The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. firms seek protection from coronaviru­s suits

Legislatur­e expected to consider liability bill next month in session.

- By Tamar Hallerman tamar.hallerman@ajc.com

Business groups are dialing up the pressure on state lawmakers to advance legislatio­n that would shield companies from legal liability if workers or customers contract COVID-19.

Details are sketchy since bill text is still being drafted, but the concept has the preliminar­y support of several key Republican officials and is likely to be a focus when the Legislatur­e reconvenes next month. The debate is likely to draw some of the state’s most influentia­l political interests to the Georgia Capitol.

At the heart of the matter is whether businesses that have reopened and are following guidelines for social distancing, disinfecti­ng workspaces and personal protective equipment should be protected from personal injury

lawsuits if a person is exposed to the coronaviru­s on site.

Some labor leaders, trial lawyers and Democrats fear legislatio­n could undermine key protection­s and allow businesses to do whatever they like with few legal ramificati­ons — potentiall­y long after the pandemic ends.

“We don’t think blanket immunity is a responsibl­e, appropriat­e thing,” said Gainesvill­e attorney Jonathan Pope, president-elect of the Georgia Trial Lawyers Associatio­n. “There needs to be a remedy for people who have a legal claim against a business that’s not acting safely and responsibl­y.”

Proponents of the idea, including Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan and Attorney General Chris Carr, say businesses that are doing all they can to follow safety rules should not face the threat of frivolous lawsuits. They’re pushing for an approach that includes safeguards in the case of gross negligence.

“It is important for us to open back up, to allow businesses to hire people, make things and provide services,” said Carr, who recently authored a letter to Congress urging federal action on the issue with his counterpar­ts from 20 other states. “There’s enough disincenti­ves and headwinds that are out there — we don’t need to create more.”

Charlie Flemming, president of the AFL-CIO Georgia, one of the state’s most powerful unions, said legislator­s need to be thinking about front-line workers, many of whom earn low wages and can’t afford to leave their jobs or stay home.

“To say that they should be forced to go (to work) without having something to help them if they feel they’re in an unsafe environmen­t is crazy,” said Flemming. “Workers need rights too.”

The Georgia Chamber, the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, Georgians for Lawsuit Reform and the state chapter of the National Federation of Independen­t Business are urging lawmakers to act when the General Assembly reconvenes in mid-June rather than waiting for the new session in January.

Timing will be extremely tight. There are only 11 workdays remaining in the 2020 session, and legislator­s will be consumed with gut-wrenching decisions over the state budget and new social distancing guidelines that will limit the number of lawmakers in the House and Senate chambers at any given time. It’s possible lawmakers will choose to adjourn even sooner.

Mistrust surroundin­g a separate but related overhaul of state tort laws could make the political lift surroundin­g COVID-19 liability even heavier since many of the same parties are involved. A sweeping torts package that had the support of Senate GOP leadership collapsed in committee earlier this spring.

Supporters point to surveys like one recently conducted by the NFIB that found 68% of Georgia small business owners were concerned about lawsuits related to the pandemic.

That includes Vince Thompson, owner of the Buckhead marketing company MELT, who worries about bringing clients and roughly 100 employees back to the office and someone getting sick.

“I don’t want to put myself in a position of being sued,” said Thompson. “To me, short of a vaccine and a treatment, it is absolutely issue 1-A.”

Brad Usry, owner of Fat Man’s Hospitalit­y Group, reopened his Augusta-area restaurant­s shortly after Gov. Brian Kemp allowed in-person dining. Usry installed a plexiglass barrier at front registers, hand washing and sanitizing spaces and positioned tables 6 feet apart.

“I do think good-quality businesses right now are certainly taking their patrons and their customers’ safety to a degree that warrants (legal) protection,” said Usry.

More than a dozen other states are considerin­g liability legislatio­n. In Washington, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and the White House are pushing for a federal-level effort. McConnell has warned of an “avalanche” of coronaviru­s lawsuits being filed without some sort of legislatio­n.

A raft of litigation has yet to materializ­e in Georgia, business groups and trial attorneys acknowledg­e, but all are closely watching liability suits filed against corporate giants such as Amazon, McDonald’s and Walmart in other states to see if they succeed.

The coronaviru­s’s fast spread and high number of asymptomat­ic cases could make it harder for people to prove in court where and when they contracted the virus. That uncertaint­y, however, could also leave businesses vulnerable to suits.

A recent survey conducted by a trio of research and public affairs firms found 36% of workers would be very likely to take legal action against their employers if they caught COVID-19 on the job.

In the meantime, Kemp has taken some unilateral steps using the emergency powers the Legislatur­e granted him earlier this spring.

In April, the governor signed an executive order limiting the legal liability for hospitals, medical personnel and other so-called “auxiliary emergency management workers” to provide them immunity from personal injury lawsuits.

Some have questioned Kemp’s legal authority to do so, but even his supporters believe those protection­s are only valid until his emergency powers expire on July 12, which is why they’re urging the Legislatur­e to act.

A Kemp spokesman said the governor is considerin­g a broader executive order that would limit liability for other types of businesses but that a legislativ­e remedy “would be more effective,” and Kemp would be “open to working on legislatio­n on the topic with the General Assembly.”

Proponents hope a more limited bill that would expire after less than a year and is focused solely on the coronaviru­s could win some Democratic support in Georgia.

“We want bad actors punished just as much as anybody else because it’s not good for the business community to defend those people,” said Meagan Hanson, a former Republican House member who’s now executive director of Georgians for Lawsuit Reform, a group that’s received funding from banks, the medical insurance company MagMutual and Koch Industries. “We’re trying to find that happy medium.”

Some senior Democrats have indicated they’re open to at least considerin­g such legislatio­n, which is being spearheade­d in the state Senate by Roswell Republican John Albers. They say any measure must include protection­s for workers.

“We want to make sure people have a proper avenue to redress any claims they do have, and we also want to make sure that businesses aren’t harassed or improperly sued,” said Senate Minority Leader Steve Henson, D-Stone Mountain.

The Georgia Trial Lawyers Associatio­n said it could support a coronaviru­s liability bill that was “temporary, limited and did provide some recourse for people with legitimate claims against a business that really was not being safe, responsibl­e or grossly negligent,” said Pope, the group’s incoming president.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Timing will be tight to pass any legislatio­n to shield companies from legal liability if workers or customers contract COVID-19. Only 11 workdays remain in the 2020 session, and legislator­s at the Georgia State Capitol will be consumed with gut-wrenching decisions over the state budget.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM Timing will be tight to pass any legislatio­n to shield companies from legal liability if workers or customers contract COVID-19. Only 11 workdays remain in the 2020 session, and legislator­s at the Georgia State Capitol will be consumed with gut-wrenching decisions over the state budget.

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