Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

WISCONSIN COURT strikes down occupancy limits.

- SCOTT BAUER

MADISON, Wis. — The Wisconsin Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled that Gov. Tony Evers’ administra­tion does not have the authority to issue capacity limits on bars, restaurant­s and other businesses without the Legislatur­e’s approval, a ruling that comes two weeks after the conservati­ve-controlled court struck down the state’s mask mandate.

The state Supreme Court also ruled last year in a similar case that the Democratic governor needed the approval of the Legislatur­e, which is controlled by Republican­s, to issue an emergency declaratio­n that shut down businesses early in the coronaviru­s pandemic.

There has not been a statewide capacity limit restrictio­n in place since October. That order limited the size of indoor public gatherings to 25% of a building’s or room’s occupancy or 10 people in places that don’t have an occupancy limit. The on-again, off-again order was blocked by a state appeals court that month.

The Supreme Court ruled 4-3 on Wednesday that the order issued by Evers’ Department of Health Services meets the definition of a rule, which by law must go through the Legislatur­e. The court’s four conservati­ve justices ruled against Evers, while three liberals dissented.

Justice Ann Walsh Bradley, writing for the dissent, said the emergency order did not meet the definition of a rule and the Evers’ administra­tion did not have to “go through the cumbersome rulemaking process.”

“At a time when public health experts are imploring pandemic-weary Wisconsini­tes to stay vigilant, a faulty statutory analysis once again leads this court to undermine public health measures,” Bradley wrote.

The case was brought by the Mix-Up Bar in Amery and Pro-Life Wisconsin, a group that opposes abortion rights. They argued that the court’s 2020 ruling blocking the governor’s safer at home order set a precedent that requires such moves to be approved by the Legislatur­e.

Assistant Attorney General Colin Hector, representi­ng the Evers administra­tion, said during oral arguments in December that ordering capacity limits was allowed under existing powers of the health department to address public health emergencie­s, as well as the court’s previous decision.

Misha Tseytlin, attorney for the Mix-Up Bar and its owner, said in an email that the goal of Evers and Attorney General Josh Kaul, who is also a Democrat, was to have the court issue “a blank check to devastate any business, at a moment’s notice.” He said the ruling showed that a “small, family-owned restaurant like the Mix Up can stand up to a powerful Governor and Attorney General and win when the law is on its side.”

Spokeswome­n for Evers and Kaul did not immediatel­y reply to messages seeking comment.

Even without statewide limits on capacity, there are local ordinances in effect in some places putting a cap on how many people can gather indoors. However, those have been loosening as more people get vaccinated.

Although vaccinatio­ns are on the rise, so too are covid-19 cases. The seven-day average of daily cases, which was fewer than 400 in mid-March, has doubled in Wisconsin over the past month and stood at 794 as of Tuesday, according to the state Department of Health Services.

 ?? (AP/The Post-Crescent/William Glasheen) ?? A crowd gathers at the Dairyland Brew Pub in Appleton, Wis., last May. There has not been a statewide capacity limit on bars, restaurant­s and other businesses since October, despite persistent increases in coronaviru­s cases.
(AP/The Post-Crescent/William Glasheen) A crowd gathers at the Dairyland Brew Pub in Appleton, Wis., last May. There has not been a statewide capacity limit on bars, restaurant­s and other businesses since October, despite persistent increases in coronaviru­s cases.

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