USA TODAY US Edition

Justices won’t speed church reopenings

Roberts: Elected officials, not judges, should decide

- Richard Wolf

WASHINGTON – A deeply divided Supreme Court refused Friday night to allow churches in California and Illinois to reopen amid the coronaviru­s pandemic with more worshipper­s than state plans permit.

Chief Justice John Roberts, who cast the deciding vote in the more consequent­ial California case announced just before midnight, said choosing when to lift restrictio­ns during a pandemic is the business of elected officials, not unelected judges. He was joined in the vote by the court’s four liberal justices.

Roberts, the only one of the five to explain his vote, compared in-person church services to other forms of assembly. His conservati­ve colleagues who dissented compared the services to secular businesses.

“Although California’s guidelines place restrictio­ns on places of worship, those restrictio­ns appear consistent with the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment,” Roberts wrote. “Similar or more severe restrictio­ns apply to comparable secular gatherings, including lectures, concerts, movie showings, spectator sports, and theatrical performanc­es, where large groups of people gather in close proximity for extended periods of time.”

Writing for three of the four conservati­ve justices who dissented, Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh said California’s current 25% occupancy limit on churches amounted to “discrimina­tion against religious worship services.”

“The basic constituti­onal problem is that comparable secular businesses are not subject to a 25% occupancy cap, including factories, offices, supermarke­ts, restaurant­s, retail stores, pharmacies, shopping malls, pet grooming shops, bookstores, florists, hair salons, and cannabis dispensari­es,” Kavanaugh wrote.

The legal battle reached the high court days before Pentecost Sunday, when churches that have been restricted to virtual or drive-by services since before Easter are eager to greet congregant­s.

In the California case, the court sided with Gov. Gavin Newsom’s decision to limit in-church gatherings to 25% of capacity, and no more than 100 people.

In a second, separate case arising in Illinois, the justices earlier denied two Romanian American churches’ petition because Gov. J.P. Pritzker lifted his state’s restrictio­ns Friday, making the complaint essentiall­y moot. The court said the churches could file “a new motion for appropriat­e relief if circumstan­ces warrant.”

The religious disputes over governors’ reopening plans are most heated in states that impose limits on religious gatherings. While 30 states no longer have prohibitio­ns, 20 and the District of Columbia impose restrictio­ns, according to the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. They are most severe in California, Maine, Nevada, New Hampshire, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island and Washington.

President Donald Trump, Vice President Mike Pence and many religious leaders have demanded that state and local government­s treat churches the same as most businesses. Last week, Trump labeled churches, synagogues and mosques “essential places that provide essential services.”

But some states and public health authoritie­s, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, have linked religious services to outbreaks of COVID-19. In one example, the CDC said 38% of those attending a rural Arkansas church in early March caught the virus, resulting in four deaths.

 ?? AMY NEWMAN/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Monica Asitimbay prays at Holy Trinity Church in Hackensack, N.J., May 17.
AMY NEWMAN/USA TODAY NETWORK Monica Asitimbay prays at Holy Trinity Church in Hackensack, N.J., May 17.

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