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 Aug. 27:
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Election changes
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School closures and reopenings
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Lawsuits about state actions and policies
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Travel restrictions
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Ballot measure changes
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1918 story
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Federal responses
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Stay-at-home orders
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Eviction and foreclosure policies
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Diagnosed or quarantined public officials
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State legislation
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State legislative sessions
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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.
Election changes
Read more: Changes to election dates, procedures, and administration in response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, 2020
Overview:
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Twenty states have postponed state-level primary or special elections.
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Nineteen states have modified their candidate filing requirements.
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Forty states have made modifications to their voting procedures.
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Political parties in 19 states have made modifications to party events on a statewide basis.
Details:
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Georgia: On Aug. 31, Judge Eleanor L. Ross of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia issued an order extending the return deadlines for absentee ballots in the general election. Ross ordered officials to accept as valid any absentee ballots postmarked Nov. 3 and received by 7:00 p.m., Nov. 6.
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Maine: On Aug. 27, Gov. Janet Mills (D) signed an executive order extending the mail-in voter registration deadline from Oct. 13 to Oct. 19.
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New Jersey: On Aug. 28, Gov. Phil Murphy (D) signed three bills into law, making a number of modifications to the state's absentee/mail-in voting procedures for the general election (including the extension of the receipt deadline for ballots postmarked on or before Election Day to Nov. 9).
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New York: On Sept. 2, Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) announced the launch of an online absentee ballot request portal for the general election.
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Oklahoma: On Aug. 28, Gov. Kevin Stitt (R) issued an executive order extending Oklahoma's state of emergency by 30 days. This triggered the implementation of several modifications to Oklahoma's absentee ballot procedures (including suspension of the notarization requirement, provided the voter submits a copy of his or her identification).
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Utah: On Aug. 31, Gov. Gary Herbert (R) signed into law legislation making several changes to administration procedures for the general election (including the requirement that counties provide some form of in-person Election Day and early voting).
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 end in-person instruction 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:
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Four states (N.M., R.I., Vt., W.V.) have a state-ordered school closure
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Two states (Calif., Hawaii) have a state-ordered regional school closure
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Three states (Del., N.C., Va.) are open for hybrid or remote instruction only
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Five states (Ark., Fla., Iowa, Mo., Texas) have state-ordered in-person instruction
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Thirty-six states have reopenings that vary by school or district

Details:
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Connecticut - On Aug. 31, schools were allowed to reopen for in-person instruction. Schools in the state were initially closed on March 16.
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Florida - On Aug. 28, Florida’s First District Court of Appeals put a hold on Leon County Judge Charles Dodson’s ruling that Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran’s order requiring schools to open for in-person instruction was unconstitutional.
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Maryland - On Aug. 27, Gov. Larry Hogan (R) announced that all 24 school districts met the state’s benchmarks for opening to at least some in-person instruction. All school districts have previously announced a return to school with full online learning, while 16 have announced plans to resume at least some in-person instruction starting in mid-September. On Sept. 1, the state Board of Education approved new minimum requirements for instruction. Schools must be open at least 180 days and offer at least six hours of instruction, of which 3.5 hours must be synchronous instruction (all students taught at the same time) for grades K-12.
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Rhode Island - On Aug. 31, Gov. Gina Raimondo (D) announced every public school district in the state except Providence and Central Falls will be permitted to resume in-person instruction when schools reopen for the 2020-2021 academic year. Raimondo said in-person classes are still scheduled to start Sept. 14. Raimondo also signed an executive order extending Phase III of the state’s reopening plan.
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:
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To date, Ballotpedia has tracked 879 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 318 of those lawsuits.
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Ballotpedia has separately tracked another 227 lawsuits, in 46 states, dealing with election issues during the COVID-19 outbreak. Court orders have been issued, or settlements have been reached, in 141 of those lawsuits.
Here are three lawsuits that have either garnered significant national media attention or involve major advocacy groups.
