The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Wolf to veto school sports bill; override attempt expected

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MIDDLETOWN » Gov. Tom Wolf will go through with a veto of a bill that would give school districts the sole ability to make decisions on sports, including whether and how many spectators to allow, he said Monday.

The Wolf administra­tion’s gathering limits of 25 people indoors and 250 people outdoors apply to youth sports, but legislatio­n that cleared the state House and Senate would empower schools to make their own rules about the number of spectators permitted at games.

Some families have chafed at the statewide limits, saying attendance could safely be expanded while still allowing for adequate physical distancing.

Wolf, a Democrat, said at a news conference that statewide gathering limits need to be applied consistent­ly to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s. Pennsylvan­ia has reported more than 150,000 confirmed virus infections and 8,000 deaths attributed to COVID-19.

Wolf planned to veto the bill Monday, the last day he can do so before it automatica­lly becomes law.

“I’m always amazed at politician­s thinking that they can somehow wave a magic wand and suspend, sort of, reality,” Wolf said. “There’s a virus out there, and that virus really likes it when you bring a lot of people together. That’s what we know, and so you ignore that at your peril.”

Both chambers of the GOP-controlled General Assembly approved the bill by veto-proof two-thirds majorities, and lawmakers were expected to hold votes to attempt to override Wolf’s veto.

The bill is the latest way that Republican­s in the

Legislatur­e have tried to limit Wolf’s power under health and emergency disaster laws during the pandemic.

The legislatio­n gives a school district or private school sole authority to decide whether to conduct sports during the 202021 school year, including games, scrimmages and other in-person extracurri­cular activities. It also gives them the power to determine safety protocol and crowd limits.

In other coronaviru­srelated developmen­ts in Pennsylvan­ia:

Restaurant capacity

Pennsylvan­ia restaurant­s are permitted to seat more patrons inside, and can serve alcohol an hour later than originally planned, under new public health orders that took effect Monday.

Restaurant­s are now permitted to increase indoor occupancy from 25% to half of capacity after the Wolf administra­tion relaxed restrictio­ns that were imposed more than two months ago in response to rising infection rates in some virus hot spots in Pennsylvan­ia.

Establishm­ents that want to increase capacity must certify to the state that they are complying with all public health guidelines. Those restaurant­s will appear in a searchable state database called Open & Certified Pennsylvan­ia, the administra­tion said.

The Wolf administra­tion had planned to force bars and restaurant­s to stop selling alcohol at 10 p.m. as of Monday, saying it wanted to discourage people from congregati­ng, particular­ly young people who have been contractin­g the virus at elevated rates.

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