WCRIS v. Janel Heinrich , 2021 WI 58 ( 2021 )


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    2021 WI 58
    SUPREME COURT       OF   WISCONSIN
    CASE NO.:            2020AP1419-OA, 2020AP1420-OA, 2020AP1446-OA
    COMPLETE TITLE:      Sara Lindsey James,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    Janel Heinrich, in her capacity as Public Health
    Officer
    of Madison and Dane County,
    Respondent.
    -----------------------------------------------
    Wisconsin Council of Religious and Independent
    Schools, School Choice Wisconsin Action,
    Abundant Life Christian School, High Point
    Christian School, Lighthouse Christian
    School, Peace Lutheran School, Westside
    Christian School, Craig Barrett, Sarah Barrett,
    Erin Haroldson, Kent Haroldson, Kimberly
    Harrison, Sheri Holzman, Andrew Holzman, Myriah
    Medina, Laura Steinhauer, Alan Steinhauer,
    Jennifer Stempski, Bryant Stempski, Christopher
    Truitt and Holly Truitt,
    Petitioners,
    v.
    Janel Heinrich in her official capacity as
    Public Health Officer and Director of Public
    Health of Madison and Dane County and Public
    Health of Madison and Dane County,
    Respondents.
    -----------------------------------------------
    St. Ambrose Academy, Inc., Angela Hineline,
    Jeffery Heller, Elizabeth Idzi, James Carrano,
    Laura McBain, Sarah Gonnering, St. Maria Goretti
    Congregation, Nora Statsick, St. Peter's
    Congregation, Anne Kruchten, Blessed Sacrament
    Congregation, Amy Childs, Blessed Trinity
    Congregation, Columbia/Dane County, WI Inc.,
    Loretta Hellenbrand, Immaculate Heart of Mary
    Congregation, Lorianne Aubut, St. Francis
    Xavier's Congregation, Mary Scott, Saint Dennis
    Congregation and Ruth Weigel-Sterr,
    Petitioners,
    v.
    Joseph T. Parisi, In his Official Capacity as
    County Executive of Dane County and Janel
    Heinrich, In her Official Capacity as Director,
    Public Health, Madison &
    Dane County,
    Respondents.
    ORIGINAL ACTION
    OPINION FILED:          June 11, 2021
    SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS:
    ORAL ARGUMENT:          December 8, 2020
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:
    COURT:
    COUNTY:
    JUDGE:
    JUSTICES:
    REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J., delivered the majority opinion of
    the Court, in which ZIEGLER, C.J., and ROGGENSACK, J., joined;
    and in which HAGEDORN joined except for footnote 18. HAGEDORN,
    J., filed a concurring opinion. DALLET, J., filed a dissenting
    opinion in which ANN WALSH BRADLEY and KAROFSKY, JJ., joined.
    NOT PARTICIPATING:
    ATTORNEYS:
    For the petitioners, there was an opening brief filed by
    Richard M. Esenberg, Anthony LoCoco, Lucas T. Vebber, Luke N. Berg,
    Elisabeth      Sobic     and    Wisconsin       Institute    for   Law    &   Liberty,
    Milwaukee; with whom on the brief was Misha Tseytlin, Kevin M.
    LeRoy,       Troutman    Pepper,    and     Hamilton    Sanders     LLP,      Chicago,
    Illinois; with whom on the brief was Andrew M. Bath and Thomas
    More Society, Chicago, Illinois; with whom on the brief was Erick
    Kaardal      and     Mohrman,   Kaardal     &    Erickson,    P.A.,      Minneapolis,
    Minnesota; with whom on the brief was Joseph W. Voiland and
    Veterans Liberty Law, Cedarburg; with whom on the brief was Brent
    Eisberner and Levine Eisberner LLC, Madison; with whom on the brief
    was Bernardo Cueto, Onalaska. There was an oral argument by Richard
    M. Esenberg, Misha Tseytlin, and Joseph W. Voiland.
    For the respondent, there was a brief filed by Remzy D. Bitar,
    Sadie R. Zurfluh, and Municipal and Litigation Group¸ Waukesha.
    There was an oral argument by Remzy D. Bitar.
    For   the   petitioners   Wisconsin    Council     of   Religious   and
    Independent Schools, et al., there was a reply brief filed by
    Richard M. Esenberg, Anthony LoCoco, Luke N. Berg, Elisabeth Sobic,
    and Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty, Milwaukee.
    For the petitioners St. Ambrose Academy, Inc. et al., there
    was a reply brief filed by Misha Tseytlin, Kevin M. LeRoy, and
    Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP, Chicago, Illinois; with whom
    on the brief was Andrew M. Bath and Thomas More Society, Chicago,
    Illinois; with whom on the brief was Erick Kaardal and Mohrman,
    Kaaradal & Erickson, P.A., Minneapolis, Minnesota.
    An amicus curiae brief was filed on behalf of Attorney General
    Josh Kaul by Colin A. Hector, assistant attorney general, and Colin
    T. Roth, assistant attorney general; with whom on the brief was
    Joshua L. Kaul, attorney general.
    An amicus curiae brief was filed on behalf of Institute for
    Justice by Lee U. McGrath, Minneapolis, Minnesota; with whom on
    the brief was Milad Emam, Arlington, Virginia.
    An amicus curiae brief was filed on behalf of Freedom from
    Religion Foundation by Brendan Johnson, Patrick C. Elliott, and
    Freedom From Religion Foundation, Inc., Madison.
    An    amicus   curiae   brief   was   filed   on   behalf   of   State
    Superintendent of Public Instruction Carolyn Stanford Taylor and
    Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction by Heather Curnutt,
    Madison.
    An    amicus   curiae   brief   was    filed   on    behalf   of     City   of
    Milwaukee by Tearman Spencer, city attorney, and Gregory P. Kruse,
    city attorney.
    An    amicus   curiae   brief   was    filed    on   behalf     of   Madison
    Metropolitan School District and Monona Grove School District by
    Sheila M. Sullivan, Melita M. Mullen, and Bell, Moore & Richter,
    S.C., Madison.
    An amicus curiae brief was filed on behalf of Madison Teachers
    Inc.,   Wisconsin    Association     of    Local    Health   Departments         and
    Boards,    Wisconsin    Education     Association         Council,      Milwaukee
    Teachers’ Education Association, Racine Educators United, Kenosha
    Education Association, and Green Bay Education Association by
    Diane M. Welsh, Aaron G. Dumas, and Pines Bach LLP, Madison.
    An amicus curiae brief was filed on behalf of Governor Tony
    Evers and Secretary–Designee of Department of Health Services
    Andrea Palm by Sopen B. Shah and Perkins Coie LLP, Madison.
    An amicus curiae brief was filed on behalf of Wisconsin Faith
    Voices for Justice by Barry J. Blonien, Tanner Jean-Louis, and
    Boardman & Clark LLP, Madison.
    An amicus curiae brief was filed on behalf of Liberty Justice
    Center, Alaska Policy Forum, Pelican Institute For Public Policy,
    Roughrider Policy Center, Nevada Policy Research Institute, and
    Rio Grande Foundation by Daniel R. Suhr, Reilly Stephens, and
    Liberty Justice Center, Chicago, Illinois.
    An amicus curiae brief was filed on behalf of League of
    Wisconsin Municipalities by Claire Silverman and Maria Davis,
    Madison.
    
    2021 WI 58
    NOTICE
    This opinion is subject to further
    editing and modification.   The final
    version will appear in the bound
    volume of the official reports.
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                      :              IN SUPREME COURT
    Sara Lindsey James,
    Petitioner,                                         FILED
    v.
    JUN 11, 2021
    Janel Heinrich, in her capacity as Public
    Health Officer of Madison and Dane County,                     Sheila T. Reiff
    Clerk of Supreme Court
    Respondent.
    Wisconsin Council of Religious and Independent
    Schools, School Choice Wisconsin Action,
    Abundant Life Christian School, High Point
    Christian School, Lighthouse Christian School,
    Peace Lutheran School, Westside Christian
    School, Craig Barrett, Sarah Barrett, Erin
    Haroldson, Kent Haroldson, Kimberly Harrison,
    Sheri Holzman, Andrew Holzman, Myriah Medina,
    Laura Steinhauer, Alan Steinhauer, Jennifer
    Stempski, Bryant Stempski, Christopher Truitt
    and Holly Truitt,
    Petitioners,
    v.
    Janel Heinrich in her      official capacity as
    Public Health Officer      and Director of Public
    Health of Madison and      Dane County and Public
    Health of Madison and      Dane County,
    Respondents.
    
    2021 WI 58
    St. Ambrose Academy, Inc., Angela Hineline,
    Jeffery Heller, Elizabeth Idzi, James Carrano,
    Laura McBain, Sarah Gonnering, St. Maria
    Goretti Congregation, Nora Statsick, St.
    Peter's Congregation, Anne Kruchten, Blessed
    Sacrament Congregation, Amy Childs, Blessed
    Trinity Congregation, Columbia/Dane County, WI
    Inc., Loretta Hellenbrand, Immaculate Heart of
    Mary Congregation, Lorianne Aubut, St. Francis
    Xavier's Congregation, Mary Scott, Saint Dennis
    Congregation and Ruth Weigel-Sterr,
    Petitioners,
    v.
    Joseph T. Parisi, In his Official Capacity as
    County Executive of Dane County and Janel
    Heinrich, In her Official Capacity as Director,
    Public Health, Madison & Dane County,
    Respondents.
    REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J., delivered the majority opinion of the
    Court, in which ZIEGLER, C.J., and ROGGENSACK, J., joined; and in
    which HAGEDORN joined except for footnote 18. HAGEDORN, J., filed
    a concurring opinion. DALLET, J., filed a dissenting opinion in
    which ANN WALSH BRADLEY and KAROFSKY, JJ., joined.
    ORIGINAL ACTION.        Rights declared; order vacated.
    ¶1       REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J.      Exercising our original
    jurisdiction under Article VII, Section 3(2) of the Wisconsin
    Constitution,1 we consolidate and review three cases challenging
    1  Article VII, Section 3(2) of the Wisconsin Constitution
    provides: "The supreme court has appellate jurisdiction over all
    courts and may hear original actions and proceedings. The supreme
    court may issue all writs necessary in aid of its jurisdiction."
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    the authority of Janel Heinrich, in her capacity as a local health
    officer of Public Health of Madison and Dane County (PHMDC), to
    issue an emergency order closing all schools in Dane County for
    in-person instruction in grades 3-12.        Citing 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    (2017-18)2 as authority, Heinrich issued Emergency Order #9 ("the
    Order") in an effort to decrease the spread of a novel strain of
    coronavirus, COVID-19.     The Petitioners3 contend that the Order
    exceeds Heinrich's statutory authority under § 252.03 and violates
    their fundamental right to the free exercise of religion under
    Article I, Section 18 of the Wisconsin Constitution, as well as
    parents' fundamental right to direct the upbringing and education
    of their children under Article I, Section 1 of the Wisconsin
    Constitution.
    ¶2   In response, Heinrich asserts that local health officers
    have the statutory authority under 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
     to issue
    school-closure orders.      Further, she argues that the Order is
    constitutional under the United States Supreme Court's ruling in
    Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 
    197 U.S. 11
     (1905), and that, even if
    Jacobson does not apply, the Order does not violate the Wisconsin
    Constitution.
    ¶3   We agree with the Petitioners and hold: (1) local health
    officers do not have the statutory power to close schools under
    2 All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to
    the 2017-18 version unless otherwise indicated.
    3 The Petitioners include Sara Lindsey James, Wisconsin
    Council of Religious and Independent Schools (WCRIS), St. Ambrose
    Academy, parents of students in Dane County schools, and several
    other schools and membership associations.
    3
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    ;   and      (2)   Heinrich's           Order    infringes   the
    Petitioners' fundamental right to the free exercise of religion
    guaranteed          under    Article     I,    Section         18    of     the   Wisconsin
    Constitution, which Jacobson cannot override.                         Accordingly, those
    portions       of    the    Order      restricting        or   prohibiting        in-person
    instruction are unlawful, unenforceable, and are hereby vacated.
    I.    BACKGROUND
    ¶4      In February 2020, Dane County authorities confirmed the
    first diagnosis of an individual with COVID-19 in Wisconsin.4                            The
    number of cases throughout the state soon began to rise.                           On March
    12, 2020, Governor Tony Evers declared a public health emergency
    in Wisconsin.              The next day,           then   Secretary-Designee of the
    Department of Health Services (DHS), Andrea Palm, issued an order
    mandating "the closure of all public and private Wisconsin schools
    for    purposes       of    [in-person]        instruction          and     extracurricular
    activities."
    ¶5      On March 24, 2020, Palm issued a statewide "Safer at
    Home Order."         Among other dictates, this order required all people
    in the state to remain in their homes, prohibited non-essential
    travel, closed all "non-essential" businesses, and——as relevant to
    this case——closed "[p]ublic and private K-12 schools . . . for
    [in-person] instruction and extracurricular activities."                           On April
    COVID-19 is an acute respiratory syndrome spread through
    4
    close contact with a contagious individual. Center for Disease
    Control, Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19): 2020 Interim Case
    Definition              (Apr.              5,              2020),
    https://wwwn.cdc.gov/nndss/conditions/coronavirus-disease-2019-
    covid-19/case-definition/2020/.
    4
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    16, 2020, Palm extended the "Safer at Home Order" for another
    month.      Palm's new order mandated that schools remain closed for
    in-person instruction "for the remainder of the 2019-20 school
    year."
    ¶6     In Wisconsin Legislature v. Palm, we invalidated many of
    the mandates in Palm's extension of the "Safer at Home Order,"
    declaring that the "Safer at Home Order" was unenforceable because
    it   "was    subject   to    statutory    emergency   rulemaking      procedures
    established by the Legislature."             
    2020 WI 42
    , ¶3, 
    391 Wis. 2d 497
    ,
    
