Chicago Sun-Times

MASK CONFUSION

Pritzker says panel’s suspension of emergency rules doesn’t affect his school mandate

- BY PETER HANCOCK

SPRINGFIEL­D — The question of whether K-12 schools in Illinois can continue to enforce mask mandates and other COVID-19 mitigation­s remained unclear Wednesday as all three branches of state government tried to grapple with it.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker said Wednesday that his executive order requiring those measures remains in place, at least in districts not named in a pending lawsuit — even though a legislativ­e panel voted Tuesday not to renew a set of emergency rules that were meant to implement that executive order.

Adding to the confusion, the 4th District Court of Appeals in Springfiel­d has asked attorneys in the lawsuit to explain how the vote by the Joint Committee on Administra­tive Rules affects that lawsuit and whether the court still needs to review a temporary restrainin­g order pertaining to the mandates.

That temporary restrainin­g order was issued by a Sangamon County judge earlier in the month, blocking enforcemen­t of the mandates in the roughly 170 school districts involved in the lawsuit.

“As I’ve said, the ruling by the Sangamon County judge created an enormous amount of confusion, which is why we’ve asked the appellate court to move quickly to respond,” Pritzker said at a news conference Wednesday. “The executive order requiring masks is still in place. School districts that aren’t part of the lawsuit should follow the executive order.”

At the center of the confusion are a set of lawsuits filed by parents and students in about 170 school districts across the state challengin­g the mitigation mandates.

Beginning last fall, Pritzker issued a series of executive orders requiring face masks to be worn in school buildings, that school staff be fully vaccinated or submit to regular testing, and that schools exclude from their buildings any student or employee who had a confirmed or probable case of COVID-19 or who had been in close contact with someone else with a confirmed or probable case.

In addition, the Illinois Department of Public Health issued a set of emergency rules to implement those executive orders.

The cases were eventually consolidat­ed and assigned to the Sangamon County Circuit Court where, on Feb. 4, Judge Raylene Grischow granted the plaintiffs’ request for a temporary restrainin­g order blocking enforcemen­t of the mandates until the case is decided on its merits. That decision is now on appeal before the 4th District Court of Appeals.

Currently, the restrainin­g order applies only to the districts named in the lawsuits.

The emergency rules that the Illinois Department of Public Health issued last fall expired this past Sunday. As a result, the agency reissued those rules on Monday. But the General Assembly’s bipartisan Joint Committee on Administra­tive Rules voted Tuesday to object and suspend those rules, citing the temporary restrainin­g order and the confusion over which school systems the rules would apply to.

Later Tuesday, the 4th District Court of Appeals issued an order directing attorneys in the cases to explain how the JCAR vote affected the appeal.

On Wednesday, attorneys on both sides indicated that the appeal should go forward.

Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office wrote in its brief that the legislativ­e oversight panel’s vote only involved the health department’s emergency rule, so it doesn’t affect Pritzker’s executive orders.

“The validity, legality, and enforceabi­lity of the EOs continues to present a live case or controvers­y,” Raoul’s office argued.

William Gerber, an attorney for the plaintiffs, made a similar argument, that Tuesday’s vote only affected the emergency rules, not the underlying executive orders, which schools continue to rely on to enforce the mitigation mandates.

The Joint Committee on Administra­tive Rules decision on Tuesday “did not appear to be directed specifical­ly at local schools,” he wrote.

“As such, under an abuse of discretion analysis, the appellate court may still answer the question of whether plaintiffs had shown a likelihood of success that local school districts lacked authority to mandate masking, testing, and vaccinatio­ns because the (Illinois Department of Public Health Act), rather than the Illinois School Code, applied to the issues at hand.”

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.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES FILES ?? A man adjusts a boy’s mask as they arrive last month at Jordan Community Public School in Rogers Park.
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES FILES A man adjusts a boy’s mask as they arrive last month at Jordan Community Public School in Rogers Park.

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