We are in for a long haul to the end of this nightmare .
Estelle Friedberg
On Sep 17, 2021, at 11:49 AM, Rosalind Bresnahan <rosalind568@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
LA Times Sept 17
Lawmakers roll back public health powers
Republicans across the U.S. have targeted pandemic rules, with 26 states
passing bills.
PEOPLE CHEER after the Salt Lake City Council overturned a school mask order
Aug. 12. Local and state officials are facing a legislative assault on their
ability to protect public health. At least 303 public health leaders have
retired, resigned or been fired during the pandemic. (Rick Bowmer Associated
Press) IDAHO GOV. Brad Little delivers his 2019 State of the State address.
Little has overturned an effort by Lt. Gov. Janice McGeachin, right, to ban
mask mandates. (Otto Kitsinger Associated Press)
By Lauren Weber and Anna Maria Barry-Jester
Republican legislators in more than half of U.S. states, spurred on by voters
angry about COVID-19 lockdowns and mask mandates, are taking away the powers
state and local officials use to protect the public against infectious
diseases.
A review by Kaiser Health News of hundreds of pieces of legislation found
that, in all 50 states, legislators have proposed bills to curb public health
powers since the pandemic began last year.
Although some governors vetoed bills that passed, at least 26 states pushed
through laws that permanently weaken government authority to protect public
health. More bills are pending in a few states whose legislatures are still
in session.
In three additional states, an executive order, ballot initiative or state
Supreme Court ruling limited long-held public health powers.
In Arkansas, legislators banned mask mandates except in private businesses or
state-run healthcare settings, calling them “a burden on the public peace,
health, and safety of the citizens of this state.” In Idaho, county
commissioners, who typically have no public health expertise, can veto
countywide public health orders. And in Kansas and Tennessee, school boards,
rather than health officials, have the power to close schools.
President Biden on Thursday announced sweeping vaccination mandates and other
COVID-19 measures, saying he was forced to act partly because of such
legislation: “My plan also takes on elected officials in states that are
undermining you and these lifesaving actions.”
All told:
In at least 16 states, legislators have limited the power of public health
officials to order mask mandates, quarantines or isolation. In some cases,
they gave themselves or local elected politicians the authority to prevent
the spread of infectious disease.
At least 17 states passed laws banning COVID-19 vaccine mandates or
“passports,” or made it easier to get around vaccine requirements.
At least nine states have new laws banning or limiting mask mandates.
Executive orders or a court ruling limit mask requirements in five more.
Much of this legislation takes effect as COVID-19 hospitalizations in some
areas are climbing to the highest numbers seen at any point in the pandemic.
“We really could see more people sick, hurt, hospitalized or even die,
depending on the extremity of the legislation and curtailing of the
authority,” said Lori Tremmel Freeman, head of the National Assn. of County
and City Health Officials.
Public health officials are frustrated that they, not the coronavirus, have
become the enemy. They say the rollbacks will have consequences that last
long beyond this pandemic, diminishing their ability to fight COVID-19 surges
today and to quarantine people during a measles outbreak in the future.
“It’s kind of like having your hands tied in the middle of a boxing match,”
said Kelley Vollmar, executive director of the Jefferson County Health
Department in Missouri.
But proponents of the new limits say they are a necessary check on executive
powers and give lawmakers a voice in prolonged emergencies. Arkansas state
Sen. Trent Garner, a Republican who co-sponsored his state’s successful bill
to ban mask mandates, said he was trying to reflect the will of the people.
“What the people of Arkansas want is the decision to be left in their hands,
to them and their family,” Garner said. “It’s time to take the power away
from the so-called experts, whose ideas have been woefully inadequate.”
After initially signing the bill, Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson expressed
regret, calling a special legislative session in early August to ask
lawmakers to carve out an exception for schools. They declined.
The law is currently blocked by an Arkansas judge, who deemed it
unconstitutional. Legal battles continue in other states as well.
A deluge of bills
In Ohio, legislators gave themselves the power to overturn health orders and
weakened school vaccine mandates. In Utah and Iowa, schools cannot require
masks. In Alabama, state and local governments cannot issue vaccine passports
and schools cannot require COVID-19 vaccinations.
Montana’s Legislature passed some of the most restrictive laws of all,
severely curbing public health’s quarantine and isolation powers, increasing
local elected officials’ power over local health boards, preventing limits on
religious gatherings and banning employers — including in healthcare settings
— from requiring vaccinations for COVID-19, the flu or anything else.
Legislators there also passed limits on local officials: If jurisdictions add
public health rules stronger than state public health measures, they could
lose 20% of some grants.
Losing the ability to order quarantines has left Karen Sullivan, health
officer for Montana’s Butte-Silver Bow Public Health Department, terrified
about what’s to come — not only during the pandemic but also for future
measles and whooping cough outbreaks.