    942 N.W.2d 900
    . However, this court did not address Palm's mandate
    closing     schools    for    in-person      instruction.      
    Id.,
        ¶3   n.6.
    Accordingly,      schools      throughout       Wisconsin     finished      their
    instruction for the 2019-20 school year on virtual platforms
    pursuant to the statewide "Safer at Home Order."
    ¶7     Following this court's decision in Palm, PHMDC and its
    local health officer, Janel Heinrich, began issuing a series of
    emergency orders governing Dane County.                Many of these orders
    regulated COVID-19 safety protocols in public and private schools
    throughout the county.          As they relate to schools, Heinrich's
    emergency orders were as follows:
    1. On May 13, 2020, Heinrich issued Emergency Order #1, which
    "adopted the provisions" contained in the "Safer at Home
    Order," including the mandate closing schools.
    2. On May 18, 2020, Heinrich issued Emergency Order #2, which
    expressly reiterated that public and private K-12 schools
    must stay closed for in-person instruction, but allowed
    them to provide "[d]istance learning or virtual learning."
    5
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    The order also stated that higher education institutions
    may remain open only "for purposes of facilitating distance
    learning,    performing          critical       research,    or   performing
    essential functions."
    3. On May 22, 2020 and June 5, 2020, Heinrich issued Emergency
    Orders #3 and #4, respectively.                 These orders, among other
    edicts, maintained the closure of K-12 schools, but allowed
    higher education institutions to "determine policies and
    practices for safe operations" and to open dormitories with
    "strict policies that ensure safe living conditions."
    4. On June 15, 2020, Heinrich issued Emergency Order #5, which
    re-opened    K-12        schools        for     "pupil     instruction        and
    extracurricular activities" effective July 1, 2020.                           The
    order also stated that, in order to re-open, schools must,
    inter alia, "[d]evelop and implement a written hygiene
    policy and procedure . . . [and] a written action plan for
    a COVID-19 outbreak at the school."
    5. On July 7, 2020, Heinrich issued Emergency Order #8.                      This
    order, in anticipation of schools starting the school year
    with in-person instruction, outlined a series of safety
    protocols.       The order stated, among other things, that
    "[i]ndividual groups or classrooms cannot contain more than
    fifteen   (15)    students        if     the    students    are   age    12   or
    under . . . [or] more than twenty-five (25) students if
    age 13 or older."            The order also stated that schools must
    "[d]evelop      and    implement        a     written    protective     measure
    policy    and     procedure            that     includes . . . [e]nsuring
    6
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    students are at least six (6) feet from other students[,]
    [e]nsuring      employees    are    provided      with    and    wear   face
    coverings[,]      [and]     [e]nsuring     that    student       and    staff
    groupings are as static as possible[.]"
    In reliance on Emergency Orders #5 and #8, some schools in Dane
    County opened for in-person instruction (or were preparing to open
    for in-person instruction), including the petitioner schools.
    ¶8      However, on August 21, 2020, three days before the start
    of the 2020-21 school year for many schools, Heinrich released
    Emergency Order #9, which closed all public and private schools
    for in-person instruction for students in grades 3-12.5                      The Order
    exempted students in grades K-2, so long as the schools provided
    an alternative virtual learning option.6              The Order further stated
    that,     even    though    in-person     instruction        was    prohibited       for
    students in grades 3-12, schools could continue to operate in
    person as "child care and youth settings."                As a rationale for the
    mandate, the Order explained that "[t]his remains a critical time
    for Dane County to decrease the spread of COVID-19, keep people
    healthy, and maintain a level of transmission that is manageable
    by health care and public systems."              The Order acknowledged that
    a   "number      of   systematic     reviews   have    found       that    school-aged
    children contract COVID at lower rates than older populations" and
    5In relevant part, the Order stated: "Public and private
    school buildings and grounds are open for in-person student
    instruction for grades kindergarten through second (K-2) only."
    6On September 1, 2020, Heinrich amended the Order to also
    allow in-person instruction for any qualifying students with
    disabilities.
    7
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    that "[o]utbreaks and clusters among cases aged 5-17 have been
    rare."       Heinrich cited 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    (1), (2), and (4) as
    authority for issuing the Order.
    ¶9     Although in-person instruction was forbidden for grades
    3-12, the Order allowed all higher education institutions to remain
    open   for     in-person   instruction,      allowing   them   "to    determine
    policies and practices for safe operation" and to keep open their
    student dormitories so long as they continue to enact "strict
    policies that ensure safe living conditions."             The Order further
    allowed many businesses to conduct in-person operations, including
    bars, salons, barber shops, gyms, fitness centers, water parks,
    pools, bowling alleys, and movie theatres, subject to various
    capacity limitations and social-distancing guidelines.
    ¶10    One day after Heinrich issued the Order, Sara Lindsey
    James, a parent of two students enrolled in Our Redeemer Lutheran
    School in the City of Madison, filed a petition for original action
    in this court challenging the lawfulness of the Order.                    James
    enrolled her children in Our Redeemer Lutheran School because of
    her sincerely-held religious belief that it is essential for her
    children to receive a faith-based education. Our Redeemer Lutheran
    was one of the schools the Order required to cease in-person
    instruction. James believes that it is critical for her children's
    education to take place "in-person" and "together with others as
    part of the body of Christ."
    ¶11    Other   petitions   for   original   action      soon   followed.
    Wisconsin Council of Religious and Independent Schools (WCRIS), a
    membership-based       association      of    religious     and   independent
    8
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    schools,7 filed a petition for original action with this court
    challenging the lawfulness of the Order.                WCRIS represents over
    600 schools throughout Wisconsin, including 23 schools in Dane
    County serving approximately 4,600 students in grades K-12.                   Like
    James, parents associated with WCRIS hold sincerely-held beliefs
    that in-person religious education is vital to their children's
    religious formation.
    ¶12    Additionally, St. Ambrose Academy, a classical Catholic
    school located in the City of Madison, together with parents of
    children attending St. Ambrose,8 brought a petition for original
    action to this court challenging the lawfulness of the Order.
    According to St. Ambrose, its "religious mission depends on in-
    person attendance to be fully realized."            St. Ambrose offers its
    students the opportunity to receive Holy Communion at weekly
    Masses, frequent confessions before a Catholic priest, Adoration
    of   the    Eucharist,    communal    prayer     throughout      the   day,   and
    opportunities to go on retreats and service missions throughout
    the local area.      The Order prohibited these in-person activities.
    ¶13    All three petitions for original action raised the same
    two claims:      (1) the Order exceeded Heinrich's statutory authority
    under     
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    ,   and   (2)    the    Order    violated    the
    7WRCIS's petition for original action was joined by a group
    of parents of students attending Dane County schools, as well as
    several other membership associations and individual schools
    themselves.
    8Other religious schools and parents of children attending
    these schools joined St. Ambrose's petition for original action.
    9
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    Petitioners' fundamental right to the free exercise of religion
    under Article I, Section 18 of the Wisconsin Constitution.9                    The
    Petitioners also requested temporary injunctive relief.                   Heinrich
    filed a response opposing the petitions for original action.
    ¶14   On September 10, 2020, this court granted the three
    petitions for original action and consolidated them for purposes
    of briefing and oral argument.                 At the same time, this court
    enjoined those provisions of the Order "which purport to prohibit
    schools    throughout      Dane     County       from       providing   in-person
    instruction to students," thereby allowing schools to re-open for
    in-person instruction.          In issuing the injunction, this court
    determined that Petitioners:          (1) had a reasonable probability of
    success on the merits, (2) lacked an adequate remedy at law, and
    (3) would suffer irreparable harm in the absence of an injunction.
    Recognizing that "[o]verriding the choices of parents and schools,
    who also undoubtedly care about the health and safety of their
    teachers   and   families,      intrudes       upon   the   freedoms    ordinarily
    retained   by    the   people     under    our   constitutional     design,"    we
    9 The Petitioners also contend that the Order violates
    Petitioners' fundamental right to direct the education and
    upbringing of their children under Article I, Section 1 of the
    Wisconsin Constitution. The Petitioners' principal constitutional
    claim, however, focused on the free exercise of religion and was
    more substantively developed than Petitioners' parental rights
    argument. Because we resolve the constitutional challenge under
    the free exercise of religion provision, we decline to address the
    Petitioners' additional constitutional argument.
    10
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    concluded     that    a    balancing      of    equities   favored    issuing   the
    injunction.     On December 8, 2020, we heard oral argument.10
    II.       STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶15        We review this case under our original jurisdiction
    conferred     in     Article      VII,     Section    3(2)   of     the   Wisconsin
    Constitution.        The Petitioners ask this court to interpret 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
        in   determining         whether   Heinrich    violated   her
    10 After oral argument, Heinrich issued another emergency
    order, which does not mandate school closures; Heinrich asserts
    her subsequent order renders this case moot. Even if Heinrich's
    latest order moots this original action, many of the recognized
    exceptions to the mootness doctrine apply.        "[E]xceptions to
    dismissal for mootness include situations involving: (1) issues
    of great public importance; (2) the constitutionality of a statute;
    (3) issues that arise so often a definitive decision is essential
    to guide the trial courts; (4) issues likely to arise again and
    that should be resolved by the court to avoid uncertainty; or (5)
    issues . . . capable and likely of repetition and yet evade
    review[.]"    Portage Cnty. v. J.W.K., 
    2019 WI 54
    , ¶29, 
    386 Wis. 2d 672
    , 
    927 N.W.2d 509
     (quoted source omitted). Given the
    ever-evolving orders from PHMDC, the issues presented are
    undoubtedly capable and likely of repetition but would evade review
    if every time a lawsuit challenging PHMDC's orders is filed, the
    health authority issues a modified order.        Additionally, the
    statutory and constitutional issues in this case plainly present
    matters of great public importance. Accordingly, we address the
    merits of this dispute. See Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn v.
    Cuomo, 
    141 S. Ct. 63
    , 72 (2020) (Gorsuch, J., concurring) ("[J]ust
    as this Court was preparing to act . . . the Governor loosened his
    restrictions, all while continuing to assert the power to tighten
    them again anytime as conditions warrant. So if we dismissed this
    case, nothing would prevent the Governor from reinstating the
    challenged restrictions tomorrow. And by the time a new challenge
    might work its way to us, he could just change them again. The
    Governor has fought this case at every step of the way. To turn
    away religious leaders bringing meritorious claims just because
    the Governor decided to hit the 'off' switch in the shadow of our
    review would be, in my view, just another sacrifice of fundamental
    rights in the name of judicial modesty.").
    11
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    statutory    authority.      Issues    of   statutory    interpretation    and
    application present questions of law.              Police Ass'n v. City of
    Milwaukee, 
    2018 WI 86
    , ¶17, 
    383 Wis. 2d 247
    , 
    914 N.W.2d 597
    .               The
    Petitioners also ask this court to interpret Article I, Section 18
    of   the    Wisconsin     Constitution.        Issues    of   constitutional
    interpretation also are questions of law. Serv. Emps. Int'l Union,
    Loc. 1 v. Vos, 
    2020 WI 67
    , ¶28, 
    393 Wis. 2d 38
    , 
    946 N.W.2d 35
    .
    III.     DISCUSSION
    A.   Statutory Powers Under 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    ¶16    The Petitioners argue that          Heinrich lacks      authority
    under 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
     to close schools.               Heinrich responds
    that both 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    (1) and (2) authorize local health
    officers to issue school-closure orders.                The Petitioners are
    correct.    Section 252.03 does not provide local health officials
    with any authority to close schools; accordingly, Heinrich's Order
    is statutorily unlawful.11
    ¶17    Wisconsin Stat. § 252.03 delineates the powers of local
    health officers regarding communicable diseases.              Subsections (1)
    and (2) of the statute provide:
    (1)    Every local health officer, upon the appearance of
    any communicable disease in his or her territory,
    shall immediately investigate all the circumstances
    and make a full report to the appropriate governing
    body and also to the department. The local health
    officer shall promptly take all measures necessary
    to prevent, suppress and control communicable
    11Both parties stipulated to the fact that the Order "closes
    schools," despite the availability of virtual learning options for
    students. Accordingly, we do not further address whether the Order
    constitutes a "school-closure order."
    12
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    diseases, and shall report to the appropriate
    governing body the progress of the communicable
    diseases and the measures used against them, as
    needed to keep the appropriate governing body fully
    informed, or at such intervals as the secretary may
    direct.    The local health officer may inspect
    schools and other public buildings within his or
    her jurisdiction as needed to determine whether the
    buildings are kept in a sanitary condition.
    (2)    Local health officers may do what is reasonable and
    necessary for the prevention and suppression of
    disease; may forbid public gatherings when deemed
    necessary to control outbreaks or epidemics and
    shall advise the department of measures taken.
    ¶18    Nowhere in this statute did the legislature give local
    health officers the power to "close schools."                  The statute lists
    a series of discrete powers afforded local health officers in order
    to address communicable diseases.               Local health officers may, for
    example,     "forbid   gatherings        when   deemed   necessary   to    control
    outbreaks or epidemics," and "inspect schools and other public
    buildings . . . as needed to determine whether the buildings are
    kept in a sanity condition."               
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    (1) and (2).
    Under the doctrine of expressio unius est exclusio alterius, the
    "express mention of one matter excludes other similar matters [that
    are] not mentioned."        FAS, LLC v. Town of Bass Lake, 
    2007 WI 73
    ,
    ¶27, 
    301 Wis. 2d 321
    , 
    733 N.W.2d 287
     (quoting Perra v. Menomonee
    Mut.   Ins.     Co., 
    2000 WI App 215
    ,    ¶12,   
    239 Wis.2d 26
    ,   
    619 N.W.2d 123
    ); see also State v. Delaney, 
    2003 WI 9
    , ¶22, 
    259 Wis. 2d 77
    , 
    658 N.W.2d 416
    ; Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner,
    Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 107-11 (2012) ("The
    expression of one thing implies the exclusion of others (expressio
    unius est exclusio alterius).").                Pursuant to this doctrine, if
    13
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    "the legislature did not specifically confer a power," the exercise
    of that power is not authorized.                   State ex rel. Harris v. Larson,
    
