Altered image falsely suggests that restaurant staff in Maine are required to wear dog cone-style face visors to protect against COVID-19

CLAIM
“Governor of Maine orders restaurant staff to wear COVID visors like dog cones”
DETAILS
Inaccurate: Maine Governor Janet Mills did not issue a statement requiring restaurant staff to wear dog cone-style face visors. Rather, the updated prevention checklists for COVID-19 issued by her administration require only that restaurant staff who opt to wear face shields instead of face masks must wear them upside down.
KEY TAKE AWAY
Restaurant staff in Maine are not required to wear dog cone-style visors as part of COVID-19 precautionary measures. The updated prevention checklists issued by Maine Governor Janet Mills’ administration only require staff who have opted to use face shields instead of face masks to wear them upside down. A photo of a restaurant staff member appearing to wear a dog cone-style face visor at work is altered.

FULL CLAIM: “Governor of Maine orders restaurant staff to wear COVID visors like dog cones”

REVIEW


A false claim that restaurant staff in Maine are required to wear dog cone-like face shields to protect against COVID-19 in compliance with orders from Governor Janet Mills is circulating on social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter. This claim can be traced back to an 18 August 2020 tweet by anti-vaccination activist Sherri Tenpenny, which was later promoted by the website Summit News. NewsGuard, which evaluates the trustworthiness of news sources, has reported that Summit News, which was launched by an editor of the conspiracy theory website Infowars, “severely violates basic journalistic standards.” Nevertheless, the Summit News article has received more than 19,000 interactions on Facebook to date, according to social media analytics tool CrowdTangle.

The claim is inaccurate, as the Governor’s requirements are for face shields, not dog cone-style face visors. The official COVID19 Prevention Checklist Industry Guidance on the website of the Maine Department of Economic and Community Development, which was updated on 14 August 2020, states:

Front-of-house staff may wear a face shield in lieu of a face covering only if the shield is designed to be worn inverted, attaching below the face (e.g. as a collar) and open at the top of the shield, with the shield extending above the eyes and laterally to the ears. Face shields that are open at the bottom, directing breath downward, are not acceptable replacements for face coverings for front-of-house staff.

Only staff who have opted to use face shields instead of face masks are required to wear them upside down. Face shields are not analogous to dog cones, therefore, the claim that a dog cone-style face visor is required for all restaurant staff in Maine is demonstrably false.

The article also misleads readers with a photo apparently showing a restaurant staff member wearing a dog cone-style face visor at work (see below), which was credited to Tenpenny.

altered-photo-dog-cone

However, this photo is actually a composite of two different images. A reverse image search on Google reveals that the majority of the altered photo is derived from a stock photo on iStock (see screenshot below).

istockphoto-restaurant-wait-staff

This photo was then altered to include an image of a woman’s face wearing a dog cone, which is originally from a 2014 Coca-Cola advertisement titled “Coca-Cola Social Media Guard” that can still be viewed on YouTube (see screenshot below).

2014-coca-cola-advertisment

NOTES

This fact check is available at IFCN’s 2020 US Elections FactChat #Chatbot on WhatsApp. Click here, for more.

 

Published on: 27 Aug 2020 | Editor:

Health Feedback is a non-partisan, non-profit organization dedicated to science education. Our reviews are crowdsourced directly from a community of scientists with relevant expertise. We strive to explain whether and why information is or is not consistent with the science and to help readers know which news to trust.
Please get in touch if you have any comment or think there is an important claim or article that would need to be reviewed.

ifcn-fact-checkers-code-of-principles-signatory