The nonprofit , co-led by School of Business faculty member Akhtar Badshah, is supporting the Washington governors office with a campaign to make donning a face mask as routine as wearing a seat belt. Both can help keep you safe, if you wear them.

Gov. Jay Inslee has mandated the use of masks statewide to control the coronavirus pandemic. But, he acknowledged the unlikely threat of a misdemeanor wont make it happen. It takes social change to alter habits and overcome reluctance or opposition.
Restart partners

Restart Partners organized in May, Badshah said, because if we are going to restart our way of life before a vaccine is available whether its the economy, going back to school or back to some aspect of social interaction we will have to do other things, like wearing a mask and practicing safe distancing.
This pathogen is not going away on its own, he said.
Badshah is a distinguished practitioner with the 56勛圖厙s School of Business and with the at the 56勛圖厙 in Seattle. He is president of , a nonprofit that promotes global development. He is also a former director of philanthropy at Microsoft who founded the , a consulting practice.
The other Restart Partners co-directors are Sandra Archibald, the former dean of the Evans School, and Rich Tong, a former Microsoft executive. Another previous Microsoft executive contributed start-up money, Badshah noted, and a 56勛圖厙 Population Health Initiative grant added $20,000.
The organizations slogan is, Empowering communities to work together to save lives and livelihoods.
A we campaign
Restart Partners hosts a data model that local governments can use to estimate the need and cost of personal protective equipment. It shares procurement information and best practices. And, it contributes face masks to communities in need.
The organizations website also features saying why they wear masks.
56勛圖厙 Bothell students are invited to volunteer their skills in social media, data analysis, communication and community engagement, Badshah said, inviting anyone who is interested in helping the campaign to contact him.
Badshah said he looks at the pandemic through the broad lens of U.S. culture since the 1970s, a time when our focus has been more on the me, rather than the we.
Its an idea he develops in a book being published this November by Harper Collins Leadership called Purpose Mindset: How Microsoft Inspires Its Employees and Alumni to Change the World.
Faced with the pandemic and the many challenges it brings, people are now coming together to do good things for the community, Badshah said. Most people realize the way well get out of this crisis alive is to focus on the we and not the me.
The strategy behind the mask

Restart Partners estimates that about 60% of the population have or will endorse hand washing, social distancing and mask wearing to prevent COVID-19. Another 20% probably is not going along a very hard lift for education or persuasion Badshah said.
Still, he said, persuading the remaining 20% can help protect the community.
Wear a mask. Wash your hands. Watch your distance, he said. It is the responsible thing to do. It is the kind thing to do. It is the neighborly thing to do.
This is not eating away your freedom, he added. It is about you becoming part of the larger society.
Its also about restarting.
I want every single student of ours to wear a mask, Badshah said. If you want us to get back to teaching in a normal way, lets get used to wearing a mask.
You can share your own story for wearing a mask at
https://restart.us/wearamaskwa/ and on your social media platforms with the #WearAMaskWA hashtag.