Las Vegas Review-Journal

County bars serve lawsuit over closure

- By Bill Dentzer and Colton Lochhead Review-journal Capital Bureau

CARSON CITY — Plaintiffs representi­ng 37 Clark County bars have gone to court to block Gov. Steve Sisolak’s latest order closing alcohol-serving establishm­ents to stem the spread of COVID-19, claiming they are being unfairly singled out.

“The disparate treatment of bars and taverns is unreasonab­le because there is no rational basis for treating bars and taverns differentl­y than other, similarly situated, non-essential businesses,” lawyers for the plaintiffs wrote in the lawsuit filed over the weekend in Clark County District Court. It seeks a court order rescinding the governor’s directive, which took effect Friday. Bars in seven counties with elevated COVID-19 transmissi­on rates

were closed under the directive.

Bars were closed along with other nonessenti­al businesses in March but were permitted to reopen May 29 under the state’s phased recovery plan. Sisolak reinstated the closures last week amid a monthlong rapid rise in Nevada’s COVID-19 infection rate and resulting stress on the health case system, and citing evidence of noncomplia­nce with social distancing directives in bars.

The reinstated restrictio­ns permit bars, breweries and other drinking establishm­ents that don’t serve food to offer curbside pickup.

In their filing, plaintiffs say compliance checkers initially found 48 percent compliance in bars in checks conducted between June 24 and July 2, but 80 percent compliance in bars during checks on July 3. They also say none of the 39 businesses cited for noncomplia­nce, among 1,600 checked between June 26 and July 10, were alcohol-serving businesses.

“Despite the available evidence showing compliance by bars and taverns, (the bar-closing directive) unfairly and unlawfully singles them out for closure,” the filing says. “Notably, it does not close home improvemen­t stores, water parks, casino floors, or casino pools, or other businesses found to have similar (or more serious) compliance issues.”

Further, plaintiffs claim there is

“no evidence that sitting at a bar top or at a table within the bar area increases the likelihood of contractin­g COVID-19 so long as the bar or tavern complies” with social distancing requiremen­ts in the state’s Phase Two reopening plan.

The governor’s office declined to comment on the lawsuit Tuesday.

News of the lawsuit came as Clark County for the first time reported more than 1,000 new COVID-19 cases Tuesday.

Contact Capital Bureau reporter Bill Dentzer at bdentzer@reviewjour­nal. com. Follow @Dentzernew­s on Twitter. Contact Capital Bureau Chief Colton Lochhead at clochhead@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Coltonloch­head on Twitter.

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