    64 Wis. 2d 521
    ,     527,    
    219 N.W.2d 335
        (1974).           Because    the
    legislature         expressly       granted    local     health      officers         discrete
    powers under 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
     but omitted the power to close
    schools, local health officers do not possess that power.                                   See
    Jefferson v. Dane Cnty., 
    2020 WI 90
    , ¶29, 
    394 Wis. 2d 602
    , 
    951 N.W.2d 556
    .
    ¶19     Heinrich's       contrary       interpretation             of     
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
     makes little sense when read in conjunction with 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.02
    , a closely-related statute governing the powers of
    DHS regarding communicable diseases.                  In § 252.02, the legislature
    specifically stated that "[t]he department [of health services]
    may    close       schools    and    forbid     public       gatherings         in    schools,
    churches, and other places to control outbreaks and epidemics."
    § 252.02(3) (emphasis added).                 The presence of this specific text
    in § 252.02 in the face of its conspicuous absence from § 252.03
    shows that the legislature withheld that authority from local
    health officers.             Given that § 252.02 and § 252.03 mirror each
    other    in    other       substantive        respects,      this    stark        difference
    supports our textual analysis.                 Under the related-statutes canon
    of    statutory        construction,          statutes       in     the        same     chapter
    "contain[ing] the same subject matter . . . must be considered in
    pari materia and construed together."                        State v. Wachsmuth, 
    73 Wis. 2d 318
    , 325, 
    243 N.W.2d 410
     (1976); see also State v. Jensen,
    
    2000 WI 84
    , ¶20, 
    236 Wis. 2d 521
    , 
    613 N.W.2d 170
    ; R.W.S. v. State,
    
    162 Wis. 2d 862
    , 871, 
    471 N.W.2d 16
     (1991).                       "Several acts in pari
    14
    Nos.       2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    materia,     and    relating          to    the    same       subject,     are    to     be    taken
    together, and compared in the construction of them, because they
    are considered as having one object in view, and as acting upon
    one system." Scalia & Garner, supra, at 252 (quoting 1 James Kent,
    Commentaries on American Law 433 (1826)).
    ¶20    Comparing         the     construction           of   these        two    statutes,
    located in the same chapter and covering the same subject matter,
    confirms that the legislature withheld this authority from local
    health officers.              See State ex rel. Kalal v. Cir. Ct. for Dane
    Cnty.,     
    2004 WI 58
    ,    ¶46,        
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    ,    
    681 N.W.2d 110
    ("[S]tatutory language is interpreted in the context in which it
    is used; not in isolation but as part of a whole; in relation to
    the language of surrounding or closely-related statutes.").                                     As we
    explained     when       we    granted        temporary         injunctive        relief,       this
    conclusion is        bolstered by the fact that                       "[b]oth 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.02
     and 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
     were drafted at the same time and
    by   the     same    legislature,            so    no     historical        quirk       or     later
    amendment . . . would suggest anything other than the legislature
    granted DHS and local health officers different powers."
    ¶21    Despite the absence of any express grant of authority
    allowing local health officers to close schools, Heinrich argues
    that   her    general         authority       to       take    measures     "reasonable          and
    necessary" for the prevention and suppression of disease allows
    her to close schools.                      See 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    (2).                        She is
    incorrect.        If local health officers' authority to take measures
    "reasonable and necessary" included the extraordinary power to
    close schools, then the legislature's specification of particular
    15
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    powers,      such     as   the    power      to    "inspect     schools,"     would    be
    superfluous. The power to take measures "reasonable and necessary"
    cannot be reasonably read as an open-ended grant of authority.
    Doing so would swallow the rest of the statute and render it mere
    surplusage.         "Statutory language is read where possible to give
    reasonable effect to every word, in order to avoid surplusage."
    Kalal, 
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    , ¶46; see also Scalia & Garner, supra, at
    174.
    ¶22    Furthermore, Heinrich's interpretation of local health
    officers'      "reasonable            and    necessary"    powers      violates       the
    fundamental principle that specific statutory language controls
    over more general language.                 See In re Paternity of Palmersheim,
    
