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44 St. & Loc. L. News 1 (2020-2021)

handle is hein.journals/stlolane44 and id is 1 raw text is: Vol. 44, No. 1, Summer/Fall 2020

STATE&
LOCAL LAW
The Section serves as a collegialforum for its members, the profession, and the public to provide leadership and educational resources in urban,
state, and local government law and policy.

How the Wisconsin
Legislature Reopened the
State with a Mundane
Legal Theory
By Lane Ruhland
OVID-19 not only has wreaked havoc on our coun-
try's population and economy, but it also has kept
lawyers quite busy, especially in Wisconsin. Wis-
consin's legislative and executive branches certainly do
not see eye to eye on policy matters with a democratic
governor and republican-controlled legislature, and that
tenuous relationship has been strained further by contin-
ual confrontations in court, only increased by the presence
of the pandemic. For example, the Wisconsin legislature
has defended against numerous challenges to Wisconsin's
election administration brought by outside groups as well
as when the governor attempted to reschedule Wisconsin's
spring election due to the pandemic. Thus far, the legisla-
ture has been successful in these cases. Perhaps the most
tense confrontation came in the legislature's challenge to
Lane Ruhland is special counselfor the Madison, Wis., office
of Husch Blackwell LLP She represented the Wisconsin state
legislature in Wisconsin Legislature v. Palm. Ruhland
enjoys helping clients navigate the intersection of law, politics,
and media awareness. She understands that due diligence
in this legal sector must go beyond
compliance and encompass campaign
image. In addition to afocus on
campaign finance matters, her career
has centered on navigating the
complex administrative rulemaking
process, which has given her a unique
knowledge of where administrative
law and legislative matters align.

the authority of the governor's cabinet secretary, Andrea
Palm, in Wisconsin Legislature v. Palm.2
Like many other states, in spring 2020, the Wisconsin
Department of Health Services (DHS), through Emer-
gency Order No. 283 (commonly known as the Safer at
Home order), required all individuals within the state to
stay at home, with some broad exceptions. For example,
you could leave your home for certain emergency care, or
to travel to your workplace, only if your line of work was
deemed essential. The order broadly defined work that was
essential and that which was not. Any business that claimed
to be essential could contact the Department of Workforce
Development (DWD) to make the case, after which DWD,
using obscure criteria, then would decide.
The strict limitations on travel and the unilateral deter-
mination of which businesses were essential caused great
consternation among many in Wisconsin, including the
legislature. There was concern not only with the economic
impact of the order but also with the precedent of allow-
ing one individual, unaccountable to the electorate, to issue
continued on page 13
- Chair's Message, page 3
- Section News
-2020-21 Section Leadership, page 2
-ABA Virtual Annual Meeting Wrap-Up: Free CLE
Credit Available, Resolutions Adopted, page 4
-Law Student Awards, page 7
-Writing Competition Announced, page 10
-Jefferson Fordham Award Winners, page 11
-2020 Virtual Fall Conference, October 26-30,2020,
page 12
- Member News, page 10
- How the Wisconsin Legislature Reopened the State with a
Mundane Legal Theory, page 1
- Native American Law Update, page 5
- ABA Stands with Law School Graduates in the Midst of
the Pandemic, page 6
- Defying Great Odds-Mitigating Property Loss Through
Historic Partition Law Reform in the U.S., page 8

Published in State & Local Law News, Volume 44, Number 1, Summer/Fall 2020. © 2020 American Bar Association. Reproduced with permission. All rights reserved. This information or any portion
thereof may not be copied or disseminated in any form or by any means or stored in an electronic database or retrieval system without the express written consent of the American Bar Association.

AEA
AMERioANBRPA   oATioN

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