Starting next week, people must wear face masks or similar coverings inside Minneapolis stores and other indoor gathering spots, or risk a $1,000 fine.
When Mayor Jacob Frey signed an emergency regulation on Thursday requiring the masks, he joined a slew of other city officials across the country who have ordered people to cover their faces in public in hopes of slowing the spread of the coronavirus.
The new requirement in Minneapolis came just one day after Gov. Tim Walz cleared the way for more businesses to reopen with limitations on June 1.
"We have a responsibility to the entire state to step up our efforts to prevent community spread," Frey said. "Short of universal testing, cloth masks are an important mechanism for protecting our public health. Why? Because there's a good chance, and a good reason people wouldn't know they're carrying COVID-19."
Health officials say roughly 80% of coronavirus infections result in mild or no symptoms, meaning many people could carry the virus without knowing it.
City officials think Minneapolis is first in Minnesota to require face masks indoors. The city has reported an outsized number of COVID-19 cases: the city had 2,176 confirmed cases as of Wednesday evening — or roughly 12% of the statewide total.
Frey's order, which goes into effect at 5 p.m. Tuesday, requires people over the age of 2 to wear a covering over their nose and mouth when they are inside "indoor spaces of public accommodation." It includes in that definition retail stores, government buildings, schools, recreation centers, hotels and skyways, among other locations.
Mask mandates have varied widely across the country. Los Angeles requires masks anytime someone is in public, inside or out.