The Coronavirus Weekly Update summarizes major changes due to the coronavirus pandemic in politics, government, and elections. Today, you will find updates on the following topics, with comparisons to our previous edition released on Sept. 24:
- Election changes
- School closures and reopenings
- Lawsuits about state actions and policies
- Travel restrictions
- Ballot measure changes
- 1918 story
- Federal responses
- Stay-at-home orders
- Eviction and foreclosure policies
- Diagnosed or quarantined public officials
- State legislation
- State courts

For daily news on state reopening plans and which industries and activities are permitted across the country, subscribe to Documenting America's Path to Recovery.
Overview:
- Thirty-nine states have made modifications to their voting procedures.
- Six states have made voting procedure modifications since Sept. 24.
- Twenty states have modified their candidate filing requirements.
- No states have made candidate filing modifications since Sept. 24.
Details:
- Alabama: On Sept. 30, Judge Abdul Kallon of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Alabama issued a ruling that made a number of modifications to Alabama's voting laws, including waiving the absentee/mail-in ballot witness/notary requirement for voters with underlying medical conditions.
- Indiana: On Sept. 29, Judge Sarah Barker of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana issued an order extending the postmark and receipt deadline for absentee/mail-in ballots in Indiana to Nov. 3 and Nov. 13, respectively.
- Iowa: On Sept. 25, Iowa legislators approved Secretary of State Paul Pate's R(R) emergency request authorizing counties to begin processing absentee/mail-in ballots on Oct. 31, the Saturday before Election Day.
- South Carolina: On Sept. 25, the full Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed an earlier ruling and removed the state's witness requirement for absentee/mail-in ballots.
- Texas: On Sept. 30, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit blocked a lower court's order that had reinstated Texas' straight-ticket ballot device, pending further proceedings.
- Wisconsin: On Sept. 29, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit upheld a district court decision extending voter registration and absentee/mail-in ballot return deadlines in Wisconsin.
School closures and reopenings
Read more: School responses to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic during the 2020-2021 academic year
Overview:
In March and April, 48 states closed schools to in-person instruction for the remainder of the 2019-2020 academic year. Those states accounted for 99.4% of the nation's 50.6 million public school students. Montana and Wyoming did not require in-person instruction to close for the year. Montana schools were allowed to reopen on May 7 and Wyoming schools were allowed to reopen on May 15.
The current status of school reopenings is as follows:
- Washington, D.C., has a district-ordered school closure
- 2016-17 enrollment: 85,850 students (0.17% of students nationwide)
- Five states (Calif., Hawaii, N.M., Ore., W.V.) have a state-ordered regional school closure
- 2016-17 enrollment: 7,679,753 students (15.18% of students nationwide)
- Two states (Del., Va.) are open for hybrid or remote instruction only
- 2016-17 enrollment: 1,686,326 students (3.33% of students nationwide)
- Four states (Ark., Fla., Iowa, Texas) have state-ordered in-person instruction
- 2016-17 enrollment: 9,180,918 students (18.15% of students nationwide)
- Thirty-nine states have reopenings that vary by school or district
- 2016-17 enrollment: 31,955,012 students (63.17% of students nationwide)

Lawsuits about state actions and policies
Read more: Lawsuits about state actions and policies in response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, 2020-2021
Overview:
- To date, Ballotpedia has tracked 1,013 lawsuits, across all 50 states, dealing in some way with the COVID-19 outbreak. Court orders have been issued, or settlements have been reached, in 352 of those lawsuits.
- Since Sept. 24, we have added 22 lawsuits to our database. We have also tracked an additional 20 court orders and/or settlements.
- Ballotpedia has separately tracked another 251 lawsuits, in 47 states, dealing with election issues during the COVID-19 outbreak. Court orders have been issued, or settlements have been reached, in 176 of those lawsuits.
Here are three lawsuits that have either garnered significant national media attention or involve major advocacy groups.
- Case v. Ivey: On Sept. 24, seven Alabama residents represented by former Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore (R) sued Gov. Kay Ivey (R) and State Health Officer Dr. Scott Harris in U.S. district court. Plaintiffs allege the executive orders Ivey and Harris have issued are unconstitutional. The plaintiffs said the "Orders, Proclamations, and Mandates of both Governor Ivey and State Health Officer Harris" have been enforced as law and "violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment." Plaintiffs allege the limits on gathering size and social distancing orders "unlawfully and in direct contradiction to the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment … effectively prohibited worship services." A representative for Ivey said, "The governor is pleased with our state’s progress in terms of COVID-19 and reminds everyone to keep at it." Although the suit was originally filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Alabama, it was later moved to the Middle District. A judge has not yet been assigned.
- Ike’s Korner Grille v. South Carolina: On Sept. 20, a Spartanburg County restaurant sued the state of South Carolina and Gov. Henry McMaster (R), alleging McMaster's COVID-19 executive orders "are not authorized by the laws of South Carolina and violate the South Carolina Constitution." Ike’s Korner Grille has received multiple notices for violating mandatory safety measures. The Grille's owners allege the orders pose "the threat of lasting and permanent harm" to its "business and personal liberty by the restrictive micro-managing of operations." Plaintiffs also allege McMaster’s orders exceed the statutory time-limit for a state of emergency and unconstitutionally "usurp the legislative power of the General Assembly." A representative from McMaster’s office said, "[The] governor is confident in the constitutionality of the targeted, deliberate and limited measures that have been put in place to help stop the spread of the virus." The case is pending in the Spartanburg County Court of Common Pleas.
- Newman v. Evers: On Sept. 17, a Wisconsin poll worker who was fired for refusing to wear a mask sued his local city clerk and Gov. Tony Evers (D) in the La Crosse County Circuit Court. Poll worker Nicholas Newman asks the court to declare Evers' Executive Order No. 82 and Emergency Order No. 1 unlawful. The orders declared a public health emergency and mandated masks statewide, respectively. Newman alleges Evers' mask mandate exceeds "his statutory and constitutional power, and is therefore unlawful, void and unenforceable." Newman also says the order exempts him from wearing a face covering because he "is an individual who has trouble breathing" and "also has a medical condition which makes it dangerous for him to wear a mask for an extended period of time." A representative for Evers said, "that masks can save lives, and Gov. Evers continues to ask everyone to do their part to help prevent the spread of COVID-19 by wearing a mask." The case has been assigned to Judge Ramona A. Gonzalez.
Travel restrictions
Read more: Travel restrictions issued by states in response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, 2020-2021
Overview:
- Governors or state agencies in 25 states issued executive orders placing restrictions on out-of-state visitors. At least 14 of those orders have been rescinded.
- Since Sept. 24, three states have modified their travel restrictions.
Details:
- Connecticut, New Jersey, and New York - On Sept. 22, Govs. Ned Lamont (D-Conn.), Phil Murphy (D-N.J.), and Andrew Cuomo (D-N.Y.) that Colorado had been added to the tristate quarantine list. Arizona and Virginia were removed from the list.
Ballot measure changes
Read more: Changes to ballot measure campaigns, procedures, and policies in response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, 2020-2022
Overview:
- At least 19 lawsuits were filed in 13 states seeking court orders suspending or changing signature requirements and deadlines.
- Rulings or settlements have been issued in 18 cases.
- Ballotpedia has tracked 27 statewide initiative petition drives that suspended signature gathering.
- Seven states and D.C. changed ballot measure procedures through executive orders or legislative action.
- At least four initiative campaigns initially targeting 2020 reported they would shift their focus to 2022.
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