Los Angeles Times

O.C. education board again sues over virus rules

- By Gabriel San Román

For the second time in recent months, the Orange County Board of Education is mounting a legal challenge to Gov. Gavin Newsom’s pandemic-related state of emergency declaratio­n.

In August, the California Supreme Court declined to hear the board’s previous petition seeking to overturn Newsom’s emergency rulemaking authoritie­s that included allowing state officials to issue a mask mandate for K-12 students this summer ahead of the new school year.

But that setback didn’t deter a renewed legal effort.

This time, attorneys for the board filed a Nov. 23 complaint with the Orange County Superior Court, which doesn’t share the state Supreme Court’s authority to decline cases.

And unlike the August petition, no release about the suit was sent before its filing, two days before the Thanksgivi­ng holiday.

After the state Supreme Court declined to hear the original case, the board did send a formal letter to Newsom asking him to voluntaril­y end the state of emergency by Sept. 13 to avoid future litigation.

The framing of the filing that followed is similar to the previous petition.

“This case is not about vaccine or mask mandates, or any other specific policy measures,” said Scott Street, an attorney for the board. “It seeks to restore the normal process of governance and to ensure transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in the political process, things that have been lacking during the past two years.”

Street previously served as an attorney with the California Fitness Alliance, a coalition of gym owners who sued the governor in 2020 over pandemic restrictio­ns on their business operations but dropped the case when the state planned to fully reopen in June amid declining COVID-19 infections.

In the board’s suit, Street argued that Newsom violated the California Emergency Services Act when he reopened the state in June but kept the state of emergency declaratio­n from March 2020 in play. The complaint acknowledg­ed that the statute has been seldom used with little in the way of case law interpreta­tion, but it argued that the law was on its side.

“One thing is clear,” the suit claimed, “the governor has a duty to terminate the state of emergency at the ‘earliest possible moment that conditions warrant.’ ”

For Street and the plaintiffs, that moment arrived in June when Newsom rescinded the stay-at-home order and proceeded to roll back nearly 90% of his pandemic executive orders by October — except the state of emergency declaratio­n.

In November, the governor extended certain provisions of his emergency proclamati­on through March 2022, citing possible surges in COVID-19 cases and understaff­ed hospitals.

The California Department of Public Health vehemently disagrees any violation has taken place.

“Numerous courts have recognized that state law authorizes the continued state of emergency, which remains necessary to ensure hospitals are equipped to handle a surge in COVID-19 cases and to support the state’s ongoing vaccinatio­n and booster programs,” the department said. “California will continue to lead with science and public health to keep California­ns safe.”

On Wednesday, the department helped confirm the first Omicron variant case in the United States in San Francisco. Omicron is classified as a “variant of concern” by the World Health Organizati­on. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention notes that Omicron’s presence reinforces the importance of vaccinatio­n, booster shots and general prevention strategies.

Scientists predict it will be weeks or months before Omicron’s impact is more fully known..

Children’s Health Defense, an anti-vaccinatio­n group founded by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has joined the education board as co-plaintiff, as it did in August.

The complaint described the nonprofit’s mission as one that seeks “to educate the public about the risks and harmful effects of chemical exposures upon prenatal and children’s health.”

 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? Kent Nishimura THE O.C. SUIT targets Gov. Gavin Newsom’s emergency authority.
Los Angeles Times Kent Nishimura THE O.C. SUIT targets Gov. Gavin Newsom’s emergency authority.

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