EXCLUSIVE: house-of-representatives are challenging Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) infectious-disease guidelines for children, saying the ongoing mask and school restrictions are harming kids and “jeopardize an entire generation’s development.”
Republican Whip Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., and Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., led a letter to rochelle-walensky” target=”_blank”>CDC Director Rochelle Walensky<
The lawmakers ask Walensky to schedule a staff briefing with House Oversight Committee Republicans by Feb. 7 to explain the science and justification around the ongoing restrictions that have kept kids out of classrooms and children’s faces covered.
The lawmakers take aim at the mask guidelines for children 2 and older, saying they are hindering early childhood development and are out of step with mask requirements elsewhere. The letter points out that the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control recommends against primary school children wearing masks and that the World Health Organization (WHO) says children under 6 should not be required to wear masks.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky testifies before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee about the ongoing response to the COVID-19 pandemic in the Dirksen Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill on Nov. 4, 2021, in Washington, D.C.
(Chip Somodevilla)
“Many of America’s peer nations around the world — including the U.K., Ireland, all of Scandinavia, France, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and Italy — have exempted children, with varying age cutoffs, from wearing masks in classrooms with no evidence of an uptick in school outbreaks in those countries relative to schools in the U.S.,” the lawmakers wrote.
The GOP leaders also say it’s time to roll back the 14-day quarantine policy for day care and early child care centers that has created a “logistical nightmare” for parents when entire preschool classes are shut down abruptly for two weeks.
“These isolation policies are ineffective, especially in light of the transmission and infection rate for this age group,” the Republicans wrote. “The CDC’s guidelines make it impossible for parents to maintain any regular work schedule or find childcare on short notice. This uncertainty is a logistical nightmare for parents and creates further disruption for children.”
A child wears a face mask on the first day of New York City schools during the COVID-19 pandemic in Brooklyn Sept. 13, 2021.
(REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo)
In addition to Scalise and Comer, the top Republican on the House Oversight Committee, the letter was signed by Reps. Jim Jordan of Ohio, Mark Green of Tennessee, Nicole Malliotakis of New York and Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa. Green and Miller-Meeks are both medical doctors.
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The authors point to the devastating impacts school closures have had on students, including learning loss and a mental health crisis. They say studies have shown that coronavirus transmission among children is low, and symptoms tend to be milder than for adults, “yet, the CDC has refused to follow the science.”
“America’s children are paying — and will continue to pay — the price for the CDC’s decisions for years to come,” they wrote.