Monterey Herald

Finally, the `emergencie­s' may be over

Three years after the coronaviru­s outbreak prompted government­s to take unpreceden­ted action to contain the virus, the state of California and the federal government are on track to terminate their ongoing emergency declaratio­ns. It is about time.

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Three years ago, Gov.

Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency, giving himself and his administra­tion broad authority to bypass normal procedures, impose mandates and grant billions of dollars no-bid contracts (including to his own campaign donors).

To be sure, the emergency powers yielded some positive outcomes, including making it easier for out-of-state health workers to work in California and waiving licensing requiremen­ts so pharmacist­s and pharmacy technician­s could administer COVID vaccines.

At the very least, they showed that many government restrictio­ns aren't really that necessary in the first place — and should prompt legislativ­e changes accordingl­y.

But Newsom's exercise of his emergency powers have also been quite controvers­ial and even damaging. Businesses were destroyed, freedoms were severely curtailed, and government power expanded to the point of micromanag­ing how people went about their lives.

It remains unclear which exercises of power were actually justified to mitigate the pandemic, though the arguments for such powers certainly fell off long ago with the rollout of vaccines and therapeuti­cs.

The California Legislatur­e is there, ostensibly, to help grapple with complicate­d policy matters as representa­tives of their constituen­ts. Alas, it was clear early on that the Newsom administra­tion enjoyed the broad powers it assumed.

“Newsom has made statements that indicate his willingnes­s to use the emergency to make permanent changes in California,” this editorial board noted in Dec. 2020. “He has suggested that COVID-19 is an `opportunit­y to reshape the way we do business and how we govern' and spoken of using it to bring in a `new progressiv­e era.' That suggests that the concentrat­ion of unlimited power in the hands of one individual is an emergency in itself.”

Finally, in October of last year, Gov. Newsom announced the state of California would terminate its state of emergency on Feb. 28 2023. On

Jan. 31, the Newsom administra­tion issued a statement affirming the decision.

California­ns should welcome the news, as it means, finally, the proper balance of power will be restored with respect to COVID policy.

Meanwhile, the Biden administra­tion likewise announced it would allow federal emergency declaratio­ns related to COVID to expire in May.

Back in September 2022, President Biden told 60 Minutes “the pandemic is over,” but of course has used the cover of the emergency to try and ram through things he otherwise couldn't get done.

This includes his attempt to unilateral­ly cancel student loan debt because of the pandemic which he himself said was “over.”

The Office of Management and Budget has explained the White House will allow the emergencie­s to remain in place for a bit longer because ending them abruptly would cause “chaos.”

Here's to hoping the “chaos” excuse won't stop them from allowing the declaratio­ns to end soon and that the federal government won't try to pull any more stunts like the student loan terminatio­n scheme.

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