Wolf’s move comes as the delta variant drives new COVID cases in the Commonwealth.
Pennsylvania is now averaging more than 3,200 new, confirmed infections daily — 20 times the number of cases it was reporting on a typical day in early July. More than 1,700 people are hospitalized with COVID-19, up sevenfold since last month. Deaths have doubled in two weeks to about 20 per day.
“The reality we are living now is extremely different than just one month ago,” said Beam on Tuesday.
Of the 1.3 million documented cases of COVID in Pennsylvania since the start of the pandemic, 15% have been in those ages 0-19.
About two-thirds of Pennsylvania adults are fully vaccinated. Most students, however, are not yet eligible for vaccination.
As many districts fully reopen for the first time in nearly 18 months, rules around masking have taken center stage and continued to take an overtly partisan tone.
In the Central Bucks Schools District — Southeast Pennsylvania’s second-largest district — the board’s rejection of a mask mandate has triggered a lawsuit from parents. Last week, a federal judge ordered the North Allegheny School District and its board to require face coverings for students, staff and visitors, siding with a group of parents in the Pittsburgh suburbs who had sued.
Opponents of masking mandates say they violate parental prerogative and question their effectiveness, pointing to nations, such as Great Britain, that don’t require masks in schools.
Proponents say they’re crucial to keeping schools safe through the current surge, especially because vaccines aren’t yet approved for children under 12. The CDC says modeling suggests masks continue to provide important protection as the nation’s vaccination campaign continues.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.