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VICTORY! MIT drops controversial new mask policy prohibiting requests for others to mask up
Colleges across the country are lifting mask mandates put into place during the COVID-19 pandemic. At MIT, the updated mask policy included a provision that restricted free speech. (Shutterstock.com)
After pushback from 鶹ýIOS, Massachusetts Institute of Technology rescinded its new mask policy that wrongly prohibited faculty, students, and staff from asking others to wear face coverings on campus.
In a posted yesterday to its website, MIT changed its campus mask policy, which last week “request[ing]” that others wear masks. The new language allows such requests, and narrows the prohibition to pressuring or coercing others to mask:
In situations where there are power imbalances, individuals are asked to be especially thoughtful in requesting a person to alter their masking practice since even well-meaning requests can be perceived to carry pressure or coercion.
MIT its COVID-19-related campus-wide mask requirement on March 14, consistent with similar updates from state and local authorities. In an email to faculty and students that MIT also posted to its , the new policy stipulated that departments “may not establish their own policies or requirements related to face coverings” and warned faculty that they “may not request or require that others wear masks.”
The university’s ban on mere requests that others mask up violated MIT’s free expression policies.
But as 鶹ýIOS shortly thereafter, the university’s ban on mere requests that others mask up violated MIT’s free expression . 鶹ýIOS wrote to MIT on March 17 and called on the university to “expediently update its policy and publicly clarify that students and faculty are not broadly banned from requesting that others wear masks — requests that recipients are free to deny, accept, or ignore.”
The updated policy no longer includes that requirement and clarifies that anyone who is “asked to wear a mask in an area where it is not required or to remove a mask in a particular situation [is] free to refuse.”
鶹ýIOS commends MIT for moving quickly to update the policy.
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