Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

'It is now time to open up Texas 100 percent,' Gov. Greg Abbott says

Gabriel C. Pérez/KUT
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott leads a roundtable discussion on law enforcement and public safety priorities, in Austin on Jan. 21.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced he's lifting statewide executive orders that limit occupancy for businesses and require Texans to wear masks in public spaces.

"Effective next Wednesday, all businesses of any type are allowed to open 100%," Abbott said.

 

The governor said businesses can limit capacity or "implement additional safety protocols" if they wish and that counties can restrict occupancy if COVID-related hospitalization rates rise above 15% for seven straight days.

However, Abbott said, officials can't "impose a penalty of any kind" on Texans for refusing to wear a mask or on businesses for failing to "mandate customers or employees wear face coverings."

"Under no circumstance can a county judge put anybody in jail for not following COVID orders and no penalties can [be] imposed for failing to wear a facemask," he said.

The governor said county judges can place caps on businesses if COVID hospitalizations rise above that 15% threshold, but that occupancy limits for businesses cannot go below 50%.

"At this time ... people and businesses don't need the state telling them how to operate," he said.

While the state has seen a drop-off in new cases and deaths in recent weeks, Texas is still far behind in vaccination efforts. Texas is currently 54th among all 50 states, territories and protectorates in the share of vaccinated residents. Just over 12% of the overall population has received one dose of a vaccine, while 6% have received both doses, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Last week, the Department of State Health Services announced it had received its largest shipment of vaccines in 12 weeks and that the state has so far administered more than 5 million doses.

City and county leaders across Texas are wary Abbott's order could lead to another spike in COVID cases and deaths, as was the case after he rescinded some limitations on businesses last October.

Just before Abbott's announcement, Austin's top doctor said removing the mask mandate could lead to a "substantial surge."

"The danger that we face by reducing some of those restrictions – particularly, [a] masking mandate ... certainly has the potential to initiate a surge at the moment when we have the potential to really drive the numbers into the ground," Dr. Mark Escott, interim medical director for Austin Public Health, said.

Travis County Judge Andy Brown and Austin Mayor Steve Adler released a letter ahead of Abbott's news conference urging him to continue the mandate.

After the governor's announcement, Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins urged folks to continue wearing masks in public, tweeting that they "should focus on what doctors, facts and science say is safe; not on what Gov. says is legal."

Related Content