Wisconsin businesses, public health agencies at odds over virus bill
Wisconsin’s business community on Tuesday came out in support of a Republican-authored coronavirus response bill moving quickly through the Legislature that is opposed by public health officials and Democrats.
The measure, introduced on Monday and slated to pass as soon as Thursday, appears likely to be vetoed by Gov. Tony Evers. The governor said he still hasn’t read the bill, or decided what he will do, but “the likelihood of a veto is pretty strong” if it contains provisions he can’t support.
Evers said he was disappointed that Republicans weren’t offering the bill he put forward that he said included items that had bipartisan support.
Republican Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, who sponsored the bill, testified that it was a “good faith effort to compromise with Gov. Evers.” But the proposal is not the compromise Evers or Democrats had been looking for and far from what Evers had put forward last month.
Evers calls on Wisconsin Legislature to pass COVID-19 bill first
The Wisconsin Restaurant Association, the state and Milwaukee chambers of commerce, the Wisconsin Grocers Association and others were among those in support of the measure that gives immunity to businesses from civil liability claims related to COVID-19. The bill would also bar local health officials or the state from closing businesses for more than two weeks at a time if the virus spikes — a restriction businesses support.
Kristine Hillmer, president of the Wisconsin Restaurant Association, said restaurants across the state had become “major fall guys” during the pandemic and many face closure and the threat of lawsuits. She spoke in favor of granting restaurants immunity from lawsuits.
But Heath Straka, a Madison attorney representing the Wisconsin Association for Justice, said there have been no lawsuits brought against businesses to date because they are so difficult to prove. He said the exemption proposed was too broad and would serve as an incentive for businesses not to provide adequate protection against the coronavirus.
The Wisconsin Public Health Association and the Wisconsin Association of Local Health Departments and Boards also opposed the bill, saying it would limit their ability to respond to the virus. They objected both to limits placed on how long businesses could be closed and a prohibition on mandating vaccination against COVID-19.
“The middle of a pandemic is no time to limit the work of local health officers,” the two groups said in a statement.
The Wisconsin Medical Society also opposed the bill’s prohibition on employers requiring that workers receive the COVID-19 vaccine.
“Vaccinations are safe, effective and are often the best tool to combat harmful disease,” Mark Grapentine, chief policy officer for the group that represents doctors, said in prepared testimony.
The Assembly Health Committee planned to vote on the bill after the hearing. Committee approval will set up a vote on passage in the Assembly, where Republicans have a 60-38 majority, on Thursday. The GOP-controlled Senate could also approve it then, which would send the bill to Evers.
That would make it the first bill passed this session, which began Monday.