Maryland Expands Face Covering Requirement, Unemployment Benefits, Issues Travel Advisory


Maryland Governor Larry Hogan has issued a new Executive Order (EO) requiring all people older than five to wear face coverings in indoor public spaces and outdoors where social distancing is not possible. Additionally, the Maryland Department of Health (MDH) has issued a travel advisory cautioning residents not to travel to states with high rates of COVID-19 and recommending testing and quarantining if residents travel to those locations.

The EO and travel advisory come as Maryland experiences increased COVID-19 cases and represent a pause in the Governor’s Maryland Strong: Roadmap to Recovery. Maryland is in phase two. (See our article, Maryland Phase Two Reopenings: Indoor Dining, Malls, Gyms.)

Expanded Face Mask Requirement

Pursuant to the EO, people older than five must wear masks when they are:

The EO provides exceptions to the expanded face mask requirement. People do not need to wear face coverings in the following circumstances:

MDH Travel Advisory

Pursuant to the travel advisory, the MDH “strongly recommends” that residents refrain from non-essential travel outside of Maryland. Additionally, the MDH recommends the following:

Essential workers, as referenced in the Governor’s Office of Legal Counsel’s Interpretive Guidance, are exempt from the quarantine recommendation if they are returning or traveling to Maryland to perform essential work. Employee commuters who leave or enter the state daily and have work-based COVID-19 screening procedures also are exempt.

Counties With Heightened Face Covering Requirements

Baltimore CityBaltimore County, and Anne Arundel County have imposed their own, more restrictive face covering orders that require residents to wear face masks in all indoor public spaces and outdoors when social distancing is not possible.

The Baltimore City face mask requirement applies to those age three and older. The Anne Arundel County and Baltimore County requirements apply to those age two and older.

Expanded Unemployment Benefits

The Maryland Department of Labor (MDL) is offering an additional 13 weeks of unemployment insurance to claimants who have exhausted the maximum period for collecting the benefits.

Under federal and state law, the Extended Benefits program is available to claimants who have exhausted both their 26 weeks of regular unemployment benefits and 13 weeks of the Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation (PEUC) assistance. The extended benefit period began on May 31, 2020, but was not payable until recently, because claimants must exhaust PEUC before receiving extended benefits.

Upon exhausting regular and PEUC benefits, the MDL will issue written notification to all potentially eligible claimants informing them they can apply for the Extended Benefits program. If a claimant is determined to be eligible, the weekly benefit amount will be the same as the claimant received under the regular and PEUC programs.

Reopening orders contain extensive requirements creating compliance issues that can vary significantly depending on the specific state or local jurisdiction. Jackson Lewis attorneys are closely monitoring updates and changes to legal requirements and guidance and are available to help employers work through the complexities involved with state-specific or multistate-compliant plans.


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National Law Review, Volume X, Number 219