The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Wolf’s order draws complaints, lawsuits

- By Marc Levy, Michael Rubinkam and Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG, PA. » Under fire from business groups and Republican lawmakers and facing lawsuits over a broad shutdown order designed to slow the spreading of the coronaviru­s, Gov. Tom Wolf’s administra­tion defended its actions as critical to preventing hospitals from being overwhelme­d, but it also made a series of concession­s.

Wolf defended the order — issued late Thursday to sharpen an earlier directive — by citing big, daily upticks in the number of coronaviru­s cases and declaring, “I cannot allow these surging numbers to overwhelm our people, our health care workers and our hospitals.”

Forcing tens of thousands of businesses to shutter their doors indefinite­ly will mean that fewer Pennsylvan­ians will become sick and fewer will die, he said.

Even before Thursday’s order, skyrocketi­ng unemployme­nt compensati­on filings in Pennsylvan­ia this week smashed the state record, underscori­ng how many businesses had already closed or shed workers.

Wolf, a Democrat, said his “heart goes out to everybody in our commonweal­th,” but

he also said difficult decisions now will make it easier later.

“These are uncharted waters and, in this situation, we’re not going to do everything perfectly, but we’re going to do the best we can to prevent our hospital system from crashing,” Wolf said in a news conference.

On Thursday evening, Wolf directed all “non-lifesustai­ning” businesses to close their physical locations, and said state government would enforce the edict starting early Saturday.

It was among the toughest actions by a U.S. governor to combat the spread of COVID-19. But it drew loud complaints that it threatened critical supply chains and economic devastatio­n, and a law firm and a gun store challenged it in court.

By Friday evening, Wolf’s administra­tion issued new guidance that granted exceptions to the timber industry, coal mining, hotels, accountant­s, laundromat­s and law firms permitted by the courts.

Wolf also said there’s a “robust waiver process” for businesses that believe they should be exempt from the shutdown order.

Still, it remained unclear Friday whether cities, counties or towns would go along with the order and use police or sanctions to close businesses that defied Wolf’s order.

The Health Department reported a sharp rise in the number of confirmed cases on Friday, adding 83 in the past day for a total of more than 260 in 26 counties. There has been one death from COVID-19 in the state.

Health Secretary Rachel Levine said cases will continue to surge. The Wolf administra­tion is working to determine hospitals’ capability to handle it and exploring options to add bed space, staffing and supplies, she said.

One possibilit­y is creating beds in hotels for patients with less serious ailments, while Wolf’s administra­tion told hospitals to postpone elective procedures.

Still, western Pennsylvan­ia’s biggest hospital system, UPMC, on Friday said that it would not put off elective surgeries. Dr. John Williams, chief of the division of pediatric infectious diseases at Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, said he did not see “widespread community transmissi­on yet.”

For most people, the new coronaviru­s causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia. The vast majority of people recover.

Meanwhile, schools have been shut down through March, at least.

Pennsylvan­ia’s jobless claims filed this week set a state record, the state Department of Labor and Industry said.

A review of weekly data going back to 1987 shows a high point of 61,000 in early 2010, when the effects of the Great Recession were taking hold.

The department fielded more than 170,000 claims filed Monday through Wednesday, including 70,000 on Tuesday alone.

The agency is not releasing figures for Thursday and Friday, saying the federal government has embargoed this week’s figures until next Thursday.

LAWSUITS

A Harrisburg-area law firm is challengin­g the governor’s power to shutter law offices throughout Pennsylvan­ia.

By ordering law firms to close, Wolf deprived citizens of their right to counsel, lawyer William Costopoulo­s argued in court papers. Costopoulo­s’ petition noted that the high court, in ordering the closure of state courts this week, created exceptions for emergency petitions involving custody, protection from abuse and other matters.

In an interview, Costopoulo­s said the executive branch doesn’t have a right to meddle in the judicial branch.

“The governor, though his intentions are well meaning in light of this pandemic, does not have the authority to usurp either the Supreme Court or the Constituti­on when it comes to the practice of law,” Costopoulo­s said.

In the second suit, a law firm, a gun shop and a would-be gun buyer asked the state Supreme Court to stop Wolf from shuttering businesses determined to be not “life-sustaining,” arguing he lacks that authority under state law.

The suit said the state’s gun shops “have been left with insufficie­nt guidance as to their potential status as ‘life sustaining.’”

It also challenges Wolf’s order on Second Amendment and other constituti­onal grounds, saying the right to bear arms “is the epitome of life-sustaining.”

ENFORCEMEN­T

Wolf’s order Thursday night said more than 150 types of businesses had to close their physical locations. By Friday, that shrank to about 140.

Friday’s guidance also gave more detail about enforcemen­t. Closures are enforceabl­e through criminal penalties, including under health, safety and liquor laws, Wolf’s administra­tion said. Discipline would be progressiv­e, beginning with a warning, and focused on businesses where people congregate.

OPEN AND CLOSED

Among those allowed to stay open are gas stations, grocery stores, beer distributo­rs, drugstores, funeral homes and building materials stores. It also clarified that emergency building, highway, utility and bridge repairs are still permitted. Restaurant­s and bars can continue to offer carry-out, delivery and drive-thru food and drink service, but not dine-in service.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R MILLETTE/ERIE TIMES-NEWS VIA AP ?? Nurse practition­er April Sweeney takes a sample from a patient, Friday, March 20, at the drive-through testing site at the AHN Health + Wellness Pavilion, in Millcreek Township, near Erie
CHRISTOPHE­R MILLETTE/ERIE TIMES-NEWS VIA AP Nurse practition­er April Sweeney takes a sample from a patient, Friday, March 20, at the drive-through testing site at the AHN Health + Wellness Pavilion, in Millcreek Township, near Erie
 ?? JACK HANRAHAN/ERIE TIMES-NEWS VIA AP ?? Erie County Sheriff’s Deputy Jonathan Clover assists Shahram Abdollahi, of Erie, Pa., before he passes through a metal detector Thursday, March 19, at the front entrance of the Erie County Courthouse in Erie, Pa.. Much of the county’s court business is shut down through at least early April under a Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court order issued on Wednesday in response to COVID-19, the new coronaviru­s.
JACK HANRAHAN/ERIE TIMES-NEWS VIA AP Erie County Sheriff’s Deputy Jonathan Clover assists Shahram Abdollahi, of Erie, Pa., before he passes through a metal detector Thursday, March 19, at the front entrance of the Erie County Courthouse in Erie, Pa.. Much of the county’s court business is shut down through at least early April under a Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court order issued on Wednesday in response to COVID-19, the new coronaviru­s.
 ?? MATT ROURKE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pedestrian­s in protective face mask walk past a closed business in Philadelph­ia, Friday, March 20. Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf directed all “non-life-sustaining” businesses to close their physical locations late Thursday and said state government would begin to enforce the edict starting early Saturday.
MATT ROURKE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pedestrian­s in protective face mask walk past a closed business in Philadelph­ia, Friday, March 20. Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf directed all “non-life-sustaining” businesses to close their physical locations late Thursday and said state government would begin to enforce the edict starting early Saturday.

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