    2004 WI App 126
    , ¶27, 
    275 Wis. 2d 311
    , 
    685 N.W.2d 546
    ; Apple Valley
    Gardens      Ass'n,    Inc.      v.   MacHutta,     
    2007 WI App 270
    ,   ¶16,    
    306 Wis. 2d 780
    , 
    743 N.W.2d 48
    .                 If Heinrich's argument were correct,
    then the general provision would essentially afford local health
    officers any powers necessary to limit the spread of communicable
    diseases. This cannot be. What is reasonable and necessary cannot
    be reasonably read to encompass anything and everything.                        Nothing
    in the text of the statute confers upon local health officers the
    power to close schools. To conclude otherwise would be tantamount
    to striking language from the statute so that it says only "[l]ocal
    health officers may do what is reasonable and necessary for the
    prevention and suppression of disease."                    Because we are a court
    and    not   the    legislature,        it    would   exceed     the   constitutional
    boundaries of our authority to rewrite the law in this manner.
    16
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    ¶23   As recognized since the founding of our nation, "it is
    no more the court's function to revise by subtraction than by
    addition[.]       As Chief Justice John Marshall explained:             'It would
    be dangerous in the extreme, to infer from extrinsic circumstances,
    that a case for which the words of an instrument expressly provide,
    shall be exempted from its operation.'              Or in the words of Thomas
    M.     Cooley:      '[T]he     courts     must . . . lean      in    favor   of    a
    construction which will render every word operative, rather than
    one which may make some idle and nugatory.'"                   Scalia & Garner,
    supra, at 174 (quoting Sturges v. Crowninshield, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.)
    122, 202 (1819) (per Marshall, C.J.) and Thomas M. Cooley, A
    Treatise on the Constitutional Limitations Which Rest upon the
    Legislative Power of the States of the American Union 58 (1868)).
    Adopting Heinrich's statutory analysis (as the dissent does) would
    render the rest of 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
     entirely redundant.                        If
    "[l]ocal health officers may do what is reasonable and necessary
    for the prevention and suppression of disease" then the legislature
    quite unnecessarily wrote that "[t]he local health officer may
    inspect schools and other public buildings within his or her
    jurisdiction as needed to determine whether the buildings are kept
    in a sanitary condition."           § 252.03(1).    Under Heinrich's (and the
    dissent's) statutory construction, the legislature also needlessly
    wrote that local health officers "may forbid public gatherings
    when     deemed    necessary    to      control    outbreaks    or    epidemics."
    § 252.03(2).       Heinrich's (and the dissent's) interpretation of
    § 252.03 violates the "cardinal rule of statutory interpretation
    that no provision should be construed to be entirely redundant."
    17
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    Kungys v. United States, 
    485 U.S. 759
    , 778 (1988) (citations
    omitted).12
    12 Justice Rebecca Dallet would apparently jettison the canons
    of statutory construction that have guided judicial interpretation
    for centuries. While the canons represent "a generally agreed-on
    approach to the interpretation of legal texts" judges who reject
    this textually-grounded method of decision making "refuse to yield
    the ancient judicial prerogative of making the law, improvising on
    the text to produce what they deem socially desirable results[.]"
    Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation
    of Legal Texts xxvii, 4 (2012). Justice Dallet disparages these
    canons because they interfere with her desired results. In her
    dissent to the court's order granting injunctive relief, Justice
    Dallet criticized the court (and the petitioners) for "fail[ing]
    to understand that we are all in this together; voluntarily sending
    children to school may put others in the community at risk."
    Contrary to Justice Dallet's policy-focused approach, the canons
    serve as "helpful, neutral guides" and are "grounded in experience
    developed by reason and tend to a better administration of justice
    than leaving interpretation in each case to feelings of policy on
    the part of the tribunal." Scalia & Garner, supra, at 61 (quoting
    3 Roscoe Pound, Jurisprudence 506 (1959)).
    18
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    Justice Antonin Scalia and Bryan Garner, co-authors of the
    "first modern attempt . . . to collect and arrange only the valid
    canons and to show how and why they apply to proper legal
    interpretation," Scalia & Garner, supra, at 9, included in their
    treatise only those venerable canons representing "what the best
    legal thinkers have said for centuries." Id. at xxix. Justice
    Dallet dismisses their work as just one "toolbox" that is "not the
    law" but merely an "extrinsic source" (while citing a plethora of
    secondary sources herself) and ignores the fact that every canon
    on which the court relies in this opinion has been previously
    adopted and applied not only by this court, but both federal and
    state   courts——for   centuries.     Dissent,   ¶76.     Rejecting
    longstanding precedent, Justice Dallet would cabin the use of
    canons solely for "clearing up confusing or ambiguous text." Id.,
    ¶77.     Fundamentally, Justice Dallet misunderstands how to
    interpret legal texts. "[N]either written words nor the sounds
    that the written words represent have any inherent meaning.
    Nothing but conventions and contexts cause a symbol or sound to
    convey a particular idea." Scalia & Garner, supra, at xxvii. The
    canons represent "a generally agreed-on approach to the
    interpretation of legal texts."          Id.     Justice Dallet's
    marginalization of their role flies in the face of centuries of
    jurisprudence and her proffered method of statutory interpretation
    falls on the fringes of acceptable approaches, far outside of the
    judicial mainstream. "[L]egislators enact; judges interpret" and
    the canons simply "explain how [judges] should perform this task."
    Id. at xxx.
    19
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    Justice Dallet distorts the words of textualists to support
    her rejection of the fair reading method of statutory
    interpretation; neither Justice Samuel Alito nor Justice Brett
    Kavanaugh condemned the entire corpus of canons as Justice Dallet
    insinuates.    Justice Alito did not deride the use of canons of
    statutory construction, only the Court's abuse of them to defeat
    "the sense of the matter." Facebook, Inc. v. Duguid, 
    141 S. Ct. 1163
    , 1174 (2021) (Alito, J., concurring).        Nor did Justice
    Kavanaugh characterize "Scalia and Garner's brand of textualism"
    as being "just as subjective as any other" approach.      Dissent,
    ¶79.        Justice    Kavanaugh   never   said    "fancy-sounding
    canons . . . warrant     little  weight   in    modern   statutory
    interpretation," id.; rather, he targeted his criticisms toward
    particular canons: "I would consider tossing the ejusdem generis
    canon into the pile of fancy-sounding canons that warrant little
    weight in modern statutory interpretation." Brett M. Kavanaugh,
    Fixing Statutory Interpretation, 
    129 Harv. L. Rev. 2118
    , 2161
    (2016) (book review). He also never said the canons "often lead
    to 'wrongheaded' judicial 'policymaking,'" dissent, ¶79; rather,
    Justice Kavanaugh characterized only "[t]he anti-redundancy canon"
    which "tells us to bend the statute to avoid redundancies" as
    "little more than policymaking and, in my view, often quite
    wrongheaded." Kavanaugh, supra, at 2162.
    Citing Justice Scalia extensively (and only favorably),
    Justice Kavanaugh heartily endorsed the widely accepted canons of
    construction:
    To assist the interpretive process, judges over time
    have devised many semantic and substantive canons of
    construction — what we might refer to collectively as
    the interpretive rules of the road. To make judges more
    neutral and impartial in statutory interpretation cases,
    we should carefully examine the interpretive rules of
    the road and try to settle as many of them in advance as
    we can.
    Id. at 2121.    Acknowledging that "statutory interpretation has
    improved dramatically over the last generation, thanks to the
    extraordinary influence of Justice Scalia," Justice Kavanaugh
    proposed that "courts should seek the best reading of the statute
    by interpreting the words of the statute, taking account of the
    context of the whole statute, and applying the agreed-upon semantic
    canons." Id. at 2118, 2121. Justice Dallet ignores not only the
    20
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    ¶24    Perhaps recognizing the           textual shortcomings of her
    argument, Heinrich points to other statutes that make reference to
    local health officers closing schools, arguing that these statutes
    support a local health officer's power to close schools under 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    .          In particular, Heinrich mentions 
    Wis. Stat. § 115.01
    (10)(b), which says that "school days" are "days on which
    school is actually taught and the following days on which is not
    taught: . . . [d]ays on which school is closed by order of a local
    health officer." Heinrich's reliance on this statute is misplaced.
    A plain textual reading of § 115.01(10)(b) shows that the provision
    is not a grant of authority to local health officers; instead, it
    is   merely    a   "classifications"         section   for   statutes    wholly
    unrelated     to   the   duties    of   local    health   officers    regarding
    communicable diseases.        Accordingly, this statute has no bearing
    on the authority of state actors in this case.
    ¶25    Heinrich further argues that 
    Wis. Stat. § 120.12
    (27)(a)
    contemplates that local health officers have the power to close
    schools under 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    .              Section 120.12(27)(a) states
    that "[the school board shall] [w]ithin 24 hours of a school being
    closed for a reason specified in § 115.01(10)(b) or (c) or by the
    department    of   health    services     under    § 252.02(3),      notify   the
    department." Nothing in this provision gives local health officers
    any authority to close schools.          Rather, the statute contemplates
    that DHS has the power to close schools under ch. 252.                  Section
    canons but the text, context, and structure of 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    to reach her desired outcome in this case.
    21
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    120.12(27)(a)    is   silent    concerning     local    health    officers.
    Instead, 
    Wis. Stat. § 120.12
     pertains to the duties of local school
    boards.    When interpreting the "duties of local health officers"
    during the presence of "communicable diseases," this court must
    turn to the plain text of the statute that governs these duties:
    § 252.03.13   That statute withholds the power to close schools from
    local health officers.14
    B.    Legislative and Statutory History of 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    ¶26   The   plain   text   of   
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
         confers   no
    authority on local health officers to close schools; accordingly,
    13Adopting Heinrich's arguments, Justice Dallet cites
    statutory provisions referencing school closures by local health
    officers as proof of their authority under 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
     to
    close schools. This is a plain logical fallacy. Like § 252.03,
    none of these other statutes confer such authority on local health
    officers.   Statutory references to a school closure by a local
    health officer may stem from 
    Wis. Stat. § 250.042
    (1), which says:
    "If the governor declares a state of emergency related to public
    health under s. 323.10 and designates the department [of health
    services] as the lead state agency to respond to that emergency,
    the department shall act as the public health authority during the
    state of emergency . . . .    During the period of the state of
    emergency, the secretary may designate a local health department
    as an agent of the department and confer upon the local health
    department, acting under that agency, the powers and duties of the
    public health authority."      That statutory provision is not
    challenged in this case so we do not construe it or consider its
    validity under the constitution; nevertheless, on its face it
    explains the existence of statutory references to school closures
    by order of local health officers although no statute confers such
    authority.
    14Heinrich points to a few additional statutes from unrelated
    chapters to support her conclusion that local health officers have
    the power to close schools under 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    . Heinrich
    fails to flesh out these other provisions in any substantive way;
    accordingly, we decline to discuss them.
    22
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    our    analysis     of   the    statute     could     end   there.         Kalal,   
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    , ¶45 ("[S]tatutory interpretation 'begins with the
    language of the statute.              If the meaning of the statute is plain,
    we ordinarily stop the inquiry.'").                However, "legislative history
    is    sometimes     consulted     to    confirm     or   verify   a   plain-meaning
    interpretation."         Id., ¶51.        Similarly, "statutory history" may
    also be used as part of "plain meaning analysis."                      See Richards
    v. Badger Mut. Ins. Co., 
    2008 WI 52
    , ¶22, 
    309 Wis. 2d 541
    , 
    749 N.W.2d 581
    .         In this case, both the legislative and statutory
    history confirm that local health officers do not have the power
    to    close    schools.        Although      the    legislature       at   one   point
    contemplated giving them this power, it never did so.
    ¶27    Wisconsin's public health infrastructure originated 145
    years ago in 1876, when the legislature created the State Board of
    Health, which, like DHS today, served as the statewide public
    health agency.       Steven Burg, Wisconsin and the Great Spanish Flu
    Epidemic of 1918, Wisconsin Magazine of History, Autumn 2000,
    at 44.15      At that time, the legislature gave the State Board of
    Health the power to issue statewide health orders in times of
    crisis.       
    Id.
         In 1883, the legislature required every town,
    village, and city in the state to establish a local board of health
    and appoint a local health officer.              
    Id.
     In delineating the duties
    of local health officers, the legislature mandated that local
    This
    15           article        is         available        at
    https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/wmh/id/4
    3606.
    23
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    health     officers   "take       such    measures       for     the       prevention,
    suppression, and control of the diseases."16                   § 1, ch. 167, Laws
    of 1883.    Nowhere in this law (or in any other) did the legislature
    give local health officers the power to close schools.
    ¶28    Thirty years later, in 1913, the legislature enacted a
    law giving the State Board of Heath the power to close schools
    during an epidemic. In contrast, the legislature declined to grant
    such authority to local health officers. As relevant to this case,
    the statute conferred four powers on the State Board of Health:
    1. The power "to establish quarantine . . . ";
    2. The power "to order and execute what is reasonable and
    necessary for the prevention and suppression of diseases";
    3. The power "to close schools and churches"; and
    4. The power "to forbid public gatherings."
    § 1, ch. 674, Laws of 1913 (emphasis added).                        Only five years
    later, when the Spanish Flu infected Wisconsinites, the State Board
    of Health invoked these extraordinary powers.                  Burg, supra, at 45.
    ¶29    In the aftermath of the Spanish Flu, the legislature
    revisited    Wisconsin's    public       heath   laws.         In    May    1919,   the
    16 In more detail, the 1883 law read: "[I]t shall be the duty
    of such health officer at all times promptly to take such measures
    for the prevention, suppression and control of the diseases herein
    named as may in his judgment be needful and proper, subject to the
    approval of the board of which he is a member . . . ."        § 1,
    ch. 167, Laws of 1883.
    24
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    legislature expanded the powers of local health officers to include
    the following:
    1. The power "to establish quarantine . . . ";
    2. The power "to order and execute what is reasonable and
    necessary for the prevention and suppression of disease";17
    and
    3. The power "to forbid public gatherings."
    § 1, ch. 159, Laws of 1919.               This language mirrors the powers
    accorded the State Board of Health—with one notable exception:
    the power to close schools.             Compare § 1, ch. 674, Laws of 1913
    with § 1, ch. 159, Laws of 1919.
    ¶30    This legislative choice was no accident.              Early drafts
    of the bill reveal that the legislature at one point contemplated
    giving local health officers the power to close schools.                   At the
    time the legislature asked the Attorney General to opine on its
    constitutionality, an earlier version stated that "the local board
    of health of each township, incorporated village or city, shall
    have the power to close schools, theatres, and churches" for the
    prevention and suppression of disease.              8 Wis. Op. Att'y Gen. 157,
    157-58 (1919) (emphasis added).                The Attorney General responded
    that the provision in the bill "'clos[ing] schools, theatres, and
    churches' seems to be without limitation." Id. Expressing concern
    over    the       language's   constitutionality,       the   Attorney    General
    recommended that the language "should . . . more clearly state[]"
    The legislature first gave this power to local health
    17
    officers under its 1883 law.
    25
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    that the "[the provision closing schools] is intended to limit
    this [authority] to the necessity of controlling epidemics."              Id.
    After receiving the Attorney General's opinion, the legislature
    struck the provision concerning school closures.                Gone was any
    language allowing local health officers to "close schools" during
    an epidemic——or otherwise.        Ultimately, the legislature enacted
    this bill without any mention of school closures.                  See § 1,
    ch. 159, Laws of 1919.
    ¶31   The 1919 law established the foundation for Wisconsin's
    current statute concerning local health officers, with periodic
    amendments over the ensuing decades.           In 1923, the legislature
    restructured its public health laws, retaining the same language
    adopted in 1919.      See 
    Wis. Stat. §§ 143.02
     and 143.03 (1923-24).
    In 1981, the legislature again amended these laws, with only minor
    additions.   See 1981 Wis. Act 291, §§ 21, 23.           In all this time,
    the legislature never gave local health officers the power to
    "close schools"—only the statewide health agency (now DHS).              Both
    the plain text of 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
     as well as its legislative
    and statutory history lead to only one reasonable conclusion:
    Heinrich   exceeded    her   statutory     authority    under    
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
     when she issued the Order closing all schools in Dane
    County.
    26
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    C.     Constitutional Claims18
    18 In espousing the doctrine of constitutional avoidance as a
    compulsory rule, Justice Dallet proclaims that "we generally reach
    constitutional claims only if the case is 'incapable of resolution
    without deciding the constitutional conflict,'" misciting Gabler
    v. Crime Victims Rights Bd., 
    2017 WI 67
    , ¶¶51-52, 
    376 Wis. 2d 147
    ,
    
