

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Kit O'Toole Oak Bluffs

After two years of masking and now with the new cdc guidance, it should be mask optional. Everyone who wanted to be vacinated has been. Everyone who wants to mask is still free to do so.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 03/01/2022 - 09:05

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Joanne the island

All island Board of Health you have done a great job. So far. You have the appreciation and confidence of most islanders. Do not blow it!!

You have followed the science to impose mask mandates -- now follow the science to lift them. Do not go rogue and impose some artificial, not based on reality, delay in lifting the mandates. "Three weeks after spring break" makes no sense and is not based on anything!!!

If you make up from nothing a so-called "cautious approach," you will lose credibility if the time comes to reimpose the mandate.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 03/01/2022 - 11:03

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Melanie Tisbury

Dukes County CDC Guidelines: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/your-health/covid-by-county.h…

It's time to move on from this and let people see each other's faces again when out and about. Some places may want to keep a masks on policy and that us up to them, no judgement. Some people too. But the option to return to normalcy should be there; wearing masks everywhere and the social implications of that should not be the so-called "new normal". Seeing a smile, a grimace, or a blank expression makes all the difference in our daily lives. The absence of lip reading has proven to be a challenge to the hearing impaired; I myself am affected by it. In short it would be nice to see you.

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