By CBSNewYork Team

August 27, 2021

-CBS New York

 

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork/AP) — Masks will not be required when the US Open tennis tournament gets underway next week in Flushing Meadows, Queens.

Fans won’t need to mask up or show proof of vaccination to attend.

“The goal is not to prevent all cases of COVID. The goal, really, is to be certain that we don’t have an outbreak of COVID that’s going to be unusual or that we would regret,” Dr. Brian Hainline, a U.S. Tennis Association first vice president and member of its medical advisory group, said on a conference call with reporters on Wednesday. “We’re still relying on the goodwill of people. The unvaccinated — although it’s not going to be enforced — they really should be wearing masks. I expect many vaccinated individuals are going to be wearing masks, as well.”

The decision is drawing some criticism. City Councilmember Mark Levine called it “extraordinarily reckless,” saying it “needs to be fixed.”

Last year, fans were banned from the Open due to COVID, but this year, the tournament will be operating at full capacity.

The U.S. Tennis Association says it is following virus protocols from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the New York City Department of Health.

While players and their team members are allowed to go out in the city during the tournament, a graphic distributed by the USTA reads in bold lettering: “It is highly recommended that everyone exercise caution, especially given the delta variant. Try to avoid large, crowded indoor settings. Socialize only among your team when indoors. Keep masks on indoors even with other fully vaccinated persons who are not in your support team.”

Players don’t need to be vaccinated to compete; they will be tested for COVID-19 when they arrive in New York and then every four days. A positive result will force the player to isolate for 10 days and withdraw from the tournament.

Spectators won’t need to fill out health questionnaires and will not have their temperatures taken to access the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. To eat indoors there, anyone 12 and older will need to show proof they’ve had at least one dose of a vaccine. All courts are considered outdoor venues — including, thanks to their air-filtration systems, Arthur Ashe Stadium and Louis Armstrong Stadium, even if their retractable roofs are closed because of rain.

That was also the case this year for the two arenas with roofs that can be closed at Wimbledon. But for much of that tournament, held in June and July, capacity was reduced to 50%, fans had to show proof of a recent negative COVID-19 test and they were told to wear masks while wandering the grounds of the All England Club.

c. CBS NEW YORK