    897 N.W.2d 384
    . Dissent, ¶85. Gabler actually said: "This case
    is incapable of resolution without deciding the constitutional
    conflict presented by the Board's exercise of its statutory
    powers." Gabler, 
    376 Wis. 2d 147
    , ¶51. Although "[t]his court
    does not normally decide constitutional questions if the case can
    be resolved on other grounds" such "[c]onstitutional avoidance is
    'a matter of judicial prudence' and does not apply where the
    constitutionality of a statute is 'essential to the determination
    of the case.'"      Id., ¶52 (quoting Kollasch v. Adamany, 
    104 Wis. 2d 552
    , 561, 
    313 N.W.2d 47
     (1981); then citing Fleeman v.
    Case, 
    342 So.2d 815
    , 818 (Fla. 1976) and Hammond v. Bingham, 
    362 P.2d 1078
    , 1079 (Idaho 1961)).           This exception to the
    constitutional avoidance doctrine applies no less to governmental
    edicts such as the Order we consider in this case. Like other
    state and federal courts around the country, we have elected to
    answer constitutional questions of great public importance.
    "Courts in other jurisdictions have also recognized that the
    principle of constitutional avoidance gives way where the
    constitutional question is of great public importance."         
    Id.
    (citing State ex rel. Bland v. St. John, 
    13 So. 2d 161
    , 170 (Ala.
    1943) and Buckingham v. State ex rel. Killoran, 
    35 A.2d 903
    , 904-
    05 (Del. 1944)). In Gabler, we elected to decide "a separation of
    powers issue of great public importance." Id., ¶53. In this case,
    we opt to decide a religious liberty issue of great public
    importance. In doing so, we recognize, as we did in Gabler, that
    "the greatest of our judges have not always followed [the
    constitutional avoidance doctrine] as a rigid rule. Perhaps had
    they done so the great opinion of Chief Justice Marshall in Marbury
    v. Madison would never have been written." Id., ¶52 (quoting Clay
    v. Sun Ins. Office Ltd., 
    363 U.S. 207
    , 223-24 (1960) (Black, J.,
    dissenting)).
    Treating the constitutional avoidance doctrine as a rigid
    principle directing courts to disregard any constitutional
    questions whenever a case may be resolved on statutory grounds is
    not only inconsistent with our precedent, it would violate the
    judiciary's obligation to uphold the constitution.    As part of
    their oath of office, judges in Wisconsin "solemnly swear" to
    27
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    "support the constitution of the United States and the constitution
    of the state of Wisconsin." 
    Wis. Stat. § 757.02
    (1). In fulfilling
    its sworn duty, "[t]he judiciary cannot, as the legislature may,
    avoid a measure because it approaches the confines of the
    constitution.      We    cannot   pass   it   by  because   it   is
    doubtful . . . with whatever difficulties, a case may be attended,
    we must decide it, if it be brought before us." Cohens v. Virginia,
    
    19 U.S. 264
    , 404 (1821).      When parties present constitutional
    questions of great public importance, "[t]he courts of the [United]
    States are bound to take notice of the constitution," and to
    "emphatically . . . say what the law is." Marbury v. Madison, 5
    U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 138, 177 (1803).
    Contrary to Justice Hagedorn's conception of the judicial
    role, there is nothing unprecedented about fulfilling our
    responsibility to decide important constitutional questions, which
    was recently affirmed by this court in Gabler and has been echoed
    by preeminent jurists since Chief Justice John Marshall pronounced
    it in Marbury. Alexander Hamilton said the "duty" of the judiciary
    "must be to declare all acts contrary to the manifest tenor of the
    Constitution void.      Without this, all the reservations of
    particular rights or privileges would amount to nothing."       The
    Federalist No. 78, at 466 (Alexander Hamilton) (C. Rossiter ed.
    1961). Accordingly, "when a case or controversy comes within the
    judicial competence, the Constitution does not permit judges to
    look the other way; we must call foul when the constitutional lines
    are crossed. Indeed, the framers afforded us independence from
    the political branches in large part to encourage exactly this
    kind of 'fortitude . . . to do [our] duty as faithful guardians of
    the Constitution.'" Gundy v. United States, 
    139 S. Ct. 2116
    , 2135
    (2019) (Gorsuch, J., dissenting) (quoting The Federalist No. 78,
    at 470 (C. Rossiter ed. 1961) (ellipsis in original)).
    Justice Hagedorn misconstrues the basis for this court's
    decision to resolve petitioners' religious liberty claim. No one
    is suggesting we must address every important constitutional
    question raised. In this very case we declined to decide whether
    the Order violates the constitutionally-protected right of parents
    to direct the upbringing and education of their children.
    28
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    ¶32   Turning to the Wisconsin Constitution, the Petitioners
    contend that the Order violates their fundamental right to the
    free   exercise   of   religion    under    Article   I,   Section 18.      In
    response, Heinrich asserts that the Order is constitutional under
    the    United   States   Supreme      Court's    ruling    in   Jacobson    v.
    Our duty to uphold the Constitution, however, is particularly
    urgent when governmental action is alleged to infringe the people's
    fundamental right to religious freedom. "The courts have both the
    title and duty when a case is properly before them to review the
    actions of the other branches in light of constitutional
    provisions[.]"   Herbert Wechsler, Toward Neutral Principles of
    Constitutional Law, 
    73 Harv. L. Rev. 1
    , 19 (1959). Declining to
    decide the constitutional question in this case would "shirk[] our
    duty" to say what the supreme law of our state is. Bond v. United
    States, 
    572 U.S. 844
    , 882 (2014) (Scalia, J., concurring in the
    judgment). Justice Hagedorn relegates what Alexander Hamilton and
    Chief Justice Marshall characterized as our judicial "duty" to a
    mere "power" to be exercised "with modesty." Concurrence, ¶58.
    This reformulation of the judicial role is rooted in the
    progressive era, when judges abandoned their obligation to uphold
    the Constitution in extreme deference to majoritarian impulses,
    thereby elevating legislative acts over the Constitution——at the
    expense of individual rights and liberty. See Randy E. Barnett,
    Our Republican Constitution: Securing the Liberty and Sovereignty
    of We the People 122-53 (2016). Justice Hagedorn's trepidation
    over fully embracing our "duty as faithful guardians of the
    Constitution" is incompatible with our constitutional structure,
    and his standard for answering constitutional questions based upon
    an individual justice's belief that "it is prudent to do so" would
    leave the people with justifiably little faith in the judiciary as
    a bulwark of liberty.     See The Federalist No. 78, at 469 (C.
    Rossiter ed. 1961) ("[T]he courts of justice are to be considered
    as the bulwarks of a limited Constitution against legislative
    encroachments[.]").      Preserving the free exercise rights
    constitutionally retained by the people lies well within the bounds
    of the judicial role and is not "needlessly opin[ing]"——it is a
    constitutional imperative. Dissent, ¶64. As the bulwark of our
    Wisconsin Constitution, we should defend the people's rights with
    fortitude, not modesty.
    29
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    Massachusetts, 
    197 U.S. 11
     (1905), and that, even if Jacobson does
    not apply, the Order does not violate Article I, Section 18 of the
    Wisconsin Constitution.             We hold that the Wisconsin Constitution—
    —not Jacobson——controls the question, and those portions of the
    Order     restricting       or     prohibiting      in-person    instruction     are
    unconstitutional because they violate a citizen's right to the
    free exercise of religion guaranteed in Article I, Section 18 of
    the Wisconsin Constitution.19
    1.    Jacobson v. Massachusetts
    ¶33    The United States Supreme Court decided Jacobson over a
    century ago in the midst of the smallpox epidemic.                         Jacobson
    alleged that a Massachusetts law requiring residents to receive
    vaccinations violated his rights under the Fourteenth Amendment of
    the United States Constitution.                  Jacobson, 
    197 U.S. at 14
    .        In
    essence, Jacobson brought an "implied substantive due process"
    claim asserting that the law violated his "bodily integrity."                    See
    Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn v. Cuomo, 
    141 S. Ct. 63
    , 70
    (2020)     (Gorsuch,    J.,        concurring).         The   Court     ruled   that
    Massachusetts's    compulsory            vaccination    law   was   a   "reasonable
    19 The Petitioners who are religious schools or parents with
    children attending religious schools raise an as-applied challenge
    to the constitutionality of those portions of the Order restricting
    or prohibiting in-person instruction. The remedy for violating
    the constitutional right to the free exercise of religion is
    vacating those portions of the Order as applied to those
    Petitioners. Because the Respondent lacks any statutory authority
    to close schools (whether religious or secular), we vacate those
    portions of the Order entirely.
    30
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    exercise of [its] police power" and was constitutional under the
    Fourteenth Amendment.       Jacobson, 
    197 U.S. at 35
    .
    ¶34       Contrary to Heinrich's argument, Jacobson does not apply
    to this case, for at least four reasons.            First, the Petitioners'
    challenge to the constitutionality of the Order is couched entirely
    within Article I, Section 18 of the Wisconsin Constitution——a
    provision      containing   Wisconsin's     free   exercise    clause.20     In
    contrast, in Jacobson the defendant asserted that the compulsory
    vaccination law violated an implied "substantive due process"
    right     to   "bodily   integrity"    in   violation    of   the   Fourteenth
    Amendment.      See Roman Catholic Diocese, 141 S. Ct. at 70 (Gorsuch,
    J., concurring); Jacobson, 
    197 U.S. at 14
    .            The issue in Jacobson
    involved "an entirely different right" and "an entirely different
    kind of restriction" than the Petitioners' current challenge.
    Roman Catholic Diocese, 141 S. Ct. at 70 (Gorsuch, J., concurring).
    ¶35       Second, Jacobson's case did not involve a violation of
    the free exercise of religion under the First Amendment or any
    state constitution.         In contrast, the Petitioners in this case
    challenge the government's infringement of their constitutionally-
    protected right to the free exercise of their religion.               "Nothing
    in Jacobson purported to address, let alone approve, such serious
    and long-lasting intrusions into settled constitutional rights."
    Id. at 71 (Gorsuch, J., concurring).
    20Article I, Section 18 contains two clauses referring to the
    rights of conscience, but we understand both of these provisions
    to protect the free exercise of religion. Coulee Catholic Sch. v.
    LIRC, 
    2009 WI 88
    , ¶58, 
    320 Wis. 2d 275
    , 
    768 N.W.2d 868
    .
    31
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    ¶36   Third, even if Jacobson could somehow inform a free
    exercise claim, the Petitioners' challenge in this case invokes a
    state constitutional provision that affords heightened protections
    for   the   free    exercise     of    religion     compared    to   its    federal
    counterpart.       See State ex rel. Warren v. Reuter, 
    44 Wis. 2d 201
    ,
    227, 
    170 N.W.2d 790
     (1969).            Article I, Section 18's "protections
    and prohibitions . . . are far more specific [than the First
    Amendment]"    and    provide        "expansive    protections   for    religious
    liberty."     Coulee Catholic Sch. v. LIRC, 
    2009 WI 88
    , ¶60, 
    320 Wis. 2d 275
    , 
    768 N.W.2d 868
    .             Indeed, the Wisconsin Constitution
    "provides much broader protections for religious liberty than the
    First Amendment."       Id., ¶66.       Accordingly, this court must review
    whether     Heinrich's     Order        survives      strict    scrutiny      under
    Wisconsin's own constitutional provisions, not whether the United
    States Constitution allows it; Jacobson would inform only the
    latter and therefore is irrelevant.
    ¶37   Fourth,     the     Jacobson      Court    upheld    Massachusetts'
    compulsory vaccination law because it was "a reasonable exercise
    of [its] police power."          Jacobson, 
    197 U.S. at 35
    .           However, "in
    this state, constitutional rights do not expand the police power;
    they restrict the police power."              State v. Hamdan, 
    2003 WI 113
    ,
    ¶39, 
    264 Wis. 2d 433
    , 
    665 N.W.2d 785
    .               That an order reflects an
    exercise of police power does not save it if the order "eviscerates
    [a] constitutionally protected right."              Id., ¶40.    Indeed, police
    powers are "hedged about on all sides by constitutional restraints
    with the judiciary to stand guard at the boundaries."                      State ex
    rel. Milwaukee Med. Coll. v. Chittenden, 
    127 Wis. 468
    , 502, 107
    32
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    N.W. 500 (1906).   Our constitutional review of measures adopted by
    state or local health officers to curb the spread of disease is
    particularly important because       such   police powers     necessarily
    curtail the freedom of those citizens who are subject to their
    exercise.21   In this case, we examine Article I, Section 18 of the
    Wisconsin Constitution to stand guard against abuses of executive
    21Justice Dallet reads into the statutes the extraordinary
    and virtually unlimited power of local health officials to "take
    all measures necessary" in a pandemic, without considering any
    constitutional constraints on its exercise.      Justice Dallet's
    failure to grapple with the incompatibility of her statutory
    interpretation with the Wisconsin Constitution violates the
    foundational principle that the constitution reigns supreme over
    statutory law: "[T]he Constitution is to be considered in court
    as a paramount law" and "a law repugnant to the Constitution is
    void, and . . . courts, as well as other departments, are bound by
    that instrument." Marbury, 5 U.S. at 178, 180.
    Instead of undertaking a constitutional analysis, Justice
    Dallet remarkably blames the petitioners themselves for the
    infringement of their own constitutional rights. Taking a position
    diametrically opposed to Heinrich's and belied by the record,
    Justice Dallet says that "[i]f in-person education on every
    subject, religious or not, is truly religious practice, as some
    petitioners here claim, nothing in the Order burdens that practice"
    since "Section 8 of the Order explicitly exempts religious
    practices from its in-person gathering restrictions[.]" Dissent,
    ¶88.   The parties' stipulated facts "torpedo" Justice Dallet's
    assertion.     The parties——including Heinrich——stipulated that
    "Emergency Order #9, itself, does not allow for the opening of in-
    person education for grades 3-12 under any conditions except for
    a new order superseding and replacing Emergency Order #9, and
    except   for   qualifying   students   with  disabilities   or   an
    individualized education program."     Joint Stipulation of Facts
    #147 (emphasis added). Had the petitioner schools tested Justice
    Dallet's theory, they would have exposed themselves to "a penalty
    of not more than one thousand dollars $1,000" for "[e]ach and every
    day of violation." Joint Stipulation of Facts #170.
    33
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    power——however      well-intentioned——that            infringe     on      the    free
    exercise of religion.
    2.     Article I, Section 18 of the Wisconsin Constitution
    ¶38     The framers of the Wisconsin Constitution understood
    that "religious freedom was in need of . . . protection," in order
    for individuals to freely exercise their religion.                      Jennifer A.
    Faulker,     The   Transformation        of    Religion    in    America    and   the
    Preservation of the Freedom of Religion in Wisconsin, in Defining
    a   People,    Creating    a   State:         The   Wisconsin    Constitution       in
    Jacksonian     Context    201,     202    (1998).         "The   framers     of   the
    constitution, backed by Wisconsin residents, chose to describe the
    religious freedoms that they should be entitled to in greater
    detail than were given in the federal constitution."                    Id. at 223.
    The result was Article I, Section 18, which "contains two clauses
    referring to the rights of conscience . . . , which we understand
    to refer generally to the exercise of religious freedom."                    Coulee,
    
