Governor Extends Statewide Mask Mandate

(Madison) Governor Tony Evers on Tuesday declared a new public health emergency in Wisconsin following a recent spike in cases among young people and issued a new face coverings order effective immediately through November 21.

Read the full press release:

Executive Order #90 is available here.ย Emergency Order #1 is available here.ย Both orders are effective immediately and will expire after sixty days or with a subsequent superseding order. The governor previously declared a public health emergency under Executive Order #82, which remains in effect.

โ€œWe continue to learn more about this virus, but what we do know is that we are facing a new and dangerous phase of the COVID-19 pandemic here in Wisconsin,โ€ said Gov. Evers. โ€œWe are seeing an alarming increase in cases across our state, especially on campus. We need folks to start taking this seriously, and young people especiallyโ€”please stay home as much as you are able, skip heading to the bars, and wear a mask whenever you go out. We need your help to stop the spread of this virus, and we all have to do this together.โ€

With the start of the school year, Wisconsin is seeing a surge in cases, especially among young people. In fact, 18 to 24-year-olds have a case rate five times higher than any other age group. This significant increase has only occurred within the past month and appears to be driven by in-person social gatherings. Last week, eight Wisconsin cities were listed among the top twenty cities in the United States where COVID-19 cases were rising fastest, and six of those eight cities have University of Wisconsin System campuses.

โ€œThe current surge among young people is concerning, but it is important to remember that this increase in cases is not confined to college campuses,โ€ said Department of Health Services Secretary-designee Andrea Palm. โ€œStudents come to these campuses from across the state, and we worry about the effect their return from an area with a high infection rate could have on their home communities. That is why it is imperative we take action to curb transmission now โ€“ to protect residents of Wisconsin in every corner of the state.โ€

Wisconsin is now experiencing unprecedented, near-exponential growth of the COVID-19 pandemic with the daily number of new cases rising from 678 on August 31st to 1,791 on September 21st, a 2.6-fold increase in three weeks, driven in part by the unprecedented number of infections among 18-24 year-olds.

โ€œWe need to remember that most respiratory viruses see their peak activity in Wisconsin between late fall and early spring,โ€ said Dr. Ryan Westergaard, Wisconsinโ€™s Chief Medical Officer and the State Epidemiologist for Communicable Diseases. โ€œWe need to do everything we can now to slow the spread of COVID-19 and prepare for the winter. That is why we need to continue wearing masks and practicing physical distancing. It is also why we encourage everyone to get a flu shot this year; the flu shot cannot protect you from COVID-19, but by helping protect you from the flu, it helps strengthen our COVID-10 response here in Wisconsin by preserving hospital and testing capacity.โ€

On July 30, Gov. Evers issued Executive Order #82 to declare a public health emergency as a result of a spike in COVID-19 cases in counties throughout the state. At the same time, Gov. Evers issued a statewide face covering mandate. New cases of COVID-19 slowed down in August as a result of the mandate, but as campuses reopened the last several weeks, there has been a new surge in cases across our state. With todayโ€™s new face covering order, Wisconsin residents ages five and older are required to wear a face covering when they are indoors or in an enclosed space with anyone outside their household or living unit.