Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Judge nixes 25% capacity for religious gatherings

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A federal judge on Friday blocked New York state from enforcing coronaviru­s restrictio­ns limiting indoor religious gatherings to 25% capacity when other types of gatherings are limited to 50%.

Judge Gary Sharpe enjoined Gov. Andrew Cuomo, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio and Attorney General Letitia James from enforcing some of the capacity restrictio­ns put in place by executive order to contain the spread of the virus.

The plaintiffs’ religious activities “will be burdened and continue to be treated less favorably than comparable secular activities,” Sharpe said in his 38-page ruling from Albany.

The plaintiffs, two Catholic priests from upstate New York and three Orthodox Jewish congregant­s from Brooklyn, argued the restrictio­ns violated their First Amendment rights to practice their religion.

The plaintiffs said the restrictio­ns forced the Rev. Steven Soos and the Rev. Nicholas Stamos, members of the breakaway Society of St. Pius X, to either turn away parishione­rs who wished to attend Mass “or to hold more Masses per day than are possible.”

Christophe­r Ferrara, an attorney for the plaintiffs, called the unequal restrictio­ns “an irrational targeting of houses of worship.”

“The idea that houses of worship are some deadly viral vector

unlike anything else is just superstiti­on,” Ferrara said in a telephone interview. “There’s no science to support that.”

Restrictio­ns limiting the number of people who can attend outdoor religious gatherings also will be lifted by the injunction.

The New York State Catholic Conference said New York bishops were not involved in the lawsuit. But spokesman Dennis Poust said he anticipate­d that “our churches will continue to voluntaril­y follow state guidelines as a matter of prudential judgment.”

The judge noted that both Cuomo and de Blasio have expressed approval for protests against racism and police brutality that followed the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s last month while continuing to support restrictio­ns on religious gatherings.

“Governor Cuomo and Mayor de Blasio could have just as easily discourage­d protests, short of condemning their message, in the name of public health and exercised discretion to suspend enforcemen­t for public safety reasons instead of encouragin­g what they knew was a flagrant disregard of the outdoor limits and social distancing rules,” he said.

Spokespers­ons for Cuomo and de Blasio said the governor and mayor were reviewing the decision.

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