Arguments in cases brought by parents, teachers, against COVID mandates
continue
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[January 04, 2022]
By Greg Bishop
(The Center Square) – Arguments
continue in cases brought by teachers challenging the governor’s vaccine
mandates in schools and parents challenging mask and exclusion mandates
on students.
Earlier Monday in Springfield, Sangamon County Judge Raylene Grischow
heard arguments from defendants to have a different judge oversee the
teacher’s case. That case has dozens of teachers and school staffing
suing 22 districts. The judge said the issue has been delayed long
enough.
“We’ll run out of judges before it’s heard and that causes a prejudicial
effect to the plaintiffs,” Grischow said. “We’ve been dealing with this
COVID issue, it needs to be decided and I’m going to deny the motion.”
Attorney Thomas DeVore argues on behalf of parents and
teachers in separate cases the issue is about individual due process
rights to challenge quarantine orders.
Attorney Loretta Haggard, representing the teachers' unions attempting
to intervene, said they have serious concerns if due process is allowed.
“If everyone who doesn’t feel like getting a vaccine or taking a nasal
swab or saliva test decides to go and fight it and demand individual due
process, that is going to break down the system,” Haggard said.
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Sangamon Judge Raylene Grischow, attorney Loretta Haggard
representing the teachers unions and attorney Thomas DeVore during
oral arguments Monday in Springfield
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Sangamon Seventh Judicial Courts YouTube
Later in the day, DeVore said due
process must be upheld over other concerns.
“They’re trying to suspend what they know to be due process under
the law because they’re worried about the practical realities of if
people are afforded their due process rights, that’s really the
issue,” DeVore argued in court. “You know what my response is to
that, judge, the legislature can fix that.”
DeVore said the legislature could come back in a week and clear the
issue up.
“But until then, we all deal with the law that is given to us and if
the practical matter is the law as it is written creates procedural
complications for them, that's not the people’s fault,” DeVore said.
Grischow took a motion for teachers’ unions to intervene in the case
under advisement. She denied a similar motion Dec. 30 in the case of
more than 700 parents suing around 140 schools. A hearing in that
case is expected Wednesday.
The judge scheduled litigants in the teachers' case to head back to
court in a couple of weeks for continued hearings on various other
issues in the case. |