WISCONSIN SUPREME COURT STRIKES DOWN GOVERNOR'S STAY-AT-HOME ORDER
…A typical Wisconsin bar scene after the State
Supreme Court threw out the governor’s Stay-At-Home order.
Wisconsin should now look for more death’s from
Covid-19 in the coming weeks.
Wisconsin governor’s stay-at-home policy
already had divided public opinion. This week, the State Supreme Court struck the
stay-at-home order down.
On Wednesday night, in the heart of downtown
Platteville, Wis., just hours after the Wisconsin Supreme Court threw
out the state’s stay-at-home order, the bar, Nick’s on 2nd
was packed wall to wall, standing room only.
It was totally ridiculous.
It was sometime after 10 p.m. when a “Long
Cool Woman in a Black Dress” song by the Hollies came over the sound
system and a bartender took out his camera. In a Twitter broadcast, he surveyed
the room of maskless patrons crammed together, partying like it was a year ago.
A few were pounding on the bar to the
beat of the song. Some were clapping their hands in the air and some were
fist-pumping, a scene so stupid that they were celebrating like it was the end
of the worst pandemic in a century. It
was just wrong.
Instead, as Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers (D) knew,
they were just celebrating the apparent end of his power over them, at least
that was just for now.
“We’re the Wild West,” Gov.
Evers told MSNBC’s Ali Velsi on Wednesday night, reacting to the State
Supreme Court’s ruling and the scenes of people partying in bars all across
Wisconsin. “There are no restrictions at all across the state of Wisconsin.
… So at this point in time … there is nothing that’s compelling people to do
anything other than having chaos here.” Yes,
chaos it was.
Patrons also packed the Iron Hog Saloon
in Port Washington, Wis., after the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s decision.
Right after the State Supreme Court’s conservative
majority issued a 4 to 3 ruling, invalidating the extension of the
stay-at-home order issued by Evers’s appointed state health chief, the Tavern
League of Wisconsin instructed its members to feel free to “OPEN
IMMEDIATELY!” Just how stupid is
that?
With Governor Evers’s statewide orders removed,
local health authorities scrambled to issue or extend citywide or countywide
stay-at-home orders, creating a hodgepodge of rules and regulations all across
the state that are bound to cause confusion, not to mention some traffic across
county lines. It’s a situation unlike any in the United States as the pandemic
rages on. But most of all, Evers feared that the court’s order would cause the
one thing he was trying to prevent: more death.
To date, Wisconsin has seen more than 10,900 confirmed
coronavirus cases and 421 deaths.
“When you have no requirements anymore,
that’s a problem,” the governor said. “We’re just leaving it open. We’re
going to have more cases. We’re going to have more deaths. And it’s a sad
occasion for the state. I can’t tell you how disappointed I am.”
The state’s high court sided Wednesday with
Republican legislators who sued the Evers administration in April, finding that
the Democratic governor “cannot rely on emergency powers indefinitely”
as the pandemic drags on for months. In a concurring opinion, Justice Rebecca
Bradley cited Korematsu v. United States, in which the Supreme
Court allowed the internment of Japanese Americans as a way to “remind the
state that urging courts to approve the exercise of extraordinary power during
times of emergency may lead to extraordinary abuses of its citizens.”
One conservative Wisconsin justice, Brian Hagedorn,
joined the other two liberals in dissenting. Justice Rebecca Dallet wrote in
her dissent, “This decision will undoubtedly go down as one of the most
blatant examples of judicial activism in this court’s history. And it will be
Wisconsinites who pay the price.”
Republican lawmakers wanted the state
legislature to have a say in the drastic public health measures that Evers’s
administration, as in other states, has demanded that residents follow. The State
Supreme Court agreed, believing that an un-elected state health chief shouldn’t have
such sweeping power over millions of people.
In Wisconsin’s super-partisan political
environment, it’s unclear how well the Democratic administration will work with
the Republican-majority legislature to compromise on public health, a concern Governor
Evers shared on Wednesday night. He said as far as he could tell, the
Republicans didn’t have a plan, but would be speaking with them Thursday.
“We have no authority right now,” he
said on MSNBC. “It’s been taken away."
In the mess of county and city orders, the city
of Racine, and the state’s largest city, Milwaukee, each issued or extended
their own stay-at-home orders that still prohibit bars and restaurants
from reopening, save for takeout. Dane County, where Madison is located, and
Brown County, home to Green Bay and several meatpacking plants, also
issued stay-at-home orders.
“Different counties are saying, ‘Bring it
on.’ Other counties are saying, ‘No, we don’t want this to happen,’ ” Evers
said. “So suddenly it’s a 72-county affair, which is going to be very
confusing to people in the state.”
The bar scene was crowded in counties
apparently without immediate health orders to replace Gov. Evers’.
At the Iron Hog Saloon in the
town of Port Washington, drinks flowed but masks and social distancing were
lacking, WISN reported. The owner, Chad Arndt, said that he had put
more cleaning protocols in place and that if people felt uncomfortable, they
didn’t have to come and he would respect that. “I hope they respect my
feelings [that] I would like to come out and I would like to start getting the
economy going again,” he said.
To one customer, Gary Bertram, it’s a simple
decision. “If people want to quarantine, quarantine. If you don’t want to
quarantine, don’t quarantine. Go out and do what you normally do,” he told
WISN.
It isn’t that simple, of course. Public health
authorities have repeatedly warned that those who choose to ignore social
distancing and go about their lives may end up spreading the disease, to people
who aren’t drinking at bars but just visiting a grocery store.
Other bars that reopened tried to take more
precautions. At Jake’s Supper Club in Menomonie, the high tables
were spaced farther apart, staff was required to wear face masks, and hand
sanitizer stations were set up, owner Peter Gruetzmacher told WQOW.
The biggest challenge, he said, will be keeping
the regulars at the required distance, two bar stools away, when “they all
kind of consider themselves family.”
The Tavern League of Wisconsin
still encouraged bars to follow the Wisconsin Economic Development
Corporation’s reopening guidelines, which include making employees wear
masks, strengthening sanitation policies and keeping groups of customers six
feet away from each other. The league’s executive director, Pete Madland, told Fox
11 that he welcomed the ruling because it helped struggling bars.
“They’re seeing their livelihoods melt away …
and they were helpless to do anything about it,” Madland
said. Nick’s on 2nd couldn’t immediately be
reached for comment early about its policies.
More coronavirus individuals and more deaths
are expected to spike in Wisconsin due to these recent decisions by the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s
decision.
Copyright G. Ater 2020
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