FRANKFORT, Ky. — After Republicans in the General Assembly voted to ban statewide school mask mandates late Thursday evening, Kentucky reported its fifth highest number of new cases in one day and surpassed 8,000 COVID-19 deaths, according to state data.
What You Need To Know
- With Friday's COVID-19 report, Kentucky has surpassed 8,000 deaths from the virus
- A record number of 2,541 are currently hospitalized with COVID-19
- One of Friday's 32 deaths was 19 years old
Gov. Andy Beshear announced 5,197 new cases of COVID-19 and 32 new deaths in Friday's report – that brings the death toll of COVID-19 in Kentucky to 8,003. Over 620,000 cases have been confirmed as of Friday.
I am also reporting our fifth highest day of newly reported cases, with 5,197, and a record day for hospitalizations and Kentuckians in the ICU. We are in a dangerous place. Please, help us encourage folks to get vaccinated and make sure to mask up indoors. 2/2
— Governor Andy Beshear (@GovAndyBeshear) September 10, 2021
The latest data from the Kentucky Department for Public Health shows some 2,541 Kentuckians hospitalized with the virus. 698 are in the ICU and 448 are on a ventilator.
Kentucky lawmakers grabbed the quarterback role to direct the response to COVID-19 this week, but when it came time to lead, the GOP-led legislature “punted” the decision on mask-wearing in schools to local boards, Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear said Friday.
A day after a special legislative session ended, Beshear gave a blistering response to the legislature’s decision to halt statewide mask mandates to combat Kentucky’s worst surge of the coronavirus pandemic. He declared that the legislature “owns this pandemic moving forward.”
The legislature passed bills Thursday that scrapped a statewide mask mandate for public schools and imposed a ban on any statewide mask rules until June 2023. Beshear vetoed the mask-related language but Republican lawmakers overrode him before ending their three-day session.
Beshear used the football analogy to slam the legislature’s actions, especially in nullifying the state school board’s requirement that anyone in public K-12 schools wear a mask. The Republican-backed measure shifted masking decisions to local school boards.
“The masking decision the General Assembly made was wrong. And it was also a punt,” Beshear told reporters. “I’ve been willing to make the calls, to take the hits, to make the plays. And the legislature asked to go in ... at QB. And what did they do? They punted on first down. When you’re in charge, it means you’ve got to make the decision. This one was to push the decision to others.”
The governor said he would have ordered mask-wearing in indoor public places if he still had the authority to do so. The special session marked a power shift in the state’s response to the virus.
Beshear said Friday the ban on blanket masking requirements comes at a dangerous time, as the delta variant puts record numbers of virus patients in Kentucky hospitals and intensive care units.
Asked what his message would be to school districts, the governor made the case for local masking requirements. It’s the “best way” to keep children learning in classrooms, he said.
“There is only one decision, one right answer where you don’t endanger children and your entire community,” he said. “This thing is burning through Kentucky like nothing that we have ever seen.”
Many lawmakers weren’t wearing masks when they voted to block statewide masking rules — which the governor noted at his news conference Friday.
“You can’t say you’re pro-mask while refusing to wear one in a crowded room,” he said.
Beshear praised other actions taken during the special session, including the extension of the pandemic-related state of emergency. That continues a number of actions taken by the governor to combat COVID-19. Examples include waiving licensing requirements for out-of-state medical providers and preventing price gouging.
Among the 32 Kentuckians lost to COVID-19 on Friday, Beshear said one was just 19 years old. The state's rolling positivity rate is hovering right at 14% as of Friday.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.