Wisconsin appeals court temporarily blocks order limiting public indoor gatherings News
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Wisconsin appeals court temporarily blocks order limiting public indoor gatherings

Wisconsin’s Court of Appeals District III temporarily blocked Emergency Order #3 Limiting Public Gatherings Friday, preventing enforcement of the directive designed to limit public indoor gatherings to 25 percent of a building’s total capacity. The limit had not applied to schools, polling locations, and churches. The administration of  Governor Tony Evers had issued the order on October 6, imposing fines of up to $500 on violators.

The Tavern League of Wisconsin, Miki Jo’s Mix Up bar and restaurant and Pro-Life Wisconsin had sued on October 13, arguing that the governor’s administration did not have the authority to issue the order. The League argued that the order amounted to a “de facto closure” order for bars, restaurants, and taverns across Wisconsin, and Pro-Life Wisconsin asserted that it compromised indoor fundraising.

A three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals District III wrote that the plaintiffs had demonstrated a “sufficient likelihood of success” in their appeal. Therefore the panel blocked the order while the case remains on appeal.

The block of this emergency order is one of several setbacks to the governor’s attempts to curb COVID-19 in Wisconsin. The Wisconsin Supreme Court struck down the governor’s stay-at-home order in May. Republican lawmakers have also sued to block the governor’s statewide mask mandate.