Improving COVID-19 trends have St. Paul eyeing an earlier than planned end to the vaccine-or-test requirements instituted last month for restaurants, bars and other entertainment venues.
St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter "is hopeful that he will be able to lift the order this week," spokesman Kamal Baker said Tuesday.
Minneapolis may follow suit. Mayor Jacob Frey "hopes to lift it as soon as evidence supports the decision," city spokeswoman Sarah McKenzie said Tuesday. "The end of the week is a possibility, but he wants to review data with the experts."
Carter and Frey announced the requirements for diners amid a wave of cases and hospitalizations fueled by the omicron variant. The orders took effect Jan. 19, though ticketed events were not required to comply until Jan. 26.
Ramsey County reported more than 700 cases per 100,000 residents in the last seven days, according to data from the county's COVID-19 dashboard updated Monday. Two weeks ago, that rate was more than 1,800 cases per 100,000 residents.
"With a promising downward trend of case counts in Ramsey County, we look forward to discontinuing the requirement as soon as possible," Carter said in a statement Tuesday.
St. Paul's vaccine requirement was set to expire 40 days after it took effect. Baker said Carter does not have imminent plans to lift St. Paul's mask mandate for businesses licensed by the city, but said "the mayor continues to monitor promising downward trends."
Minneapolis' order did not have an expiration date, but Frey said he expected the measure to be temporary.