Call & Times

Top court upholds Mass. governor’s sweeping virus emergency orders

- By ALANNA DURKIN RICHER

BOSTON — Gov. Charlie Baker did not overstep his authority when he issued sweeping orders to close businesses and limit gatherings to control the spread of the coronaviru­s, the highest court in Massachuse­tts said in a ruling released Thursday.

The Supreme Judicial Court rejected a challenge brought on behalf of a group including salon owners, pastors and the headmaster of a private school, who accused the Republican governor of exercising “legislativ­e police power” by declaring a state of emergency under the state’s Civil Defense Act.

The court said the pandemic clearly merits action by the governor under the Cold War-era law. It also rejected the lawsuit’s argument that the governor’s actions infringe on people’s constituti­onal rights to due process and free assembly.

“Given that COVID-19 is a pandemic that has killed over a million people worldwide, it spreads from person to person, effective vaccines have not yet been distribute­d, there is no

known cure, and a rise in cases threatens to overrun the Commonweal­th’s hospital system, it is a natural cause for which action is needed,” the court wrote, quoting the state law.

The governor declared a state of emergency March 10, giving him greater power to take actions like shutting down events with large gatherings of people or gaining access to buildings or stockpilin­g protective gear. He has issued a slew of emergency orders prohibitin­g gatherings of a certain size, closing certain businesses and mandating masks aimed at slowing the spread of the disease in the hard-hit state.

Facing mounting pressure in recent weeks from public health experts and municipal leaders to do more to control the dramatic increase in coronaviru­s cases that is stressing the health care system, Baker announced this week that Massachuse­tts would tighten some restrictio­ns.

Beginning Sunday, indoor theaters and performanc­e venues will again have to close, and stores, houses of worship, gyms, libraries, museums and other indoor spaces will have to reduce their capacity from 50% to 40%.

Yet restaurant­s, casinos and many other indoor venues will still be allowed to remain open, even as the state again opens field hospitals to help cope with rising numbers of COVID-19 patients.

The lawsuit filed in June by the Washington-based group New Civil Liberties Alliance argued that Baker had no authority to issue public health-related orders under the Civil Defense Act, which it said was designed to protect the state from foreign invasions, insurrecti­ons, and catastroph­ic events like hurricanes and fires.

The group argued the coronaviru­s falls under another state law, which it said puts local health boards instead of the governor primarily in charge of public health emergencie­s.

“Fear of a deadly virus is not a reason to abandon constituti­onal governance,” Michael DeGrandis, senior litigation counsel for the New Civil Liberties Alliance, said

in June.

OUTDOOR DINING IN

BOSTON

Boston is bringing back its outdoor dining program in the spring, an initiative started this year to help restaurant­s survive during the coronaviru­s pandemic, Mayor Marty Walsh announced Thursday.

Online applicatio­ns for the program scheduled to start April 1 — earlier if weather allows — are being accepted now, the mayor said in a statement.

Under the program, restaurant­s may be given permission to place outdoor seating on public property, including parking spaces and streets. The new program will include some new twists based on business and community

feedback, he said.

“This year we saw the benefits outdoor dining can have on our neighborho­ods: vibrant streets, support for local businesses, a safe and enjoyable experience for restaurant goers, and, in many ways, a lifeline for our small businesses during this challengin­g time,” Walsh said in a statement.

About 550 restaurant­s participat­ed in this year’s program.

CURFEW CONCERNS

In New Hampshire, the city of Nashua is considerin­g a nightly curfew over concerns that a similar curfew and other restrictio­ns in nearby Massachuse­tts will drive people north.

“We do need to do something to protect the vulnerable population­s in our community,” Bobbie Bagley, director of Nashua Public Health and Community Services, said during a city health board meeting Wednesday, WMURTV reported. “Nashua is right on the border of Massachuse­tts and so, when things shut down in Massachuse­tts we do see an increase in activity in our state.”

But some restaurant and bar owners said that they have felt targeted by the restrictio­ns and that closing early would not be fair.

“I think they are just going to go and hurt my employees and hurt people who are trying to make a living and we need that to happen. The economy is so important,” said James Rafferty from The River Casino and Sports Bar.

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