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In the US, California to pay $US2 million in church legal fees over virus closures

Los Angeles, US
AP

The state of California has agreed not to impose greater coronavirus restrictions on church gatherings than it does on retail establishments in a pair of settlements that provide more than $US2 million in fees to lawyers who challenged the rules as a violation of religious freedom.

A deal approved Tuesday by a federal judge comes after lawyers for a San Diego-area Pentecostal church took their challenge against the state to the US Supreme Court three times and won. 

US Supreme Court Nov 2020

In this 6th November, 2020, file photo, the Supreme Court is seen at sundown in Washington. The state of California has agreed to pay more than $US2 million in legal fees in a settlement with churches that challenged coronavirus closure orders. Church lawyers, who successfully took their appeal to the US Supreme Court, said Wednesday, June 2, 2021, that the state agreed not to impose restrictions on houses of worship that are greater than those on retail businesses. PICTURE: AP Photo/J Scott Applewhite/File photo.

The settlement includes a permanent injunction in line with Supreme Court rulings that found restrictions on houses of worship cannot exceed those on retail businesses, attorney Paul Jonna said.

“If they’re gonna restrict Costco to 50 per cent, then they can do the same thing to churches,” Jonna said. “But what they were doing before, as you may remember, is they were keeping those places open and they were shutting down churches – at least in California – completely.” 

The settlement has little practical impact after a Supreme Court ruling led the state in April to lift limits on indoor worship. As the state’s case rate of COVID-19 has plummeted since a deadly winter surge and vaccination rates rise, Governor Gavin Newsom is poised to lift all restrictions on 15th June. 

Newsom’s office issued a statement saying he put the health of Californians first when he imposed closure orders. It said the settlements provide clarity on how public health standards can be applied to churches. 

Newsom was the first governor to issue a statewide stay-home order at the start of the pandemic in March, 2020. His various closure orders and modifications that allowed certain businesses to open at different capacities were challenged in state and federal courts. 

The public health orders were generally upheld until religious groups won a string of victories after a change in the Supreme Court makeup last year when liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died and was replaced by conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett. 

While the settlements only apply to restrictions issued for the COVID-19 pandemic, Jonna said he does not believe the state would impose harsher restrictions on churches in the future because of the Supreme Court rulings. 

The settlements involve a federal lawsuits brought by South Bay United Pentecostal Church in Chula Vista and Father Trevor Burfitt, a Catholic priest in Bakersfield, who sued in Kern County Superior Court. 

Lawyers for the Thomas More Society, a conservative public interest law firm, will receive $US1.6 million in legal fees in the South Bay case and $550,000 in the Burfitt case.

 

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