East Bay Times

Preventing disputes with guests

Settlement with state is looking possible

- MiLL BannerL Judith Martin Please send your questions to missmanner­s.com.

DEAR MISS ANNiRS>> Not only am I, like so many others, having to grapple with the threat of COVID-19 contaminat­ion, but also with the increasing­ly vitriolic polit- ical situation that has divided my friends and family. Therefore, I’ve put signs over my front door that read “MASKS MUST BE WORN,” and “NO POLITICS,” as well as similar placards throughout the house, particular­ly near the dinner table.

Some have already said that this approach is laughablea­ndmakesmea rude host, even mentioning infringeme­nt of free speech.

Normally, I might agree, but I’m wondering if these temporary regulation­s might be allowed during trying times. miNTLi RiAeiR >> Free speech has its limits, even overlookin­g the fact that restrictin­g it applies to the government, not citizen hosts.

Your real problem is that neither the Constituti­on nor etiquette endows hosts with legislativ­e, executive or judicial powers.

Banning behavior that will endanger or offend yourself or other guests must be done politely, which means in individual conversati­ons before the day of the event. Miss Manners realizes this may not be taken well by potential guests, but it has the advantage of setting the ground rules before anyone sets foot in the door.

eiAR ISS ANNiRS >> I have been in a tiff with my sister-in-law for about a year, when her ill-considered words rocked my marriage. We are still healing, and my hubby continues seeing a therapist. Good thing they live on the other side of the country.

But that is not the issue, just the background. I just learned that my sister-in-law’s elderly mom looked so bad she was sent directly to the hospital. Coughing, feverish, low energy, no appetite, food has no taste ...

The COVID-19 test came back negative. What they learned was so much worse. Her mother is dying of stage 4 cancer and has only a short time to live.

Having cared for my father during his non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma chemothera­py before he passed, I really have sympathy for my sister-in-law’s situation.

Is it wrong to express condolence or sympathy before someone dies? How can I acknowledg­e her pain at watching a parent die and continue to withhold an olive branch? I am not ready to forgive her yet. miNTLi RiAeiR >> The military have a term for what you are proposing. They call it a cease-fire: Everyone stops shooting, which the troops know is not at all the same thing as turning in your weapons and going home.

The etiquette equivalent is to refrain from references to past indiscreti­ons while you are dealing with your sister-in-law’s anticipate­d loss. You cannot yet offer condolence­s — that would be, at best, indelicate — but you can offer sympathy and, if possible at a distance, what the Army (you have put Miss Manners in a military frame of mind) would call logistical support.

A new pathway to indoor sports in California could come through a settlement with the state, the attorney who filed suit over youth sports in San Diego County told a group of Bay Area basketball coaches Monday night.

Stephen C. Grebing, the managing partner of Wingert Grebing of San Diego, said on a Zoom call with the Bay Area Basketball Coaches Alliance that he had received a settlement offer from the state “with almost everything we wanted” in response to an equal-rights case brought by a pair of football players in San Diego County. Grebing said the settlement would apply statewide and allow all sports to compete under the same reopening tier.

If agreed upon, the settlement would overrule local health orders, Grebing said, which could potentiall­y pave the path to indoor sports in

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