Houston, Aug 27 (IANS): The Texas Supreme Court has temporarily allowed Governor Greg Abbott's ban on school mask mandates, blocking Bexar County from continuing to defy his executive order.
"The status quo, for many months, has been gubernatorial oversight of such decisions at both the state and local levels," the court said in its ruling on Thursday, granting Abbott emergency relief to enforce his ban amid the coronavirus pandemic, reports Xinhua news agency.
"That status quo should remain in place while the court of appeals, and potentially this Court, examine the parties' merits arguments to determine whether plaintiffs have demonstrated a probable right to the relief sought," the court said.
The decision overrules an earlier district court's ruling, forcing Bexar County to reconsider how to move forward with its health and safety requirements amid new surges of coronavirus infections driven by the highly contagious Delta variant.
Abbott on Wednesday announced an executive order banning Covid-19 vaccine mandates, two days after the Food and Drug Administration granted full approval to the Pfizer vaccine.
"No governmental entity can compel any individual to receive a Covid-19 vaccine," read the order, which excludes places like nursing homes and state-supported living centres.
As a result, public institutions in Texas including state agencies, local governments, universities, public schools and any other entities that receive public funding are banned from compelling employees to get the shots or asking people who use their services for proof of vaccination.
Meanwhile, Abbott asked lawmakers to consider legislation addressing whether state or local governments could issue vaccine mandates, and if so, which exemptions should apply.
Key pandemic metrics in Texas continued to reach levels not seen since the last spike in the winter.
The state is in the back of the pack nationally, with 46.2 per cent of Texans fully vaccinated, according to local media reports.