Written by GARY D. ROBERTSON
North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper vetoed legislation Thursday that would allow K-12 students — with their parents’ permission — to opt out of mask-wearing mandates in school that a dwindling number of districts still have in place for COVID-19, questioning its efficacy for public health.
The legislation was approved by the Republican-controlled General Assembly last week as the Democratic governor held a news conference encouraging boards of education to end broad indoor mask requirements amid falling COVID-19 transmission rates and rising vaccination numbers.
Republicans who advanced the bill said the opt-out measure was needed to affirm the rights of parents to make health-related decisions for their children and lamented the obstacles masks have caused for learning and social formation in classrooms.
But Cooper, in his veto message, said a 2021 law that left mask-mandate decisions to local school boards received bipartisan support, and “that is still the right course.”
“Passing laws for political purposes that encourage people to pick and choose which health rules they want to follow is dangerous and could tie the hands of public health officials in the future,” he added.
It was not immediately clear whether Republicans in charge of the legislation would try to override the veto. The Senate and House had approved the measure with slight veto-proof margins, with help from a handful of Democrats.
Statements about the veto by House Speaker Tim Moore and Senate education committee chairwoman Deanna Ballard did not specifically mention an override attempt.
“Actions speak louder than words, and the governor should do more than ‘encourage’ schools to lift their mask mandates,” said Moore, a Cleveland County Republican. “Return this decision back to parents.”
The issue is becoming increasingly moot for now as the omicron variant has lost steam and Cooper made his appeal to local governments to end indoor mask requirements. At least 95 of the state’s 115 school districts have now approved some mask-optional policy, according to the North Carolina School Boards Association. Masks are still required on school buses, in keeping with federal rules.
The Wake County and Charlotte-Mecklenburg school boards voted separately this week to adopt optional masking starting March 7 — the date that new K-12 school guidelines from Cooper administration health officials encouraging the end of mandates take effect.
The vetoed measure also would have made clear that unmasked students can’t be treated differently than those with face coverings. And monthly school board votes on face mask policies required through the 2021 law also would have been repealed.
The legislature has not overridden a Cooper veto since December 2018, when the GOP held veto-proof majorities. He has issued 43 vetoes since early 2019, according to General Assembly data.
Photo via Julia Wall/The News & Observer.
Related Stories
‹

NC Lawmakers OK Bill Giving Student Opt-Out to Mask MandatesWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON North Carolina parents could permit their K-12 students to opt out of mask-wearing mandates set by local education boards inside schools in legislation approved by the General Assembly on Thursday. The bill now heads to the desk of Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper, who as the final vote was being completed held […]

GOP Leaders Want to Let NC Students Opt Out of Mask MandatesWritten by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS North Carolina Republicans want to allow parents to let their children opt out of local school board mandates to wear masks. House Speaker Tim Moore said Friday in a news release that legislation will be proposed soon — after redistricting is likely wrapped up next week — that would allow […]

Families Rally To Urge North Carolina Lawmakers to Fully Fund Private-School VouchersNorth Carolina parents held a rally to urge Republican legislators to fully fund scholarships for children to attend private schools.

North Carolina Measure Limiting LGBTQ+ Curriculum Heading to Governor's DeskWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON North Carolina lawmakers on Thursday finalized legislation touted by Republicans as giving parents greater authority over their children’s public school education and health care, with limits on LGBTQ+ instruction in early grades a key provision. The Senate, which passed the measure the day after the House pushed through some alterations, […]

N. Carolina Justices Weigh Who Has School Spending AuthorityWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON North Carolina’s highest court returned Wednesday to an education funding case originating almost 30 years ago, hearing arguments over whether a judge had unilateral power to allocate hundreds of millions in taxpayer dollars to address unresolved student inequities. Attorneys for students, their parents and state government’s executive branch contend it […]

NC Parents’ Bill With LGBTQ Limits Going to Senate FloorWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON Republican legislation that supporters argue would give North Carolina parents more say over their children’s public schooling and health, but critics say would intimidate and harm LGBTQ youth, is heading to the Senate floor after another affirmative committee vote Tuesday. The “Parents’ Bill of Rights” legislation includes a provision that would […]
![]()
Training to Spot Child Abuse, Trafficking to Start Soon for NC School PersonnelThroughout 2020, staff at North Carolina schools will be required to participate in new training programs on reporting child abuse and sex trafficking. The wave of new training required in 2020 stems from updates to one of North Carolina’s sexual assault laws. Passed by the General Assembly in October and signed by Governor Roy Cooper […]

North Carolina Adopts New Trump-Backed US House Districts Aimed at Gaining a Republican SeatWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — North Carolina Republican legislative leaders completed their remapping of the state’s U.S. House districts on Wednesday, intent on picking up one more seat to help President Donald Trump’s efforts to retain GOP control of Congress in next year’s midterm elections. The new boundaries approved by the […]

North Carolina Court: GOP Can Narrow Governor’s Appointment Powers on Some BoardsWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Decade-long political quarrels over legislative and executive powers in North Carolina advanced Wednesday as a state appeals court permitted the Republican-controlled General Assembly to chip away at the Democratic governor’s appointment authority for several key commissions. The judges also said lawmakers went too far remaking other boards. A […]

North Carolina GOP Announce Plans to Vote on New House Map Amid Nationwide Redistricting BattleNorth Carolina Republican legislative leaders announced plans to vote on redrawing the state's U.S. House district map for 2026 elections.
›