EMERGENCY DOCKET
Court clears way for indoor worship services in northern California

on Feb 26, 2021 at 9:17 pm

In the latest of a line of challenges to restrictions arising from the COVID-19 pandemic, the Supreme Court ordered a California county to allow churches to hold indoor worship services. In a brief order on Friday night, the justices granted a request to block county public health restrictions imposed in light of the pandemic while the restrictions are being challenged in federal court.
The request was filed by a group of churches in Santa Clara County, challenging the enforcement of a county order barring indoor worship services. The churches came to the Supreme Court on Feb. 17, asking the justices to allow them to hold services inside as soon as possible. They argued that the countyβs order discriminates against houses of worship by treating other activities, including grocery stores and airports, more favorably. The churches pointed to the Supreme Courtβs recent rulings in two cases β one lifting New Yorkβs COVID-related limits on attendance at worship services and the other granting requests by southern California churches to resume indoor worship services β to support their contention that the Santa Clara County order must also fall.
The county initially urged the justices to leave the ban on indoor worship services in place. The county explained that, in response to βthe most deadly pandemic in more than a century,β it had imposed public health restrictions that βare fundamentally different from the other COVID-19 restrictions this Court has considered.β Specifically, the county explained, the order at issue doesnβt single out religious institutions or worship services. Instead, it stressed, the countyβs public health directives βprohibit all indoor gatherings of all kinds at all places.β On Thursday, the county told the court that, because COVID-19 rates continue to fall there, it would allow indoor worship services and other prohibited indoor gatherings to resume with capacity limits. That change could take effect as soon as Wednesday, Mar. 3, James Williams, the countyβs chief lawyer, wrote in his letter.
The justices acted quickly after receiving the countyβs letter, without waiting to see whether the county would in fact lift its restrictions. In an unsigned order on Friday night, the justices granted the churchesβ request to put the restrictions on hold while their appeals play out. Such a result, the justices explained, βis clearly dictated byβ the Supreme Courtβs Feb. 5 ruling in South Bay United Pentecostal Church v. Newsom, granting the requests by southern California churches to resume indoor worship services.
Justice Elena Kagan, who dissented in the South Bay case, indicated that she dissented in Fridayβs case for the same reasons. She was joined by the two other members of the courtβs liberal bloc, Justice Stephen Breyer and Justice Sonia Sotomayor. No other justice indicated how he or she voted in the case, but the churches needed at least five votes to prevail.
This article was originally published at Howe on the Court.