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Thursday, April 23, 2026 at 1:05 PM

Face coverings required at military installations

Face coverings required at military installations

By Steve Ranson, Nevada News Group

Service members and civilians are required to wear face coverings effective April 6 at all Department of Defense installations.Photo: Adelola Tinubu/U.S. Navy

Service members and civilians are required to wear face coverings effective Monday at all Department of Defense installations including those in Northern Nevada and Mono County, Calif., to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

Defense Secretary Mark Esper issued a military-wide memo April 5 and said individuals should make their own face coverings.

This new policy will affect Naval Air Station Fallon and the Naval Aviation Warfighting Development Center, the Nevada National Guard in Carson City, Fallon and Reno, the Navy-Marine Reserve Center at Stead, the Hawthorne Army Depot and the Marine Corps Mountain Warfare Training Center northwest of Bridgeport and the commissary and exchange at Coleville.

“Effective immediately, to the extent practical, all individuals on DoD property, installations, and facilities will wear cloth face coverings when they cannot maintain 6 feet of social distance in public areas or work centers (this does not include in a service member’s or service family member’s personal residence on a military installation),” according to the memo.

This includes all military personnel, DoD civilian employees and contractors, family members and all other individuals on DoD property, installations and facilities. At NAS Fallon, this includes the commissary, Navy Exchange and Child Development Center.

“Exceptions to this requirement may be approved by local commanders or supervisors, and then submitted up the chain of command for situational awareness,” the memo stated. “Security checkpoints may require the lowering of face covers to verify identification.”

The DoD said individuals may fashion their face coverings from common materials such as clean T-shirts or other cleans cloths or from household items. The covering must cover the nose and mouth areas.

“Medical personal protective equipment such as N95 respirators or surgical masks will not be issued for this purpose as these will be reserved for the appropriate personnel,” the memo stated.

Additional requirements from the Navy call for the face coverings to be conservative in nature, not offensive and acceptable to wear with uniforms. They must also fit snuggly but comfortable against the face.

The Nevada National Guard has added the following requirements for uniformed personnel:

• Coverings should be fabricated with solid colors, not of bright, florescent colors (i.e., pink, yellow, orange).

• Avoid unusual or outlandish designs (i.e., polka dots, paisley, flag patterns.)

• Inappropriate graphics or wording on a covering will not be allowed.

• Coverings can be handmade or purchased. Fabric ideally matches current or past military uniforms. Fabric acquired from current or past T-shirts including white undershirts is acceptable.

The move to require face coverings on DoD installations comes two days after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a national recommendation that citizens wear nonmedical face coverings while in public.

The DoD said it will continue to implement all measures that are needed to mitigate risks associated with the pandemic.


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Comment author: Jack & Nancy CookComment text: Wonderful man. Created a precious family with Linda. Will always respect and admire his contribution to teaching at FHS.Comment publication date: 4/18/26, 10:27 AMComment source: Howard David JacksonComment author: JeffDickersonComment text: Very well reported, even though our motion was denied.Comment publication date: 4/15/26, 11:05 AMComment source: Judge allows Fernley City Council to proceed with corrective agenda item in Lau expulsion caseComment author: Todd fossumComment text: Hi my name is todd fossum i'm clarence's stepson, I was wondering if he had any siblings. I think he said he had a sister that just survived cancer. If she can get ahold of me or any buddy, my number is 916. 3 4 3 1 1 7 7.Thank you have a blessed dayComment publication date: 1/16/26, 4:33 PMComment source: Clarence L Shields C Comment author: Carl HagenComment text: So just curious, what is the point of a franchise agreement if it is not exclusive?Comment publication date: 12/15/25, 4:18 PMComment source: Council approves non-exclusive franchise agreement for waste collection C Comment author: Christine S GleasonComment text: In the first photo, the woman in the middle, wearing the black shirt, is SaraH Jean Gleason. She is not an FHS Leadership Student but is the person who is responsible (with the help of her father) for starting the Fernley Community Thanksgiving Dinner in 2011. She attended this year's dinner while home from Arizona State University, where she is working on her PhD.Comment publication date: 12/8/25, 8:52 PMComment source: About 400 meals served at Community Thanksgiving DinnerComment author: SusanComment text: RIP Sean. Prayers to the family, sorry for your loss.Comment publication date: 9/25/25, 1:11 PMComment source: Sean Everett Turner
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