Families Sue Rhode Island’s Governor t

Families Sue Rhode Island’s Governor to Overturn His School Mask
Mandate

My daughter is growing moody and withdrawn. My child’s attention span has
dropped. My daughter can’t breathe. My oldest has allergies and has developed
a rash from wearing a mask all day.

These are just some of the reasons why 16 parents, in a suit filed Thursday in
Superior Court, Providence, have filed a lawsuit seeking to overturn Gov. Dan
McKee’s mandate that masks be worn in all Rhode Island schools.

The lawsuit also claims that McKee lacks the constitutional authority to
impose this mandate, citing limits the General Assembly placed on his
executive powers over the summer.

Last month, McKee called on General Assembly leaders to reconvene to reaffirm
his COVID-19 emergency powers, but the leaders of the House and Senate
responded that there was no need because McKee retained authority over health
and safety matters.

The families — who live in Glocester, Smithfield, North Smithfield, and
Warwick — are seeking a temporary restraining order to halt the mandate.

The suit also questions the science behind masks in school, quoting a recent
article from New York Magazine that said studies used by the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention “do not show evidence that masking children in
school works.”

The author, David Zweig, wrote that many European countries, along with the
World Health Organization, have “explicitly recognized that the decision to
mask students carries with it potential academic and social harms for children
and may lack a clear benefit.”

The plaintiffs say mask-wearing threatens to cause serious and long-lasting
damage on their children’s physical and emotional wellbeing.

MORE PARENTS SUING OVER SCHOOL MASK MANDATES

Parents have filed at least three lawsuits in Pennsylvania challenging Gov.
Tom Wolf’s statewide school mask mandate, which went into effect starting
Sept. 7 and sparked anti-mask protests in some districts.

Jessica LeBlanc of Smithfield blames her daughter’s growing lethargy and
depression on constant mask-wearing.

“The cure is worse than the disease due to the lasting impacts the actions
(of) adults in authority have on this generation,” she wrote. “Our child who
once enjoyed her teachers now fears them. Whenever we tell her to reach out if
she having issues … breathing with the mask, she responds, ‘I’ll get in
trouble.’”

Another plaintiff, Jonathan Barrett of Glocester, wrote that his 6th grade
daughter wonders why it’s OK for her to eat at a restaurant without a mask but
has to wear one while in school.

SCHOOL MASK MANDATES AT A GLANCE

This information is no longer being updated. The last data update was on May
23, 2022.

MASK MANDATE BAN IN EFFECT

1. Florida

2. Georgia

3. Iowa

4. Oklahoma

5. Utah

6. Virginia

MASK MANDATE BAN BLOCKED, SUSPENDED, OR NOT BEING ENFORCED

1. Arizona

2. Arkansas

3. South Carolina

4. Tennessee

5. Texas

MASK REQUIREMENT IN EFFECT

1. Hawaii

PREVIOUSLY HAD MASK REQUIREMENT

1. California

2. Connecticut

3. Delaware

4. District of Columbia

5. Illinois

6. Kentucky

7. Louisiana

8. Maryland

9. Massachusetts

10. Nevada

11. New Jersey

12. New Mexico

13. New York

14. Oregon

15. Pennsylvania

16. Rhode Island

17. Virginia

18. Washington

NOTES

In January 2022, the Missouri attorney general, Eric Schmitt, sued some school
districts that required masks, citing a November ruling by a county judge that
said local health orders tied to COVID-19 were illegal. (The ruling was
interpreted differently by different districts.) The state’s treasurer
announced he would also crack down on schools with mask mandates. In
mid-March, Schmitt began dropping lawsuits against school districts that no
longer required masks. On May 19, 2022 Schmitt announced new lawsuits against
several districts that had reinstated mask requirements.

On Feb. 23, 2022, New Hampshire’s governor announced the state was no longer
recommending universal indoor masking and therefore schools have to end mask
mandates, arguing they violate state education department rules. Soon after,
the department advised districts that the mandates “are inconsistent with”
their rules. There’s disagreement over whether districts still have the
authority to require masks, but at least one district changed its policy in
response. A bill that would have banned mask mandates was vetoed by Gov.
Sununu in May 2022.

Updated 5/23/2022 | Sources: Local media reports, Education Week reporting |
Learn more here

Julie and Paul McKenney of Glocester had similar complaints.

“We believe the social and emotional effects of COVID restrictions (masking,
social distancing) have had on our children far outweigh any health risks from
the virus itself,” they wrote. “During snack time they are told to hurry up,
face forward, not to talk, making our children feel like they are doing
something wrong, that they are going to get in trouble. We need to get these
kids back to the business of being educated in a comfortable, NORMAL
environment.”

Another Glocester resident, Aimee Sayers, is home-schooling her children, ages
4 and 10, because of the COVID health measures adopted by the schools.

“I will not send my child to an establishment being run like a prison,” she
said. “I don’t understand why we are back to square on with restrictions in
schools…Not a single pediatric death in the state and we are continuing to
place restrictions on the least affected group.”

But the state Department of Health said since the start of the pandemic, Rhode
Island has had three children in Rhode Island die who were COVID-19 positive.
However, COVID was not determined to be the primary cause of death in any of
these instances.

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