: As CDC reverses mask policy, Apple, Costco, Walmart and others have some soul-searching to do

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The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reversed course on its masking guidance this week — and the move has important implications for retailers and other businesses. Some restaurants, for example, are already telling customers, “No vax, no service” as the delta variant spreads.

The CDC now recommends that people, regardless of vaccination status, wear a mask indoors in areas where there’s “substantial and high transmission” of COVID-19, as well as in K-12 schools. In May, the agency relaxed face mask guidance, saying it was no longer necessary for fully vaccinated individuals to wear one indoors.

Speaking to reporters this week, CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky highlighted her concerns around the highly contagious delta variant and the considerable share of people who remain unvaccinated. She defined “substantial and high transmission” as 50 or more new cases per 100,000 people over a seven-day period.


The CDC reversal further signifies that the pandemic is far from over, even as many Americans go shopping again, travel, attend concerts and sporting events and go to bars and nightclubs.

More than 2,000 U.S. counties, or 63% of all counties, are experiencing substantial or high transmission, according to a county-level CDC tracker of cases. “Many more infections that are occurring now in the United States are a result of unvaccinated people compared to vaccinated people,” Walensky told SiriusXM on Wednesday.

The reversal further signifies that the pandemic is far from over, even as many Americans go shopping again, travel, attend concerts and sporting events and go to bars and nightclubs, activities once deemed too unsafe. Airlines require masks to be worn, but other establishments have a mixed bag of mask policies.

On Wednesday, Bloomberg reported that Apple
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plans to require both employees and staff to wear masks from July 29 at more than half of its 270 U.S. retail stores, citing the following company memo:

“After carefully reviewing the latest CDC recommendations, and analyzing the health and safety data for your local area, we are updating our guidance on face masks for your store.” (Apple did not respond to request for comment.)

Wearing masks indoors at retailers, gyms and other outlets would not only protect other customers, it would protect employees, according to the United Food and Commercial Workers labor union, which represents 1.3 million food and retail workers, including pharmacy technicians and grocery-store employees.

“A national mask mandate is the only way we can finally take control of this virus and every retail CEO in the country must recognize that now is the time for all of us to mask up so we can keep our economy open and communities safe,” the union said in a statement released this week, according to Reuters.

Will other retailers follow suit?

Businesses can require patrons to wear masks even if they’re vaccinated. Walmart
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and Costco
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among other large retail chains, dropped mask wearing for vaccinated shoppers after the CDC issued its mask guidance in May. The companies were not immediately available for comment on whether they were updating their mask policies.

A July 26 update to Costco’s COVID-19 website, however, said its locations “will follow the face mask regulations of the applicable state and local jurisdictions.” A Walmart spokesperson told CNN on Wednesday that the company had followed CDC guidance during the pandemic, adding, “This one is a little more complicated due to county-by-county discretion, but expect to hear more from us soon.”

Ultimately, state and local governments don’t have to adopt the CDC’s recommendations, but Mark Cohen, the former CEO of Sears Canada Inc., believes all businesses should do just that. If he were still the head of a retailer, he added, he “would insist on vaccination and masks for all employees and masks for all customers,” he said. (The company did not respond to a request for comment.)


‘When all else fails, the overriding issue of health and survival in this crisis outweighs all other issues.’


— Mark Cohen, the former CEO of Sears Canada Inc.

“Mask usage in stores will comfort some customers and turn others off,” said Cohen, currently the director of retail studies at Columbia University. “When all else fails, the overriding issue of health and survival in this crisis outweighs all other issues.”

There’s a lot at stake. Equinox, which owns SoulCycle and Blink Fitness, saw a 55% spike in new members in New York City in the week after the CDC relaxed its guidance on mask wearing in May, Harvey Spevak, executive chairman of Equinox Group, told CNBC. (Equinox did not respond to a request for comment.)

ClassPass, a fitness class booking platform, saw a 32% increase in bookings at Boston-based studios from May 29, when Massachusetts lifted its mask mandate to the beginning of July, The Boston Globe reported. For his part, Cohen said gyms and fitness studios should put health and masks ahead of customer convenience. 

Ahead of the CDC’s announcement, CEO Brian Dodge of the Retail Industry Leaders Association, a trade association, asked customers to abide by local business policies and “respect employees and their fellow customers who may continue to wear masks for the safety of themselves and their family.”

And in response to the CDC’s updated guidance, the National Retail Federation, a trade organization representing retailers, said “it is truly unfortunate that mask recommendations have returned when the surest known way to reduce the threat of the virus is widespread vaccination.”

“The CDC’s latest guidance underscores the urgency for more Americans to become fully vaccinated so we can all emerge from this pandemic,” the group said.

Also see: How Silicon Valley is returning to work with a mask non-mandate

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