State files appeal to Supreme Court on mask mandate ruling
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[February 24, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois Supreme Court is
being asked to review the state’s mask mandate and other COVID-19
mitigation orders for K-12 schools on an expedited schedule.
Attorney General Kwame Raoul filed a petition for appeal Tuesday, along
with a motion for an emergency stay of a Sangamon County judge’s order
to block enforcement of the rules.
On Feb. 4, Sangamon County Circuit Judge Raylene Grischow issued a
temporary restraining order blocking enforcement of the rules which,
among other things, require schools to exclude students or staff from
their buildings if they have been in close contact with someone who has
COVID-19, and require unvaccinated staff to undergo testing at least
once a week.
In her ruling, Grischow cited a section of the Illinois Department of
Public Health Act that says people may not be quarantined without their
consent or a court order and concluded that the mitigation mandates
amounted to a kind of quarantine.
Two weeks later, a three-judge panel of the 4th District Court of
Appeals declined to review that decision, saying the issue was “moot”
because, in the intervening time, the legislature’s Joint Committee on
Administrative Rules voted not to extend the Illinois Department of
Public Health’s emergency rules that put those mandates in place.
The appeal comes just days before Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration is
scheduled to lift the statewide indoor mask mandate Feb. 28 for most
public places, except in schools and health care settings. Pritzker has
said he intends to lift the school mandate as well, possibly within the
next few weeks, saying schools need more time because of the large
number of unvaccinated children in the buildings and the close proximity
in which they work.
Asked Wednesday why the administration continues to appeal the case,
Pritzker said he thinks it’s important to clarify the powers of the
governor and state agencies in case of another public health emergency.
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“This really is about what do we do in the next emergency, as much as
anything, what happens when there is another omicron wave or, God
forbid, at some future date, another pandemic or some other major
emergency that affects everybody in the state,” Pritzker said during an
unrelated news conference in Decatur. “We want to be able to do the
right thing for the people across the state and so we hope that the
Supreme Court will see that and rule on that despite the decision by the
appellate court.”
In his appeal, Raoul’s office also argued that there needs to be clarity
because different appellate courts have ruled differently on the same
question.
In 2020, the 2nd District Court of Appeals in Kane County ruled against
the owners of FoxFire Tavern in Geneva and upheld Pritzker’s indoor mask
mandate for bars and restaurants. In that ruling, the court specifically
found that the orders “were not tantamount to quarantine orders,
isolation orders, or business-closure orders,” and that the governor’s
actions were authorized under the Illinois Emergency Management Act.
“As a result, the (Sangamon County) circuit court’s order has infused
confusion into an area of law that was settled and holds the governor to
a standard not required by statute,” Raoul’s office stated in the
appeal.
In its motion to stay the Sangamon County restraining order, Raoul’s
office said the order is creating confusion for entire communities.
“Today, parents, teachers, school staff, and members of their
communities are faced with impossible choices,” the motion states. “Some
schools have eliminated mitigation measures on the threat of legal
liability, some parents have been forced to withdraw students from
school, and uncertainty regarding the applicable legal regime reigns.
This court should stay the circuit court’s (temporary restraining order)
during the pendency of these proceedings and restore the status quo.”
The state is asking for a schedule that would allow for oral arguments
as soon as the week of March 20.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering
state government and distributed to more than 400 newspapers statewide.
It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
R. McCormick Foundation. |