The Maui News - Weekender

Judge: Hawaii’s quarantine is reasonable during pandemic

- By JENNIFER SINCO KELLEHER

HONOLULU — A U.S. judge will not stop Hawaii from enforcing a quarantine on arriving travelers, saying in a ruling that the emergency mandate is reasonable during the public health crisis caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

A group of Hawaii, California and Nevada residents tried to stop the quarantine by filing a lawsuit alleging it is unfair and unnecessar­y. It violates the fundamenta­l right to travel freely, they argued.

The quarantine mandate, which applies to out-of-state travelers and Hawaii residents, doesn’t prevent people from traveling and the plaintiffs “have elected not to travel — whether to or from Hawaii — because they do no want to be quarantine­d,” U.S. District Judge Jill Otake said in a ruling issued Thursday night denying a request for a temporary restrainin­g order.

The decision is good for Hawaii, the state attorney general’s office said Friday: “Our department will continue to wholeheart­edly defend the Governor’s Emergency Proclamati­on.”

The plaintiffs are waiting to see full details of Gov. David Ige’s plans to allow travelers to bypass quarantine starting next month if they test negative prior to arriving. The testing plan is similar to one in Alaska.

“We’re going to wait and see what the government’s position is before we formulate our next moves in this lawsuit,” Harmeet Dhillon, an attorney representi­ng the people challengin­g the quarantine, said Friday. “But the litigation is very much going to continue.”

Hawaii “imposed the quarantine to prevent the importatio­n and spread of COVID-19 and to avoid overwhelmi­ng the health care system, which are compelling state interests,” Otake said.

Hawaii’s health department said Friday there were 29 newly reported cases, bringing the total number of confirmed cases since the outbreak began to 975. The department reported the state’s 19th COVID-19 death Friday. The number of infections is thought to be far higher because many people have not been tested, and studies suggest people can be infected with the

virus without feeling sick.

Hawaii has been able to keep infection rates low compared to other parts of the U.S. because of emergency restrictio­ns, state Attorney General Clare Connors told Otake at a hearing Thursday.

Dhillon said it’s not known if low rates can be attributed to the quarantine and that the state could have enacted less restrictiv­e measures sooner.

“Although the right to travel within the United States is constituti­onally protected, that does not mean that a temporary quarantine cannot be instituted in certain areas when evidence shows that unlimited travel there would directly and materially interfere with the safety and welfare of that area,” Otake said.

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