“In the midst of Delta and other variants that are out there, we’re quite
frankly a nervous wreck about it,” Sullivan said. “Relying on morality and
goodwill is not a good public health practice.”
Although some public health officials tried to fight the national wave of
legislation, the underfunded public health workforce was consumed by trying
to implement the largest vaccination campaign in U.S. history and had little
time for political action.
Freeman said her city and county health officials’ group had meager influence
and resources, especially in comparison with the American Legislative
Exchange Council , or ALEC, a corporate-backed conservative group that
promoted a model bill to restrict the emergency powers of governors and other
officials.
The draft legislation appears to have inspired dozens of state-level bills,
according to the Kaiser Health News review. At least 15 states passed laws
limiting emergency powers. In some states, governors can no longer institute
mask mandates or close businesses, and their executive orders can be
overturned by legislators.
When North Dakota’s legislative session began in January, a long slate of
bills sought to rein in public health powers, including one with language
similar to ALEC’s. The state didn’t have a health director to argue against
the new limits because three had resigned in 2020.
Fighting the bills not only took time but also seemed dangerous, said Renae
Moch, public health director for Bismarck, who testified against a measure
prohibiting mask mandates. She then received an onslaught of hate mail and
demands for her to be fired.
Lawmakers overrode the governor’s veto to pass the bill into law. The North
Dakota Legislature also banned businesses from asking whether patrons were
vaccinated against or infected with the corona- virus and curbed the
governor’s emergency powers.
The new laws are meant to reduce the power of governors and restore the
balance of power between states’ executive branches and legislatures, said
Jonathon Hauenschild , director of the ALEC task force on communications and
technology.
“Governors are elected, but they were delegating a lot of authority to the
public health official, often that they had appointed,” Hauenschild said.
‘This is a deathblow’
When the Indiana Legislature overrode the governor’s veto to pass a bill that
gave county commissioners the power to review public health orders, it was
devastating for Dr. David Welsh , the public health officer in rural Ripley
County.
People immediately stopped calling him to report COVID-19 violations, because
they knew the county commissioners could overturn his authority. It was “like
turning off a light switch,” Welsh said.
Another county in Indiana has seen its health department’s mask mandate
overridden by the local commissioners, Welsh said.
He’s considering stepping down after more than a quarter of a century in the
role. If he does, he’ll join at least 303 public health leaders who have
retired, resigned or been fired since the pandemic began, according to an
ongoing KHN and Associated Press analysis. That means 1 in 5 Americans have
lost a local health leader during the pandemic.
“This is a deathblow,” said Brian Castrucci , CEO of the De Beaumont
Foundation, which advocates for public health. He called the legislative
assault the last straw for many seasoned public health officials who had
battled the pandemic without sufficient resources while also being vilified.
Public health groups expect further combative legislation. ALEC’s Hau-
enschild said the group was looking into a Michigan law that allowed the
Legislature to limit the governor’s emergency powers without Democratic Gov.
Gretchen Whitmer’s signature.
Curbing the authority of public health officials also has become campaign
fodder, particularly among Republican candidates running further on the right.
While Republican Idaho Gov. Brad Little was out of state, Lt. Gov. Janice
McGeachin signed a surprise executive order banning mask mandates that she
later promoted for a campaign against him. He reversed the ban, tweeting, “I
do not like political stunts over the rule of law.”
At least one former lawmaker, former Oregon Democratic state Sen. Wayne
Fawbush, said some of today’s politicians might come to regret these laws.
Fawbush was a sponsor of 1989 legislation during the AIDS crisis. It banned
employers from requiring healthcare workers, as a condition of employment, to
get an HIV vaccine, if one became available.
But 32 years later, that means Oregon cannot require healthcare workers to be
vaccinated against COVID-19. Calling lawmaking a “messy business,” Fawbush
said he certainly wouldn’t have pushed the bill through if he had known then
what he does now.
“Legislators need to obviously deal with immediate situations,” Fawbush said.
“But we have to look over the horizon. It’s part of the job responsibility to
look at consequences.”
This story was produced by Kaiser Health News, a national newsroom that
produces in-depth journalism about health issues. KHN is one of the three
major operating programs at the nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation.
KHN data reporter Hannah Recht, Montana correspondent Katheryn Houghton and
Associated Press writer Michelle R. Smith contributed to this report.
--
Rosalind Bresnahan, Ph.D.
Collective of Coordinating Editors
Latin American Perspectives
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The marriage of ignorance and force always generates
unfathomable evil, an evil that is unseen by perpetrators
who mistake their own stupidity and blindness for innocence.
Chris Hedges, The Great Forgetting, Truthdig, Jan. 10, 2016