Los Angeles Times

County appeals dining ruling

Decision against continued closure ‘ plainly erroneous,’ suit says

- By Lil a Seidman

L. A. County seeks to maintain ban, calls judge’s order “plainly erroneous.”

Los Angeles County on Thursday appealed a judge’s decision that barred an extension of its temporary ban on outdoor dining, calling the ruling “plainly erroneous and directly contrary to governing law.”

L. A. County Superior Court Judge James Chalfant ruled last week that the county should not be allowed to continue the ban indefinite­ly and would need to provide a risk- benefit analysis to justify the restrictio­n if it wanted to extend it beyond its initial three weeks, which ended Wednesday.

The Department of Public Health, which issued the order in late November, said the law is clearly on its side.

“The law says that in a public health crisis, the health officer must act urgently and swiftly to stop the transmissi­on of disease and to protect public health and safety,” department officials said in a statement.

The county, like much of the state, is in the midst of the worst wave of the coronaviru­s to date. Just this week, the county public health department has reported 272 deaths and nearly 41,000 cases. On Thursday, the availabili­ty of intensive care unit beds reached 0%.

County officials said these numbers are justificat­ion enough.

Although the county ban is now expired, a state order prohibitin­g in- person dining remains in place, meaning outdoor dining will remain off- limits until at least Dec. 28, when the state rules will either expire or be extended.

Outdoor dining had offered a lifeline to some restaurant­s struggling amid the pandemic. The California Restaurant Assn. had sued to stop the county’s ban, with a downtown L. A. restaurant, Engine Co. No. 28, filing a similar suit.

During a hearing that grew heated at times, Chalfant castigated county officials for providing only generalize­d arguments before deciding to implement restrictio­ns affecting more than 30,000 restaurant owners and their employees.

Officials “in nine months have not seriously looked at outdoor dining, and then ... impose a restrictio­n preventing outdoor dining,” Chalfant said at the hearing. “That’s just shocking.”

Mark Geragos, an attorney for the downtown restaurant, which he also owns, called the county’s appeal galling.

They’re “doubling down on no data, tripling down on paying outside lawyers and law firms, while tens of thousands of businesses in the county go under,” Geragos said by phone Thursday.

Counsel for the county accused Chalfant of substituti­ng his own opinion of the ban instead of deferring to health experts, as they say is required by law.

“It is not a court’s prerogativ­e to second- guess the county’s response to a public health crisis and to prescribe the evidence upon which public health officials may and may not rely,” the suit states.

At the hearing last week, Chalfant acknowledg­ed it was hard for him to quash his personal reaction to what he saw as misguided policy.

“I have trouble trying not to allow my personal beliefs to intrude in the analysis because ... I would do it differentl­y,” he said, adding: “But it isn’t my call. I recognize that.”

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? CHAIRS ARE stacked on tables at El Torito in Woodland Hills where outdoor dining had been set up before state and county closure orders. The county was barred from extending its order, but the state’s still stands.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times CHAIRS ARE stacked on tables at El Torito in Woodland Hills where outdoor dining had been set up before state and county closure orders. The county was barred from extending its order, but the state’s still stands.

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