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Mixed Reactions Follow California’s Statewide Mask Requirement

NY State Senator Introduces Bill Banning State Employees From Using TikTok

New York State Senator Chris Jacobs has introduced a new bill proposing to ban state employees from downloading and using the Chinese video-sharing app TikTok on their government-issued phones. “On the surface TikTok appears to be a harmless tool for creating short videos with music when in reality it is a data mining instrument that violates our privacy and could threaten our security,”  Jacobs said in a June 22 press release from his office. He added: “It is just too easy for the information it collects to be accessed by the oppressive Chinese government waging a fierce economic war against our state and our country.” The bill, named “No TikTok on Government Devices Act” (S8600), was introduced by Jacobs last Thursday. It would add new language to section 103 of…

Mixed Reactions Follow California’s Statewide Mask Requirement

ORANGE, Calif.⁠—A sign at the entrance of MMD Antiques shop in Orange, California, reads, “Masks are NOT necessary. PLEASE COME IN!”

Owner Matt De Vaul intends to keep that sign up despite Governor Gavin Newsom’s statewide order requiring masks be worn in public spaces. “I want people to feel normal in my store” De Vaul told The Epoch Times.

Mixed Reactions Follow California’s Statewide Mask Requirement A sign in MMD Antiques lets customers know that masks are optional in the store, in Orange, Calif., on June 19, 2020. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)

In Orange County, mask requirements have especially been contentious.

Dr. Nichole Quick resigned as the county’s chief health officer after her order requiring face coverings in public spaces met with a strong backlash, including personal threats.

Her interim replacement, Dr. Clayton Chau, downgraded the requirement to a strong recommendation on June 11. Newsom issued his order requiring masks statewide on June 15.

Some sheriffs throughout the state have said they will not enforce the new mask order. Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes is one of them.

“It is each person’s responsibility to wear a face covering and follow the recommended safeguards in order to stop the spread of COVID-19; it is not law enforcement’s responsibility to enforce it,” he told ABC7.

De Vaul isn’t worried about consequences. “This is another complete overreach of power,” he said. “In my opinion, it’s not a law and it’s not enforceable. Any citation would not hold up in the court of law.”

The court of public opinion is another matter.

De Vaul’s decision to open his shop before officially permitted to do so, and his stance on protective gear in his store, have met with mixed reactions. “I know I lost customers in the last three months, but I have also gained new ones,” he said.

Mixed Reactions Follow California’s Statewide Mask Requirement A mask lays on the sidewalk across the street from MMD Antiques in Orange, Calif., on June 19, 2020. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)

Newsom’s mask orders come with a few exceptions. For example, customers at restaurants who maintain a 6-foot distance from others may remove their masks.

People with medical conditions or disabilities that make mask-wearing dangerous or particularly difficult for them, along with children under the age of 2, do not have to wear masks.

Regarding enforcement, “We’re not looking to fine people,” Newsom said, according to the LA Times. “We’re looking to educate people, encourage people,” he said.

“And to the extent that people flaunt and abuse, which may be the exception, then we have many tools in the tool kit,” Newsom said. Regulatory agencies, such as the Division of Occupational Safety and Health, may be called upon to “exercise a little bit of persuasion,” he said.

The governor’s office did not reply to further inquiry from The Epoch Times about enforcement as of press deadline.

Newsom has said the mask requirement is necessary because many Californians have ignored recommendations to wear masks, and he’s worried about hospitalization numbers rising.

While De Vaul flouts the order, many are following it⁠—and some worry the supply of masks will be further strained.

Mixed Reactions Follow California’s Statewide Mask Requirement A man and woman wearing masks walk into a grocery store in Playa Vista, Calif., on June 23, 2020. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)
Mixed Reactions Follow California’s Statewide Mask Requirement Steve Snook, a pastor at Metropolis Church in Santa Monica, Calif., wears a facial covering as he hands out bags of food to low-income individuals near his church, on June 22, 2020. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)

As lunch hour hits in Playa Del Rey, Los Angeles, a group of men clad in construction vests files into a cramped Subway restaurant. Maintaining distance between people is difficult there, but all are wearing masks.

Construction technician Matt Thalin, 30, like other essential workers, has encountered challenges with the high demand for masks in Southern California.

“Some of the jobs we do require masks as we deal with mold and chemicals that are worse than COVID,” Thalin told The Epoch Times.

“I’ve been using the same mask for months,” he said. The masks they need for those jobs are of a relatively high grade. “So, it’s tough when work masks are all extinct. Not being able to buy masks for some jobs is the most frustrating. Otherwise, it hasn’t affected us much.”

He said, “Most clients we’ve worked with haven’t cared if we’ve had masks or not.”

Focus News: Mixed Reactions Follow California’s Statewide Mask Requirement

House Will Debate the Great American Outdoor Act in July

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) announced Monday that the House will debate and may vote to amend the Great American Outdoors Act, which would inject billions to maintain neglected national parks and permanently fund land and water conservation efforts. “The House will consider the Great American Outdoors Act under a rule on the floor during the work period at the end of July.  This bipartisan bill, which passed the Senate by a vote of 73–25, will permanently fund the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) and address the maintenance backlog at our national parks,” Hoyer said in a press statement. The Senate passed the legislation with bipartisan support last week, and it also has bipartisan support in the House. Hoyer said he will bring up the measure under regular rules that…