Yuma Sun

Ariz. state mask mandate issue back in court today

- BY HOWARD FISCHER

PHOENIX – State lawmakers are not conceding they acted illegally in the way they approved a ban on mask mandates at schools earlier this year as part of the budget.

But they are telling the Arizona Supreme Court that if they did break the law, the justices should let them get away with it one more time and let the state block those mask requiremen­ts.

Well, actually, several more times. They also want to be able to enforce not not just the ban on schools requiring face coverings of faculty and students but also a grab-bag of other items stuffed into what lawmakers call “budget reconcilia­tion bills.’’ These include whether universiti­es can mandate vaccines, strip Secretary of State Katie Hobbs of some of her powers, create a committee to study the election audit, and even tell schools how they can – and cannot – teach about race, gender and ethnicity.

And today, the state’s high court will hear their arguments.

Attorney General Mark Brnovich, who is defending the lawmakers, wants the justices to overturn a ruling by Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Katherine Cooper that lumping those provisions – and many more – into these catch-call bills violates state constituti­onal requiremen­ts that what’s in each bill be reflected in the title and that measures be limited to a single subject. Among his contention­s is that what meets that definition is strictly a legislativ­e matter, not subject to judicial review.

But perhaps unconvince­d that argument is going to fly, the attorney general is telling the justices, in essence, that no one ever told lawmakers they couldn’t approve disparate issues that way. So he wants them to let these provisions take effect with an admonition not to do it again.

He’s not alone.

In a separate legal brief, House

Speaker Rusty Bowers, Senate President Karen Fann and Gov. Doug Ducey tell the justices that if they conclude they broke the law they should let this budget pass, let all the disparate provisions take effect, and tell them what they need to do – in the future – to comply.

“The legislatur­e stands ready to implement diligently the judiciary’s constructi­ons’’ of what the Arizona Constituti­on means, wrote attorney Thomas Basile. “But it is entitled to fair notice of, and an opportunit­y to institute, such new doctrinal developmen­ts.’’

That presumes, however, the justices believe that lawmakers didn’t know – and shouldn’t be expected to know – what the framers of the Arizona Constituti­on meant when they spelled out in 1912 that every legislativ­e act “shall embrace but one subject’’ and that subject “shall be expressed in the title.’’

But Roopali Desai, representi­ng education groups and their allies who sued – and got Cooper to rule in their favor – pointed out to the justices that the Supreme Court has, in fact, weighed in on this issue before.

That was in a 2003 legal fight where state lawmakers sued then-Gov. Janet Napolitano about her decision to veto several provisions out of three what were called at the time “omnibus reconcilia­tion bills.’’

In that case, the court sidesteppe­d the question of whether the governor’s power extends to the ability to reject spending reductions. The justices said, among other things, the dispute is political.

But Chief Justice Charles Jones, writing for the unanimous court, said he and his colleagues essentiall­y were being put in a position of trying to determine if a governor is constituti­onally authorized to veto provisions of one of these omnibus bills when it appears that the legislatur­e itself wasn’t obeying the rules.

“The problem arises because the relevant ORBs address multiple subjects,’’ he wrote.

“Had the legislatur­e addressed these subjects in separate bills, there would be no need to determine whether they were or were not appropriat­ions,’’ Jones continued. “Thus, the problem we face is in part created by the apparent non-adherence to the single subject rule in the legislativ­e process.’’

More to the point, he said that having the court weigh in on whether Napolitano misused her veto power “would of necessity require that we simultaneo­usly validate legislatio­n which appears to conflict with the single subject rule.’’ And Jones said there were “numerous apparent violations of the single subject rule in the ORBs.’’

Basile, however, said lawmakers did take that 2003 ruling seriously and did change their procedures.

Prior to 2004, he said, all those miscellane­ous odds and ends were put into just three ORBs, the practice that the justices found legally wanting.

But since then, Basile said, they have broken them down into smaller chunks.

In fact, he said, this year there were eight “budget reconcilia­tion bills,’’ each with “distinct subject areas’’ like environmen­t, health, K-12 education and criminal justice. He said going from three to eight “complies with the single subject rule, while still accommodat­ing the practical demands of governing a large, diverse and continuall­y growing state.’’

Not good enough, countered Desai. She said what lawmakers essentiall­y want is for the justices to conclude that simply breaking these into smaller pieces, by itself, complies with what the Arizona Constituti­on demands.

Desai said they actually first have to look in to what’s actually in each of the bills. And once they do, she contends, they will conclude that, whether it’s three bills or eight, the legislatur­e still is not following what the constituti­on demands.

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