loader image
Tuesday, January 6, 2026
87.3 F
McAllen
- Advertisement -

Hidalgo County Health Authority extends mask mandate in schools

Translate to Spanish or other 102 languages!

Hidalgo County Health Authority Dr. Ivan Melendez has extended a mandatory mask mandate for all area public and private schools after consulting with the superintendents of local school districts and the medical community. Image for illustration purposes.
Hidalgo County Health Authority Dr. Ivan Melendez has extended a mandatory mask mandate for all area public and private schools after consulting with the superintendents of local school districts and the medical community. Image for illustration purposes.

Mega Doctor News

- Advertisement -

EDINBURG – Hidalgo County Health Authority Dr. Ivan Melendez has extended a mandatory mask mandate for all area public and private schools after consulting with the superintendents of local school districts and the medical community.

Dr. Ivan Melendez

“Based on all the information I have gathered, including polling 135 doctors and many area superintendents, 100 percent of those polled want the mandate to continue,” Dr. Melendez said during an hour-long meeting on Wednesday with area superintendents. “The mandate should be continued until vaccines are available to everyone,” he said.

The mandate was initially ordered by Dr. Melendez in his capacity as Health Authority on August 13 as area schools began preparing for a new school year. The mandate includes the option for individual school boards to vote to opt out of a mandate.

- Advertisement -

During Wednesday’s meeting, area superintendents expressed overwhelming support for continuing the mask mandate, saying that the rate of infection in their districts was far lower than originally feared and they attributed that, in part, to the use of facial coverings. Area doctors also agreed that the masks were having a positive effect.

Dr. Melendez said that he is encouraged by the downward trend of the number of cases. But COVID infections remain the number one health problem for school aged children in the county. He believes that facial coverings played a significant role in keeping the numbers from being far worse. As of Thursday, a total of 3,704 students and staff had tested positive for COVID-19 since the mask mandate was initiated. These numbers reflect several staff deaths due to COVID, according to area superintendents.

Hidalgo County Judge Richard F. Cortez said he agreed with the decision, particularly because the order gives schools the flexibility to opt out of the mandate at any time. “While the number of infections among students and staff appear to be slowing, I urge caution not only among our schools, but the community at large,” Judge Cortez said. “This order gives area schools the flexibility they need to exercise caution, while giving them the option to opt out of the mandate at any time of their choosing.”

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

- Advertisement -

More Articles

DHR Health Celebrates 100th ECMO Patient

Driven by its mission to heal even the most critically ill patients across the Rio Grande Valley, DHR Health recently provided extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) to its 100th patient since the program’s inception in 2023. ECMO is medicine’s most sophisticated life support system that can save lives even when a ventilator and strong medications cannot.

How to Use AI to Improve Your Workout Routine

Without breaking a sweat, artificial intelligence can perform all kinds of impressive tasks. So if you’re looking to turn up the heat on your usual workout, or wondering how to start one, should you turn to a chatbot?

Diet or Supplement: Best B12 Source?

Vitamin B12 is important for several things, includingTrusted Source proper formation of red blood cells and central nervous system function

Hope for Knee Pain Sufferers: An Advanced Nonsurgical Treatment

Rutgers Health experts have expanded treatment options for knee osteoarthritis, a condition caused by the gradual breakdown of knee cartilage because of obesity, injuries, genetics or aging, often leading to chronic pain and limited mobility.
- Advertisement -
×