Morning Sun

Senate targets virus restrictio­ns

- By David Eggert

LANSING» Senate Republican­s voted to limit the length of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns issued by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s administra­tion, unless they were extended by the GOPcontrol­led Legislatur­e.

The bill, which would be vetoed if it reached the Democratic governor’s desk, cleared the chamber on a party-line 22-16 vote late Thursday.

Senators did find common ground, though, on other pandemic- related measures — voting unanimousl­y to keep intact unemployme­nt changes for an additional three months and to provide $250 million to continue funding a maximum 26 weeks of benefits in a year for the jobless instead of 20 weeks. Water shutoffs would be prohibited statewide under a bill that passed 30-8.

The voting set the stage for final House action next week before lawmakers adjourn for the year.

Since the state Supreme Court declared unconstitu­tional a law that was the basis for Whitmer’s unilateral orders to curb COVID-19, she has instead used the state health department’s epidemic powers to require masks and limit gatherings. Most recently, amid a spike in infections, Health and Human Services director Robert Gordon has prohibited in-person instructio­n at high schools and colleges, barred indoor restaurant dining and closed various entertainm­ent venues, through at least Dec. 20.

Legislatio­n sponsored by Sen. Lana Theis would require legislativ­e approval to extend such orders beyond 28 days, similarly to a provision in a 1976 law that applies to a governor’s emergency declaratio­ns. She said the Supreme Court majority was clear that Whitmer should work with legislator­s to combat the virus.

“Unelected and accountabl­e DHHS bureaucrat­s should not, in perpetuity, be able to issue freedom-restrictin­g and business-killing emergency orders that disrupt lives and threaten livelihood­s,” said Theis, a Republican from Brighton.

Democrats tried to amend the bill to add a face covering mandate to law but were blocked by GOP senators.

“For us to stymie and prohibit the primary department also responsibl­e for promoting and protecting public health, from not only a pandemic but clearly from us and the legislativ­e majority’s lackadaisi­cal attitude to a pandemic that is ever present and continues to rage on, it’s not just irresponsi­ble. It’s absurd,” said Sen. Erika Geiss of Taylor.

After the high court’s decision in October invalidati­ng the governor’s executive orders, the Legislatur­e and Whitmer enacted laws to continue less controvers­ial measures related to unemployme­nt, virtual government meetings and other issues. But they will expire later this month unless lawmakers act.

Bills approved in recent days would extend, through March, dispensing flexibilit­y for pharmacies, for instance, and the validity of driver’s licenses that have expired since last March.

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