Sangamon Co. judge tosses decision voiding Pritzker’s executive orders
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[December 28, 2020]
SPRINGFIELD — In early July, a judge
in downstate Clay County voided Gov. JB Pritzker’s executive orders in a
sweeping order that he applied to the entire state, at the request of a
southern Illinois lawmaker who sued Pritzker over his response to the
pandemic.
More than six months later, Sangamon County Judge Raylene Grischow has
essentially voided Judge Michael McHaney’s July 2 order in the case of
Rep. Darren Bailey, R-Xenia.
Pritzker’s lawyers asked Grischow last month to “reconsider” the July 2
order from McHaney, who initially presided over Bailey’s case before it
was transferred to Sangamon County.
On Monday, Grischow issued an 11-page opinion vacating McHaney’s order,
including “the order wherein Judge McHaney applied it to ‘all citizens
of the state of Illinois.’”
Grischow also denied Bailey’s request from October to find Pritzker in
contempt for failing to follow McHaney’s July 2 order.
McHaney’s order found Pritzker’s emergency powers ended on April 8 — the
date his first disaster proclamation lapsed — and it declared the
Illinois Department of Public Health as the “proper authority to
restrict a citizen’s movement and/or forcibly close their business
premises….”
Regarding the claim that Pritzker’s emergency powers ended on April 8,
Grischow found that the state law in question — the Illinois Emergency
Management Agency Act — allows the governor to issue more than one
30-day disaster proclamation.
She wrote that her interpretation of the Illinois Emergency Management
Agency Act is consistent with a 2nd District Appellate Court decision
from November, in FoxFire Tavern LLC v. Pritzker, et al. In that case, a
Kane County restaurant sued the governor for exceeding his authority
under the law by imposing a ban on indoor dining and the appellate court
ruled in favor of Pritzker.
“The Appellate Court expressly found that the IEMAA authorizes the
Governor to issue successive disaster proclamations stemming from one
ongoing disaster,” Grischow’s opinion states.
Grischow also rejected McHaney’s assertions that the Department of
Public Health, not the governor, is responsible for closing businesses
or restricting individuals’ activities during a public health emergency,
citing the Illinois Constitution as providing the governor with “supreme
executive authority.”
“This grant of authority includes providing for the health, safety and
welfare of the people of Illinois under a rational basis standard,”
Grischow wrote in her Dec. 21 opinion.
Grischow is overseeing a total of 19 cases that were consolidated by the
Illinois Supreme Court to her court. The cases all raise the same
question about the governor’s authority to issue multiple, successive
disaster proclamations under IEMAA.
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Sangamon County Complex (Capitol News Illinois file
photo)
Those cases are ongoing and no final decision has been issued.
Thomas DeVore, an attorney who represents Bailey and a couple other
clients before Grischow, said he wasn’t surprised by Monday’s ruling
because she was required to follow the precedent established in the
2nd District Appellate Court opinion.
He said he intends to continue to pursue Bailey’s case in court,
adding that the next procedural step is to appeal to the 4th
District Appellate Court, which has jurisdiction over appeals from
Sangamon County court.
Grischow’s order “still leaves all of those issues in front of the
court,” DeVore said in a phone interview. “But at the end of the
day, the Illinois Supreme Court will decide these issues, so
practically speaking her ruling changed nothing.”
The Illinois Supreme Court has twice declined to intervene in this
case, both times at the request of Pritzker’s lawyers, first in May
and then in August.
Last week, lawyers for FoxFire filed a petition asking the Illinois
Supreme Court to hear the case and overturn the 2nd District
Appellate Court’s ruling. The Supreme Court justices have not yet
accepted or declined to hear the FoxFire case.
In an emailed statement, a spokesperson for Attorney General Kwame
Raoul’s office — which represents the governor and his agencies in
court — wrote that Grischow’s ruling “might finally signal the end
of the first lawsuit - filed earlier this year by Darren Bailey -
challenging the governor's authority to issue executive orders to
protect Illinois residents during the COVID-19 pandemic.”
“For several months, Darren Bailey’s lawsuit has served as a
distraction from the urgent need to mitigate the spread of COVID-19
in Illinois. Previously when given the opportunity, Mr. Bailey has
abandoned any effort to seek appellate court review of his challenge
to the governor's actions, and we assume that will again be the
case,” wrote AG spokesperson Annie Thompson.
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