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300 West Sahara, LLC v. Nevada: On Aug. 24, a Las Vegas hotel, after being fined for hosting an "Evangelicals for Trump" event, filed suit in the Clark County District Court seeking an order invalidating Gov. Steve Sisolak’s (D) ban on gatherings of more than 50 people. In its complaint, the Ahern Hotel argues that Sisolak’s Directive 21, which allows restaurants and casinos to operate at 50% capacity while limiting other gatherings to a maximum of 50 people, "is unreasonable because there is no rational basis for treating" businesses that host events differently than "similarly situated non-essential business." The hotel says the disparity is an "unlawful, arbitrary, capricious" and "clearly erroneous" violation of its rights to equal protection and due process. The hotel is seeking a court order allowing convention centers, hotels, and restaurants to host events if they meet other health and safety standards under Phase II of Nevada’s Reopening Response Plan. The city and state have not commented on the suit.
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New York Independent Venue Association v. Bradley: On Aug. 25, a group of businesses filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York challenging restrictions that prevent venues from hosting ticketed live music events and other events with cover charges. Venues are also barred from advertising live entertainment. The plaintiffs argue that the New York Liquor Authority rule "is not just unworkable, it is unconstitutional." The plaintiffs allege the rule violates the constitutional guarantees of free speech, procedural and substantive due process, and state agency rulemaking procedures. Justin Kantor, the New York Independent Venue Association co-chair, said, "These venues are doing everything possible to safely reopen and offer work to both artists and employees, even if it is at a financial loss, only to have New York state impose knee-jerk regulations that have now added unnecessary and unlawful restraints to our already devastated industry." The New York Liquor Authority has not commented publicly on the suit, which has been assigned to Judge Gregory H. Woods, an appointee of President Barack Obama (D).
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Neville v. Polis: On Aug. 28, the Colorado Supreme Court refused to hear a challenge against more than three dozen executive orders issued by Gov. Jared Polis (D), including a statewide mask mandate. The denial came two days after Colorado House Minority Leader Patrick Neville (R) and activist Michelle Malkin filed the case. Neville and Malkin alleged the Colorado Disaster Emergency Act, which gives the governor expanded powers during an emergency, is an unconstitutional violation of the separation of powers doctrine. "[The] chief executive by executive order is purportedly making new laws and implementing new public policies which wholly usurp the power of the legislative department to make the laws, a power which has been delegated by the People through their Colorado Constitution exclusively to the legislative department." Plaintiffs said that Polis' actions, and those of the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, and the El Paso and Denver health departments resulted in "unjust injury to [their] fundamental civil rights, liberty interests, and property rights." Polis said, "We are free to be on the side of a deadly virus that has taken the lives of too many friends, parents, and loved ones, or on the side of Coloradans. I’m on the side of Coloradans." The plaintiffs said they intended to re-file in the trial court for Denver County.
Travel restrictions
Read more: Travel restrictions issued by states in response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, 2020-2021
Overview:
Details:
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Massachusetts - On Aug. 2, the state added Colorado, Delaware, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia to its list of lower-risk states, exempting travelers and returning residents from those areas from having to quarantine for two weeks upon arriving in Massachusetts.
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Connecticut, New Jersey, and New York - On Sept. 1, Govs. Ned Lamont (D-Conn.), Phil Murphy (D-N.J.), and Andrew Cuomo (D-N.Y.) announced that Alaska and Montana had been placed back on the joint travel advisory list, after having been removed Aug. 25. The travel advisory requires travelers entering the tristate area to self-quarantine for 14 days.
Ballot measure changes
Read more: Changes to ballot measure campaigns, procedures, and policies in response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, 2020-2022
Overview:
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At least 19 lawsuits were filed in 13 states seeking court orders suspending or changing signature requirements and deadlines.
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Rulings or settlements have been issued in 18 cases, with appeals and motions for stays pending in some.
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Ballotpedia has tracked 27 statewide initiative petition drives that suspended signature gathering.
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Seven states and D.C. changed ballot measure procedures through executive orders or legislative action.
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At least four initiative campaigns initially targeting 2020 reported they would shift their focus to 2022.
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