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101 N.C. L. Rev. F. 1 (2022-2023)

handle is hein.journals/addendum101 and id is 1 raw text is: 


101 N.C. L. REv. F. 1(2022)


   DEMOCRATIZING EMERGENCIES: THE LOCAL
                             PREDICAMENT*


                                KELLY   J. DEERE

    Disasters are typically local events-even in a pandemic. Throughout 2020 and
    into 2021, state governors used their emergency powers to issue stay-at-home
    orders, close nonessential businesses, and ban  mass  gatherings-including
    gatherings for religious services. However, during the COVID-19 pandemic  it
    was local government that reacted more quickly in the beginning and continued
    to act into early 2022 when many  state governments refused to consider social
    mitigation measures to curb transmission, despite a national surge of nearly a
    million cases per day. For citizens who desire their state government to do more
    in an emergency, local government often fills that gap. While these local cities
    and  counties are enacting measures,  like school mask  mandates,  in direct
    response to local public health metrics, many have faced resistance from their
    state. Some states have banned local authorities from enacting certain mitigation
    measures and  have aggressively sought to restrain those local authorities from
    defying these bans through litigation and fines. While red states preempting blue-
    city laws is not new, some of the states' bans are more brazen in method and
    more obstructing in outcome. This new form of obstructing preemption places
    local officials in an untenable predicament. Charged with providing for  the
    health, safety, and education of its citizens, local government cannot carry out
    its duties if state government removes critical public mitigation tools from its
    toolbox in a public health emergency. This Article highlights the urgent need for
    local government  to fully respond in an emergency  and  the most important
    problems facing proponents of responsive regulation. This Article urges local
    government  to continue to challenge state-placed limitations on local emergency
    orders. The Article further concludes: (1) that the state and federal courts can
    and should bolster the local governments' legitimacy in their actions on either
    constitutional or statutory grounds; and (2) that governments  should model





    *   © 2022 Kelly J. Deere.
    **  Assistant Clinical Professor of Law, Rutgers University. The author is grateful for the advice,
mentorship, and expertise from Robert Williams. Recent law graduates Andrew Hoy and Kit Burnette
provided valuable research assistance on this Article. The author would like to thank David Noll and
the Rutgers Law School faculty attending the Abstract and Introduction Workshop for their keen
observations and valuable comments for the beginning of this Article. And finally, the North Carolina
Law Review editors are to be commended for their thoughtful and thorough edits throughout this
process.

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