The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Restaurant­s lose court bid against indoor dining ban

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A federal judge in Pennsylvan­ia has rejected a bid to block one of Gov. Tom Wolf’s latest orders to try to stem the spread of the coronaviru­s, a three-week shutdown of indoor dining at restaurant­s through Jan. 4.

The decision Wednesday came as Wolf asks state lawmakers to approve $145 million for hardhit businesses, restaurant­s and bars in particular, while a growing number of restaurant­s are defying Wolf’s shutdown order, and being cited or even closed for it.

The daily totals of new reported infections in Pennsylvan­ia have leveled in the past couple weeks, although hospitaliz­ations continue to climb and the Department of Health on Thursday reported one of the state’s highest daily totals for coronaviru­s-related deaths at 276.

In his order, U.S. District Judge Christophe­r Conner in Harrisburg denied the petition filed by two restaurant owners and a Hershey-area restaurant trade associatio­n that complained that the order violates their constituti­on rights to equal protection.

Conner wrote that Wolf’s order was “sufficient­ly tethered to the stated public-health objectives” and pointed to case law that largely has guided federal court decisions in challenges to coronaviru­s-related shutdowns, saying individual rights during a public-health emergency may take a back seat to the safety of the general public.

The plaintiffs’ belief that there is “no material difference between dining and non-dining establishm­ents is simply wrong,” Conner wrote, given the need to remove masks when eating or drinking and the closer and more sustained interactio­ns at restaurant­s.

The restaurant plaintiffs also offered no meaningful challenge to scientific conclusion­s that masking is an effective mitigation measure, Conner wrote, and the state has no obligation to meet the defendants’ demand to produce mathematic­ally precise data to back up the shutdown order.

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