    320 Wis. 2d 275
    , ¶58.          In these provisions, Wisconsin's framers
    "use[d] the strongest possible language in the protection of this
    right." Id., ¶59.        The clauses read, in relevant part, as follows:
    The right of every person to worship Almighty God
    according to the dictates of conscience shall never be
    infringed; . . . nor   shall  any   control   of,   or
    interference with, the rights of conscience be
    permitted[.]
    Wis. Const. art. I, § 18.           In line with this "extremely strong
    language," Coulee, 
    320 Wis. 2d 275
    , ¶60, this court construes
    Article I, Section 18 as "more prohibitive than the First Amendment
    34
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    of the United States Constitution."                  King v. Vill. of Waunakee,
    
    185 Wis. 2d 25
    , 59, 
    517 N.W.2d 671
     (1994).
    ¶39   When examining a law alleged to violate an individual's
    or     organization's     freedom      of        religious    exercise,         "we   have
    generally applied the compelling state interest/least restrictive
    alternative test.       Under this test, the [individual] or religious
    organization    has     to   prove    (1)     that    it     has    a    sincerely    held
    religious belief, and (2) that such belief is burdened by the
    application of the . . . law at issue.                       Upon this showing the
    burden shifts to the state to prove (3) that the law is based upon
    a compelling state interest (4) that cannot be served by a less
    restrictive alternative."            Coulee, 
    320 Wis. 2d 275
    , ¶61 (citing
    State v. Miller, 
    202 Wis. 2d 56
    , 66, 
    549 N.W.2d 235
     (1996)).
    Applying the strict scrutiny embodied in these four factors,
    Heinrich's Order unconstitutionally infringes the Petitioners'
    freedom of religious exercise.
    ¶40   For the first factor, all petitioners have sincerely-
    held    religious     beliefs,       to     which     the     respondent         expressly
    stipulated.     James, for example, believes that it is essential for
    her children to receive a faith-based education and that such
    education must take place "in-person" and "together with others as
    part of the body of Christ."                 James sent her children to Our
    Redeemer     Lutheran    School      precisely       to    fulfill       this    religious
    mission.     Likewise, WCRIS and its member schools, along with other
    petitioners     joining      WCRIS'       action,     declared          that    "in-person
    religious     instruction"     is     a     "vital    part     of       [the    students']
    religious formation."        Parents of children attending these schools
    35
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    specifically chose these institutions so their children could
    "participat[e] in [their] religious activities in-person" and
    "exercise their faith."
    ¶41    The parents of students at St. Ambrose Academy hold
    similar beliefs.      They attest it was important for their children
    to attend St. Ambrose, a Catholic institution, so that its teachers
    could "closely mentor [their] students to foster a deep love of
    Jesus Christ and [to] encourage them to imitate a life of virtue
    and service to Christ and His Church."              In order to practice their
    faith,    the   parents   embrace       the    importance    of   their    children
    receiving the sacrament of Holy Communion at weekly Masses and
    engaging in communal prayer throughout the day.                        St. Ambrose
    specifically states that its "religious mission depends on in-
    person attendance to be fully realized," given that the "community
    experience . . . is       a    mark     of     educational   activity."22        The
    Petitioners clearly demonstrate sincerely-held religious beliefs,
    uncontested     by   Heinrich;       accordingly,     they   satisfy      the   first
    factor.
    ¶42    Turning to the second factor, the Order incontrovertibly
    burdens Petitioners' beliefs.                The Petitioners established that
    in-person religious instruction is a vital part of the exercise of
    their religion.        Under Heinrich's Order, all schools in Dane
    County——including      these         private    religious    institutions——were
    required to cease all in-person instruction for students in grades
    22The other religious schools joining St. Ambrose in this
    action echo similar beliefs.
    36
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    3-12    and     instead     provide         a     virtual    learning       environment.
    Consequently, all in-person religious practices interwoven with
    religious education at these schools——ones deemed essential to the
    Petitioners' exercise of their faith——were suspended by government
    decree.
    ¶43    Indeed,      the    Order         did   not   merely    burden    academic
    schooling; it burdened the exercise of religious practices.                          While
    Heinrich allowed schools to use their premises for child care and
    youth recreational activities, the government barred students from
    attending Mass, receiving Holy Communion at weekly Masses with
    their       classmates     and     teachers,          receiving    the   sacrament     of
    Confession at school, participating in communal prayer with their
    peers, and going on retreats and service missions throughout the
    area.23       As the United States Supreme Court has opined, "the
    'exercise      of    religion'          often    involves    not     only   belief    and
    profession       but      the      performance          of . . . physical        acts[,]
    [including] assembling with others for a worship service."                            Emp.
    Div., Dep't of Hum. Res. of Oregon v. Smith, 
    494 U.S. 872
    , 877
    (1990) (emphases added).                "Our Founders conceived of a Republic
    receptive to voluntary religious expression, and provided for the
    possibility         of   judicial        intervention       when   government     action
    Contrary to Heinrich's argument, it is of no import that
    23
    the Order may be neutral and generally applicable to all schools.
    Unlike federal jurisprudence and in light of Article I, Section
    18's heightened protection for the free exercise of religion, this
    court considers whether the petitioners' sincerely-held beliefs
    were burdened by the application of the law at issue, even if the
    Order governs secular schools as well. See DeBruin v. St. Patrick
    Congregation, 
    2012 WI 94
    , ¶26 n.8, 
    343 Wis. 2d 83
    , 
    816 N.W.2d 878
    .
    37
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    threatens or impedes such expression."              McCreary Cnty., Ky. v. Am.
    Civ. Liberties Union of Ky., 
    545 U.S. 844
    , 883 (2005) (emphasis
    added).     Heinrich's      Order    not     only   impeded   the    Petitioners'
    religious expression and practice, it outright precluded both from
    occurring in Petitioners' schools altogether.                  The Petitioners'
    exercise    of   their   sincerely-held         beliefs    was      unquestionably
    "burdened by the application" of the Order,24 and the Petitioners
    accordingly satisfied the second factor.
    ¶44    Because   the    Petitioners       satisfy    both   the    first   and
    second factors, the burden shifts to Heinrich to prove that her
    Order is "based upon a compelling state interest . . . that cannot
    be served by a less restrictive alternative."                 
    Id.
        She fails to
    meet this burden.     For public health purposes, the State certainly
    has a compelling interest in slowing the spread of COVID-19.                    The
    Petitioners do not dispute this point.                However, the Order does
    not impose the "least restrictive" means of doing so.
    ¶45    "The least-restrictive-means standard is exceptionally
    demanding, and it requires the government to show that it lacks
    other means of achieving its desired goal without imposing a
    substantial burden on the exercise of religion by the objecting
    party."    Holt v. Hobbs, 
    574 U.S. 352
    , 364-65 (2015) (citations and
    24 This is not to say, however, that "anything interfering
    with a religious organization is totally prohibited." Coulee, 
    320 Wis. 2d 275
    , ¶65. In this case, however, "[w]e need not explore
    the outer boundaries" of the Wisconsin Constitution's protections
    of religious liberty because the Order unquestionably burdens the
    Petitioners' sincerely-held religious beliefs by prohibiting in-
    person religious education. Id., ¶66.
    38
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    internal quotations omitted).          "If a less restrictive means is
    available for the Government to achieve its goals, the Government
    must use it."      Id. at 365 (citations and internal quotations
    omitted).   Heinrich's earlier orders implemented less restrictive
    means such as specifying classroom student limits, mandating the
    use of masks, and requiring social distancing.           In Emergency Order
    #8, for example, Heinrich outlined detailed safety protocols for
    schools, including "[e]nsuring students are at least six (6) feet
    from other students" and requiring that "employees are provided
    with and wear face coverings." These nuanced and tailored measures
    were completely abandoned in the Order at issue, replaced by the
    drastic step of forbidding in-person religious school education
    entirely for students in grades 3-12.
    ¶46    The Order distinguishes between the age demographics of
    students, permitting only students in grades K-2 to receive in-
    person instruction while relegating all students in grades 3-12 to
    virtual instruction only.          By the Order's own reasoning, this
    distinction was unnecessary to achieve the government's goals.              As
    stated in the Order's introduction, "[o]utbreaks and clusters
    among cases aged 5-17 have been rare."          Nevertheless, a five-year-
    old student in kindergarten and an eight–year-old student in third
    grade, despite comparable infrequencies of COVID-19 transmission,
    were afforded entirely different educations in Dane County.
    ¶47    Furthermore,     while    students     in   grades    3-12    were
    prohibited from attending school in person, the Order allowed all
    higher education institutions to continue to provide in-person
    learning and dormitory housing, subject to certain restrictions.
    39
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    The    Order    failed   to    explain       why   college-aged      students    could
    continue to live, learn, and socialize in close communities, while
    students in grades 3-12 were consigned to computer screens.                      While
    the    Order      demonstrates    the       availability    of     less    restrictive
    alternatives and employs them for college students as well as
    students in grades K-2, the Order denies them to students in grades
    3-12.    For this reason, the Order fails under the fourth factor
    for establishing a freedom of religion claim.
    ¶48     In total, the Order fails the strict scrutiny test:                 the
    application of the Order burdens the Petitioners' sincerely-held
    religious beliefs, and Heinrich fails to demonstrate why the Order,
    although based upon a compelling interest, cannot be met by less
    restrictive alternatives.              Accordingly, Heinrich's Order violates
    Article I, Section 18 of the Wisconsin Constitution, which the
    government may not override, even in a pandemic.                     "Even in times
    of crisis——perhaps especially in times of crisis——we have a duty
    to hold governments to the Constitution."                         South    Bay United
    Pentecostal Church v. Newsom, 
    141 S. Ct. 716
    , 718 (2021) (granting
    in    part   an    application        for   injunctive     relief)    (statement    of
    Gorsuch, J.).
    IV.       CONCLUSION
    ¶49     Those   portions       of    Heinrich's     Order     restricting    or
    prohibiting        in-person     instruction       are     both    statutorily     and
    constitutionally unlawful, and are hereby vacated.                        Local health
    officers do not have the statutory authority to close schools under
    
