Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz welcomed new federal COVID-19 guidance Tuesday allowing vaccinated people to go mask-free in many outdoor settings, even though it will have little practical impact in a state that mostly required them indoors.
The relaxed mask guidance from the CDC is another sign of progress against the pandemic that Walz said could result in a further scaling back of restrictions and capacity limits in the next week in Minnesota.
"Masks coupled with vaccines is really the path out of this thing," said Walz, who hoped that the CDC announcement would incentivize vaccination and encourage continued mask-wearing in places where it remains necessary.
Minnesota's mandate since July 25 has required mask-wearing for people in public indoor settings and for workers outdoors when they can't maintain social distancing to do their jobs. The CDC guidance doesn't affect that, instead advising that people who have been fully vaccinated — which means it has been 14 days since their final doses — do not need masks outdoors in small social settings and when exercising alone.
Mask-wearing will continue regardless of vaccine status in large-group outdoor settings such as Minnesota Twins games at Target Field, where the practice is required under a combination of state rules for large entertainment venues and Major League Baseball policies.
The Twins on Tuesday announced a new slate of ticket offerings at a state-mandated 20% capacity through May 30, but Walz said those limits could be expanded for future events because "it looks like we are seeing some plateauing" in pandemic activity.
"The moves coming now are the moves back to normal," Walz predicted, "because already you can be in restaurants, you can be in movie theaters, we have kids in school. We're doing most of those things. The next moves are capacity limits coming off and some of those things."
The signs that a third wave of pandemic activity has peaked in Minnesota included a decline in the seven-day average positivity rate of COVID-19 diagnostic testing from a peak of 7.5% on April 8 to 6.6%.