South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Senate measure would keep churches open in next crisis

- By Jim Turner

TALLAHASSE­E — After high-profile disputes in various parts of the country about shuttering churches during the COVID-19 pandemic, the Florida Senate is poised to take up a proposal that would help prevent closures of religious institutio­ns during future emergencie­s.

The Senate Rules Committee on Thursday voted 13-1 to support a measure (SB 254) intended to shield in-person religious services from being shut down because of emergency orders.

It is now ready for a vote by the full Senate.

Bill sponsor Sen. Jason Brodeur, R-Sanford, said religious institutio­ns would still have to close if lockdown orders were applied to all businesses in a crisis such as a hurricane, but “basically, if Target and Publix are open, so too should be the religious institutio­n.”

Brodeur added that the proposal wouldn’t preclude religious leaders from acting on their own to conduct services virtually.

Sen. Bobby Powell, a West Palm Beach Democrat who voted against the bill, said the state has a responsibi­lity to protect people.

“There were a number of times that religious institutio­ns decided to gather and the result of that caused many people their lives,” Powell said. “That being said, we’re stewards of the state. We do have a responsibi­lity to always kind of move the state forward. In essence, a religious institutio­n being within the state of Florida, thus authorizin­g them to buck the system by ignoring emergency orders, is not what I think we’re here to do.”

When pressed by Sen. Audrey Gibson, D-Jacksonvil­le, about whether the measure would prevent religious leaders from requiring congregant­s to produce vaccinatio­n cards or wear masks to attend services, Brodeur replied, “They’re free to ask that. I don’t know that they can legally require that.”

Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency on March 9, 2020, as the pandemic began to hit the state. Among the more than 50 supplement­al coronaviru­s-related executive orders that DeSantis issued, one provided that certain essential businesses and establishm­ents could operate at reduced capacities, including churches, synagogues and other houses of worship.

The exemption came shortly after the pastor of a Tampa megachurch was arrested for holding two in-person church services in violation of a Hillsborou­gh County ordinance prohibitin­g gatherings of more than 10 people. The charges were eventually dropped.

A Senate staff analysis noted that by May 2020, when then-President Donald Trump called for the reopening of religious institutio­ns, more than 90% of the institutio­ns were estimated to have been closed to in-person worship.

 ?? DAVID SANTIAGO/AP ?? Parishione­r Laura Sanchez holds a rosary while she prays, wearing a mask and protective gloves at Saint Jude Melkite Greek Catholic Church in Miami on Easter Sunday 2020 during the coronaviru­s pandemic.
DAVID SANTIAGO/AP Parishione­r Laura Sanchez holds a rosary while she prays, wearing a mask and protective gloves at Saint Jude Melkite Greek Catholic Church in Miami on Easter Sunday 2020 during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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