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    .             Article I, Section 18 of the Wisconsin
    Constitution——not Jacobson——controls the constitutional question.
    40
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA
    Because Heinrich's Order violates the Petitioners' fundamental
    constitutional right to the free exercise of religion, it cannot
    stand.
    By the Court.—Rights declared; order vacated.
    41
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.bh
    ¶50    BRIAN HAGEDORN, J.            (concurring).            Today's decision
    correctly interprets the statutes, and faithfully applies our
    precedent on the religious liberty protections ratified in the
    Wisconsin    Constitution.         I   join        the   court's    opinion    in    all
    respects, with the exception of footnote 18.                     I write separately
    to   discuss      the   proper     role       of    this    court      in   addressing
    constitutional questions——both when we should decide these issues
    and how we ought to do so.
    I
    ¶51    The    dissent      criticizes         the   court   for    deciding    the
    religious liberty question raised in this case.                    The general rule,
    the dissent points out, is to decide cases on the narrowest
    grounds,       especially        avoiding          needless      engagement         with
    constitutional questions unless required to decide the case.1                        The
    dissent is correct; this is the general rule, and it is a good
    rule.    It recognizes that the primary role of the judiciary is to
    decide disputes between parties.              And it is grounded in a sense of
    epistemic and judicial humility——we often don't know what we don't
    know, and we're quite capable of unwitting error.                       That's a bad
    thing anytime, but it's especially bad when expounding on the
    constitution that serves as the foundation for the existence,
    operation, and success of our republic.                  So we should decide cases
    on narrow and firm grounds, and in ways that avoid the risk of
    judicial error——particularly on constitutional questions.
    1   Dissent, ¶85.
    1
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.bh
    ¶52       The opinion for the court responds in footnote 18.2                It
    first observes that this doctrine is a general rule and not rigidly
    applied in all cases.3            I agree.       But portions of footnote 18 go
    further and suggest that when the issue is of "great public
    importance,"       addressing      it   is       mandatory.4      Not   deciding   an
    important constitutional question, it claims, would "violate the
    judiciary's obligation to uphold the constitution," disregarding
    our oath of office.5        Failing to address it would therefore "shirk
    our   duty,"       and    possibly      violate       the      constitution   itself
    (addressing the religious liberty question "is a constitutional
    imperative").6
    ¶53       This   assertion——that       we     are   duty-bound    to    address
    important constitutional questions raised in a case even though it
    can be resolved on other grounds——is without precedent.                         I am
    unaware of any appellate court, state or federal, anywhere around
    the country having ever adopted this as a rule for judicial
    decision-making.         It certainly has no basis in our cases, nor will
    2Because I do not join it, footnote 18 does not garner a
    majority of the court and does not constitute part of the
    precedential opinion of the court.
    3   Majority op., n.18.
    4   
    Id.
    5   
    Id.
    6   
    Id.
     (alteration omitted).
    2
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.bh
    you find it in the decisions of the United States Supreme Court.7
    Rather, the Wisconsin Constitution, like the Constitution of the
    United States, envisages a far more circumscribed role for the
    judiciary.
    ¶54    Under the Constitution, the judiciary was designed to be
    the least dangerous branch.8       This is because its ability to act
    was limited, making it the least able to dominate the other
    7 Our cases do not support the broad theory proposed. Quite
    the contrary, we have explained the default rule consistently:
    "As a matter of judicial prudence, a court should not decide the
    constitutionality of a statute unless it is essential to the
    determination of the case before it." Kollasch v. Adamany, 
    104 Wis. 2d 552
    , 561, 
    313 N.W.2d 47
     (1981); see also State v. Frear,
    
    138 Wis. 173
    , 176, 
    119 N.W. 894
     (1909) (per curiam) ("Sound
    judicial policy precludes the court from considering the question
    of the constitutionality of a legislative act unless a decision
    respecting its validity is essential to the determination of some
    controversy calling for judicial solution.").
    In footnote 18, the opinion also claims support in the
    writings of Alexander Hamilton, Chief Justice John Marshall,
    Justice Neil Gorsuch, Justice Antonin Scalia, and Justice Clarence
    Thomas, among others. However, none of citations, and none of the
    named authors, have supported the proposition advanced——that the
    court must address certain constitutional questions of great
    importance when properly presented. Instead, the United States
    Supreme Court has the same general rule that this court has
    embraced:      "[W]e  ought   not   to   pass  on   questions   of
    constitutionality unless such adjudication is unavoidable." Matal
    v. Tam, 
    137 S. Ct. 1744
    , 1755 (2017) (cleaned up); see also Tory
    v. Cochran, 
    544 U.S. 734
    , 740 (2005) (Thomas, J., dissenting) ("As
    a prudential matter, the better course is to avoid passing
    unnecessarily on the constitutional question.").
    8   The Federalist No. 78, at 464 (Clinton Rossiter ed. 2003).
    3
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.bh
    branches and the least likely to trample the liberty of the people.9
    The Wisconsin Constitution follows this same design.10                 While this
    vision held sway for some time, in recent years, the judiciary has
    insisted on a far more expansive role for itself.                    A distorted
    conception of judicial supremacy has taken hold, all too often
    inserting the judiciary into nearly every aspect of public life.
    Justice       Scalia    aptly     called    this    dangerous    development   the
    "overjudicialization of the process of self-governance."11
    ¶55     To be sure, the judiciary was granted real power and
    given real responsibilities.                An independent judiciary is an
    indispensable guardian of our constitutional order.                  When parties
    properly bring cases before us, we serve the essential functions
    of resolving disputes about the law and ensuring that the law is
    followed.       We would be derelict in our duty if we simply deferred
    to    other    public    or   private      actors    when   appropriately   raised
    questions requiring an answer come our way.12                We should not avoid
    the    hard    questions,       including       constitutional   questions,    when
    
    Id.
     ("The judiciary . . . has no influence over either the
    9
    sword or the purse; no direction either of the strength or of the
    wealth of the society, and can take no active resolution
    whatever.").
    Serv. Emps. Int'l Union, Loc. 1 v. Vos, 
    2020 WI 67
    , ¶31,
    10
    
    393 Wis. 2d 38
    , 
    946 N.W.2d 35
    .
    Antonin Scalia, The Doctrine of Standing as an Essential
    11
    Element of the Separation of Powers, 
    17 Suffolk U. L. Rev. 881
    ,
    881 (1983).
    We also must be faithful in addressing the legal questions
    12
    we do address. There is no room to rewrite statutes in an effort
    to avoid addressing a complicated constitutional question.
    4
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.bh
    addressing them is necessary.                It is our solemn duty to say what
    the law is when cases require us to do so.
    ¶56   Our constitution, then, paints a picture of a judiciary
    that is at once courageous and humble, one that exercises the
    judicial power with fortitude and modestly acknowledges where its
    power and duties end.           This is why judicial modesty and judicial
    fortitude are among the cardinal judicial virtues.                            Humility
    without courage can lead to an abdication of our judicial duty to
    declare the law in cases properly before us.13                   Courage unbounded
    by the humility to recognize and accept the limits of the judicial
    role quickly leads to the rule of judges, rather than the rule of
    law.
    ¶57   We   need——and      the    constitution       requires      of   us——both
    modesty and fortitude, humility and courage.                    We are not charged
    by the constitution to provide clarity whenever a constitutional
    question is unresolved.            We are not empowered to ensure all
    constitutional      violations         are    corrected.        The    United   States
    Supreme Court has explained that "under our constitutional system
    courts are not roving commissions assigned to pass judgment on the
    validity     of   the   Nation's        laws."14      Instead,        "Constitutional
    judgments . . . are       justified          only   out    of   the     necessity   of
    I too reject the kind of judicial modesty that advocates
    13
    "extreme deference to majoritarian impulses" or one that reflects
    a "trepidation over fully embracing our duty to be faithful
    guardians of the Constitution." See Majority op., n.18 (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    United States v. Sineneng-Smith, 
    140 S. Ct. 1575
    , 1587
    14
    (2020) (Thomas, J., concurring) (alterations omitted) (quoting
    Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 
    413 U.S. 601
    , 610–11 (1973)).
    5
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.bh
    adjudicating rights in particular cases between the litigants
    brought before the Court."15            In other words, we are not law-
    declarers-in-chief; we are case-deciders.
    ¶58    That is why the general rule is correct and, so far as
    I can tell, universally accepted:               cases should ordinarily be
    decided on narrow grounds, reaching only what is necessary to
    decide the case.16       Consistent with this rule, we generally do not
    issue advisory opinions or decide cases where we cannot provide
    relief to the injured party. Nothing about our case-deciding role,
    and nothing about the judicial power itself, requires us to address
    every question we deem important, constitutional or otherwise,
    when    the    dispute   is     effectively   resolved    on   other   grounds.
    Judicial modesty remembers that we make mistakes, we often don't
    know what we don't know, and that these realities are compounded
    when complicated constitutional questions are involved.                Our role
    is modest and limited; it is important for the rule of law that we
    keep it that way.
    ¶59    That said, I believe addressing the religious liberty
    question in this case is appropriate for several reasons.                First,
    government      actors   issuing     health-related      orders   during    this
    pandemic have at times been inattentive to religious liberty
    15   Broadrick, 
    413 U.S. at 611
    .
    See 16 C.J.S. Constitutional Law, § 212 ("A longstanding
    16
    principle of judicial restraint requires that courts avoid
    reaching constitutional questions in advance of the necessity of
    deciding them."); id. (collecting cases).
    6
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.bh
    concerns, as this case and others around the country demonstrate.17
    This is a reoccurring issue, and decision-makers should understand
    the legal requirements that must inform their decisions in this
    area.     Second, Heinrich argued that religious liberty deserves
    almost no additional protection, relying largely on the United
    States Supreme Court's 1905 decision in Jacobson.18          This argument
    has been oft-repeated in cases around the country during the
    pandemic and is incorrect.19       The court's opinion today resolves
    this important question, which gives needed guidance to the public.
    Finally, we blaze no new ground in reaffirming and applying well-
    settled law.     Religious liberty receives heightened protection
    under the Wisconsin Constitution.        That's what the text says, and
    our precedent is clear.20      Today's decision appropriately applies
    the governing test in this area.          Therefore, even though it is
    true that we need not address the constitutional question in this
    case, it is prudent to do so.       These are important questions with
    immediate consequences far beyond this case.             They were fully
    presented, fully briefed, and our decision provides clarity where
    it is needed.    My disagreement is only with the notion in footnote
    18 that judicial duty requires us to answer this question.
    17See, e.g., Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn v. Cuomo, 
    141 S. Ct. 63
     (2020) (per curiam).
    18   Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 
    197 U.S. 11
     (1905).
    19See Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn, 141 S. Ct. at 70-
    71 (Gorsuch, J., concurring).
    20See Wis. Const. art. I, § 18; Coulee Catholic Sch. v. LIRC,
    
