The lawsuit,
filed by the Republican governor, alleges that Atlanta mayor Keisha Lance
Bottoms does not have the authority to require stricter public health measures
than the state, which has encouraged mask-wearing but not required it.
The governor
of U.S. State of Georgia, Brian Kemp has sued officials in the state’s largest
city seeking to block a mandate that would require Atlanta residents wear face
masks in public as part of efforts to stop the spread of the coronavirus.
“The City of
Atlanta may only exercise powers granted to it by the state, and Mayor Bottoms’
attempts to exercise an undelegated power against the state are ultra vires” or
not allowed, the suit says, asking a Fulton County judge to block the executive
orders Bottoms issued last week.
The suit also
claims that Bottoms does not have the authority to move the city back to a
“Phase 1” state of lockdown reopening.
“This lawsuit
is on behalf of the Atlanta business owners and their hardworking employees who
are struggling to survive during these difficult times,” Kemp tweeted.
“I refuse to
sit back and watch as disastrous policies threaten the lives and livelihoods of
our citizens,” he said, claiming that Bottoms’s moves endanger Atlanta’s
economy.
“We will
fight to stop these reckless actions and put people over pandemic politics.”
Bottoms, who
herself has tested positive for the virus, hit back on Twitter, saying, “3104
Georgians have died and I and my family are amongst the 106k who have tested
positive for COVID-19.
“Meanwhile, I
have been sued by @GovKemp for a mask mandate. A better use of tax payer money
would be to expand testing and contact tracing,” she tweeted.
Bottoms has
framed the disagreement as a public health policy dispute, while state
authorities have said they are focused on the technicalities of their parallel
mandates.
“The State of
Georgia continues to urge citizens to wear masks. This lawsuit is about the
rule of law,” Georgia state attorney general Chris Carr tweeted Thursday
evening.
Public health
officials have for months urged face coverings as a means to limit the
outbreak, with studies highlighting that even cloth masks can reduce oral
particle dispersion between 50 and 100 percent.
States such
as Alabama, California, Texas and Colorado have instituted state-wide mask
mandates to try to curb surging infection rates.
But mask
requirements have led to friction in stores around the country, spawning
numerous viral videos of irate customers clashing with retail employees.
And US
President Donald Trump has mostly declined to wear a mask in public, donning
one for the first time last week.
There have
been more than 131,000 COVID-19 cases in Georgia, with 3,105 deaths — one of
the worst-hit states in the US, itself the worst-hit country in the world
No comments:
Post a Comment