Daily feature: Schools
All 50 states closed schools to in-person instruction at some point during the 2019-2020 academic year. Beginning in May 2020, schools in certain states began to reopen. In which states are schools allowed to open? In which states are they ordered to remain closed?
We last looked at school reopenings and closures in the Oct. 20 edition of the newsletter. Since then, the Hawaii Department of Health relaxed school reopening guidance. The state also said it would consider schools' and districts' abilities to implement mitigation measures before it would allow reopenings.

Additional activity
In this section, we feature examples of other federal, state, and local government activity, private industry responses, and lawsuits related to the pandemic.
- New Hampshire is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to prohibit Massachusetts from imposing its state income tax on New Hampshire residents who work remotely for Massachusetts-based companies. On Oct. 19, the state of New Hampshire sued the commonwealth of Massachusetts, alleging Massachusetts’ continued taxation of New Hampshire residents who are working remotely from home as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic is unconstitutional. New Hampshire alleges Massachusetts’ "extraterritorial assertion of taxing power is unconstitutional" because it "claims the authority to tax New Hampshire residents who earn their incomes from activities they undertake solely within New Hampshire," which doesn’t have an income tax. New Hampshire alleges Massachusetts' policy "subjects Granite Staters to simple but unconstitutional confiscation." New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu (R) said, "Massachusetts cannot balance its budget on the backs of our citizens, punish our workers for making the decision to work from home and keep themselves and their families and those around them safe." Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker (R) said, "Maybe I’ll reach out to my friend Chris Sununu who, when he’s not busy suing me, may be interested in having a conversation." Because this is a dispute between two states, the U.S. Supreme Court has original jurisdiction.
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