Evers Might Extend Mask Order
Governor discussed masking order and Kenosha shootings Wednesday.
Gov. Tony Evers kept the door open Wednesday to extending the public health emergency that let him issue a statewide mask mandate, adding that he would fight a conservative lawsuit that seeks to stop it.
In a wide-ranging interview hosted by the Milwaukee Press Club, Evers also defended the University of Wisconsin System‘s plans to return to campus and said he wouldn’t change anything about how his administration responded to the recent unrest in Kenosha.
Evers issued the statewide mask mandate on July 30, using a power in state law that lets governors declare public health emergencies for up to 60 days. Evers used the same law to issue another 60-day emergency in March during the early days of the pandemic.
“We will fight we will fight every step of the way to make sure that this one small thing that everybody can do remains in place until we’re told that the numbers are down,” Evers said in a discussion that was broadcast by the Wisconsin Eye public affairs network.
Evers’ current order is set to expire on Sept. 28 unless it’s rescinded before then by the governor, the Legislature or a court order. But Evers gave no indication that he would rescind the masking order himself, and he didn’t rule out extending it.
“We’ll cross that bridge when we get there whether we extend it or not,” Evers said.
The governor’s comments come as the state has seen the percentage of positive COVID-19 tests rise, particularly on the campuses of the University of Wisconsin where students are returning to in-person instruction.
Wednesday afternoon, Dane County urged the UW Madison to send dorm residents home in an effort to slow a spike in COVID-19 cases.
Evers, who spoke shortly before Dane County’s request became public, said he supported the UW’s plans to return to campus.
“Yes, I support the UW’s effort to bring some normalcy to, you know, thousands of kids and be safe at the same time,” Evers said. “I think they’re doing a great job. It is an uphill fight and we have to be prepared that it will be bumpy.”
On Kenosha: ‘I Would Not Change Anything That I Did’
Also Wednesday, Evers stood by his administration’s response to the unrest in Kenosha in the days following the Aug. 23 police shooting of Jacob Blake.
“I would not change anything that I did,” Evers said Wednesday. “We met every request that the city and county of Kenosha asked us.”
At the same time, Evers acknowledged rejecting an offer by White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows to send federal agents from the Department of Homeland Security to Kenosha.
“I did turn down the bringing in the Homeland Security people because I saw how poorly that played out in Portland,” Evers said. “And I didn’t think that would be a good thing.”
After Evers spoke, the Wisconsin National Guard announced it had ended its Kenosha deployment on Sept. 7, presenting the most detailed picture yet of how many troops were in the city over the course of the past few weeks.
After Evers requested additional National Guard support from other states on Aug. 26, Michigan, Arizona and Alabama sent more than 700 troops, according to the statement. By Aug. 28, it said approximately 2,000 National Guard troops were on the ground in Kenosha, including more than 1,200 Wisconsin National Guard troops.
Republicans have criticized Evers for not accepting more federal help and for his initial comments on the night police shot Blake. Evers said Wednesday that his comments were factual, and that he stood by them.
“What I saw was African American man getting into his car and he was shot seven times by a police officer,” Evers said.
But the governor stopped short of Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden‘s position that the officer who shot Blake should be charged. In Wisconsin, police shootings are investigated by the state attorney general, but the decision to charge is left up to the local district attorney.
“I am waiting, as are other people, for … the attorney general to complete his study,” Evers said.
While Kenosha drew national attention for Blake’s shooting and the unrest that followed, Madison also saw continued property damage as demonstrators smashed windows downtown. Many downtown windows have since been boarded up, some for the second time this summer.
“Hopefully there might be some ways for the state to assist them, just like we should assist the people and the business people in Kenosha,” Evers said.
Listen to the WPR report here.
Evers Leaves Door Open To Extended Mask Mandate was originally published by Wisconsin Public Radio.
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More about the Kenosha Unrest
- Kenosha Event Revisits 2020 Unrest - Isiah Holmes - Aug 30th, 2022
- WisGOP Statement on One-Year Anniversary of Kenosha Violence - Republican Party of Wisconsin - Aug 24th, 2021
- One Year After Jacob Blake Shooting Kenosha Seeks Answers - Isiah Holmes and Henry Redman - Aug 23rd, 2021
- Tony Evers Lies on Kenosha Record - Republican Party of Wisconsin - Jun 14th, 2021
- Coins Celebrate Policing of Kenosha Protests - Isiah Holmes and Henry Redman - May 18th, 2021
- Did DA Delay Mensah Decision Due To Kenosha Unrest? - Isiah Holmes - Apr 8th, 2021
- How U.S. Marshals Came to Kenosha - Isiah Holmes - Apr 5th, 2021
- Wisconsin Man Indicted for Injuring Police Officer During Kenosha Riots - U.S. Department of Justice - Jan 27th, 2021
- Prosecutors Want Court to Ban Rittenhouse from Bars - Corrinne Hess - Jan 14th, 2021
- Kenosha DA Won’t Charge Cops in Blake Shooting - Corrinne Hess - Jan 5th, 2021
Read more about Kenosha Unrest here
More about the Shooting of Jacob Blake
- No Federal Charges For Officer That Shot Jacob Blake - Madeline Fox - Oct 8th, 2021
- Federal Officials Close Review of the Officer-Involved Shooting of Jacob Blake - U.S. Department of Justice - Oct 8th, 2021
- WisGOP Statement on One-Year Anniversary of Kenosha Violence - Republican Party of Wisconsin - Aug 24th, 2021
- One Year After Jacob Blake Shooting Kenosha Seeks Answers - Isiah Holmes and Henry Redman - Aug 23rd, 2021
- Gov. Evers Releases Statement One Year After Jacob Blake Shooting - Gov. Tony Evers - Aug 23rd, 2021
- Kenosha Activists Arrested During Protest of Jacob Blake - Henry Redman - May 6th, 2021
- Body Cameras Key To Charges Against Police - Corrinne Hess - May 4th, 2021
- Wisconsin Police Donated to Officer that Shot Jacob Blake - Jenny Peek and Corrinne Hess - Apr 16th, 2021
- Kenosha activists respond to tonight’s Officer Sheskey announcement - Leaders of Kenosha - Apr 13th, 2021
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More about the Statewide Mask Mandate
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- Statement by Heartland Institute Director Jeré Fabick on WI Supreme Court Victory Against Gov. Tony Evers - Heartland Institute - Mar 31st, 2021
- Senator Agard: Statement on Supreme Court Decision - State Sen. Melissa Agard, Senate Democratic Leader - Mar 31st, 2021
- Wisconsin’s Hyperpartisan Supreme Court is Endangering the Public - Democratic Party of Wisconsin - Mar 31st, 2021
- Wisconsin Supreme Court: Gov. Evers’ Multiple Emergency Declarations Violate Law - Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty - Mar 31st, 2021
- Rep. Hesselbein Statement on Supreme Court Ruling on Emergency Orders - Dianne Hesselbein - Mar 31st, 2021
- Statement on Wisconsin Supreme Court Decision - State Sen. Jon Erpenbach - Mar 31st, 2021
- Gov. Evers Releases Statement Regarding Supreme Court Decision - Gov. Tony Evers - Mar 31st, 2021
- Rep. Hintz: Statement on Wisconsin Supreme Court Ruling - State Rep. Gordon Hintz - Mar 31st, 2021
- State Supreme Court Overrules Evers’ Emergency Powers - Laurel White - Mar 31st, 2021
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