    2009 WI 88
    , 
    320 Wis. 2d 275
    , 
    768 N.W.2d 868
    .
    7
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.bh
    II
    ¶60    Finally, I write further to extend an invitation to
    litigants. As those familiar with this court's jurisprudence know,
    we are committed to reading statutes according to their plain
    meaning.    Because the text is the law, we focus our interpretive
    inquiry on the text, context, and structure of statutory language,
    seeking to understand what the words meant when they were written.21
    This court is often the beneficiary of excellent briefing and
    argument directing us to exactly that——the meaning of the statutory
    text.
    ¶61    Our constitutional jurisprudence should be no different.
    Far too often, our cases have simply copied and pasted federal
    case law and called it Wisconsin constitutional law. And at times,
    this court has drifted from a jurisprudence rooted in the text and
    appealed instead to its own sense of justice. But our constitution
    means what it says, not what federal cases say, and not what we
    might want it to say.        Our role is to discern the meaning of the
    words approved by the people and apply them faithfully.            No matter
    how captivating a clarion call for justice may be, the text of the
    Wisconsin Constitution is the law to which we are bound.22
    ¶62    Our return to a method of statutory interpretation based
    not on policy concerns, but on the text of the law itself, has
    21State ex rel. Kalal v. Cir. Ct. for Dane Cnty., 
    2004 WI 58
    ,
    ¶¶44-52, 
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    , 
    681 N.W.2d 110
    ; Vos, 
    393 Wis. 2d 38
    ,
    ¶28.
    22   Vos, 
    393 Wis. 2d 38
    , ¶28.
    8
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.bh
    been a breath of fresh air in Wisconsin courts.23         It is time to
    reinstitutionalize the same norms in our constitutional analysis.24
    Therefore, my request is this.      When raising claims based on the
    Wisconsin Constitution, bring us a textual analysis rooted in the
    original public meaning of the words of the Wisconsin Constitution.
    Of course, litigants should employ and explain our precedent.          But
    especially when raising claims of a novel character, recourse to
    first principles is most appropriate, and briefing focused on the
    original public meaning of the Wisconsin Constitution is therefore
    most welcome.
    23See generally Daniel R. Suhr,           Interpreting     Wisconsin
    Statutes, 
    100 Marq. L. Rev. 969
     (2017).
    24Indeed, we adhered to this method in our earliest
    interpretations of the Wisconsin Constitution. See State ex rel.
    Bond v. French, 
    2 Pin. 181
    , 184 (Wis. 1849) ("In deciding this
    question, our only guide is the constitution, in construing which
    we are to be governed by the same general rules of interpretation
    which prevail in relation to statutes."); see also Daniel R. Suhr,
    Interpreting the Wisconsin Constitution, 
    97 Marq. L. Rev. 93
    , 96-
    97 (2013) ("In the earliest days of the state, the Wisconsin
    Supreme Court used the same methodology to interpret both
    constitutional and statutory texts. Until 1974, the court relied
    on classical principles for all interpretive questions." (footnote
    omitted)).
    9
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    ¶63    REBECCA FRANK DALLET, J.             (dissenting).       This is not a
    difficult     statutory     interpretation        case.      The   only     statutory
    question before the court is whether 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
     prohibits
    local health officers from closing schools.                  It takes no special
    "canons" or abstract linguistic principles——only a common sense
    understanding of the English language——to see that it does not.                      I
    therefore dissent.
    ¶64    I also dissent because there is no reason for the
    majority     opinion's      constitutional        analysis.        The     majority's
    statutory analysis, flawed as it is, fully resolves the case.
    Simply      put,    the    Order      cannot      possibly       violate     anyone's
    constitutional rights because the majority strikes down the Order.
    But the majority abandons both judicial restraint and our precedent
    to needlessly opine on the petitioners' constitutional challenge.
    I
    ¶65    Wisconsin Stat. § 252.03 plainly says what it means and
    means what it says. It requires local health officers to "promptly
    take all measures necessary to prevent, suppress[,] and control
    communicable       diseases,"      and   authorizes       them   to   "do    what   is
    reasonable and necessary" for the prevention and suppression of
    disease.      Nothing about those words necessarily prevents Dane
    County's Public Health Director from closing schools to suppress
    and control COVID-19.1           The statute's plain language, its history,
    and   numerous     related       statutes   all   confirm     that    local   health
    1Whether the Order was "necessary" or "reasonable" is a fact-
    based question that is not before the court.
    1
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    officers may close schools, so long as doing so is at least
    reasonable and necessary to suppress disease.
    A
    ¶66    Ever since the legislature enacted the first statute
    addressing disease outbreaks in 1883, it has entrusted to local
    health officers the power and flexibility to respond to disease
    outbreaks.      See Wis. Stat. ch. 167, § 1 (1883).                 That initial
    statute required every locality to establish its own board of
    health, which subsequently appointed a health officer.                     Id.     One
    of   the    local   health     officer's      duties   was   to   "at     all    times
    promptly . . . take           such    measures         for    the        prevention,
    suppression[,] and control [of contagious diseases] as may in his
    judgment be needful and proper," subject to the local health
    board's approval.       Id.     Then, in the aftermath of the 1918 Spanish
    Flu outbreak, the legislature granted to local boards of health
    the similar but more inclusive power to do "what is reasonable and
    necessary     for     the    prevention       and   suppression     of    disease,"
    including "forbid[ding] public gatherings when deemed necessary to
    control epidemics."            See Wis. Stat. ch. 159, § 1411-5 (1919).
    After a 1981 amendment, that power now belongs to local health
    officers rather than local health boards.               See § 23, ch. 291, Laws
    of 1981.     For our purposes here, the legislature has since made no
    other substantive changes to the statute's text.2
    ¶67    Today,    local     health    officers     continue    to     have   the
    authority and duty to act quickly to "prevent, suppress[,] and
    2The legislature restructured the public health statutes
    in 1923 and renumbered them 70 years later, but the relevant
    language has stayed the same. See § 14, ch. 448, Laws of 1923;
    1993 Wis. Act 27, § 285; 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    .
    2
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    control communicable diseases."                  See § 252.03(1).        At the first
    sign   of    an     outbreak,      local    health    officers'      obligations      are
    mandatory         and      time     sensitive:       they     "shall"     investigate
    "immediately"        and    act    "promptly."         Id.      To   that      end,   the
    legislature         gives    local      health    officers     the    discretion      to
    determine how best to react, instructing them to "take all measures
    necessary" to stop the disease's spread. Id.. Should local health
    officers "fail" to take "all measures necessary" to stop the
    disease's spread, the state Department of Health Services (DHS)
    "shall       take       charge"    at      the    local     government's       expense.
    § 252.03(3).
    ¶68    By    contrast,       DHS's    statutory       authority    to    control
    disease outbreaks is more targeted.                For instance, the legislature
    has granted DHS (and its predecessor, the state board of health)
    the power to "forbid public gatherings when deemed necessary to
    control epidemics," but only in "schools, churches, and other
    places."      § 252.02(3); see also Wis. Stat. ch. 674, § 1407a-6.2
    (1913).      Local health officers' power to forbid public gatherings
    contains no similar limitation.                  See § 252.03(2).       Moreover, DHS
    "may" take only "emergency" measures to control the spread of
    disease after an outbreak occurs; but local health officers must
    take "all" measures to not only control outbreaks but also to
    prevent them.            See §§ 252.02(6); 252.03(1)-(2).               Thus, despite
    some overlap in local and state health officers' powers, the
    textual distinctions between §§ 252.02 and 252.03 reveal fewer
    limitations on local officers' authority to respond to diseases
    3
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    and to prevent their spread.3 And none of those limitations prevent
    a local health officer from closing schools.
    3 The majority twice errs regarding the history of 
    Wis. Stat. §§ 252.02
     and 252.03. First, while the statutes were renumbered
    at the same time, they were drafted and enacted decades apart.
    Second, building on its false premise, the majority mistakenly
    concludes that the statutes' history supports only one conclusion.
    A full examination of the historical evidence, however, reveals at
    least one other reasonable inference, with no principled way of
    choosing between the two.
    An earlier draft of Wis. Stat. ch. 159, § 1411-5 (1919)——the
    predecessor to 
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
    (2)——gave local health officers
    the power to "close schools, theaters[,] and churches," mirroring
    the state health board's power, but without the qualification "when
    deemed necessary to control epidemics."      See 8 Wis. Op. Att'y
    Gen. 157, 157 (1919).    The state attorney general warned that,
    without such qualification, the statute may be unconstitutional as
    an unlimited and arbitrary grant of power to local officials. 
    Id.
    He suggested, however, that if the legislature rephrased the
    provision to read "when necessary to control epidemics, [local
    health officers] may forbid public gatherings and close schools,
    theaters, and churches," that would cure any "constitutional
    objections to the bill." 
    Id. at 158
     (emphasis added). The enacted
    text jettisoned the specific "close schools, theaters[,] and
    churches" language for the more open-ended power "to order and
    execute what is reasonable and necessary," while still limiting
    such actions to those related to "the prevention and suppression
    of disease." See Wis. Stat. ch 159, § 1411-5 (1919).
    That history reveals two equally reasonable inferences. One
    is that the legislature removed the "close schools" language from
    the draft bill because it intended only for DHS to have the power
    to close schools. The other is that the legislature removed that
    language because it did not intend to restrict local health
    officers' response options to only closing schools, theaters, and
    churches. Neither inference is more or less consistent with the
    statute's plain text.    The legislative history is therefore no
    help in resolving this case. See Greenwood v. United States, 
    350 U.S. 366
    , 374 (1956) ("[W]hen the legislative history is doubtful,
    go to the statute."). Accordingly, our analysis starts and ends
    with the statute's plain text, which on its face does not prohibit
    local health officers from closing schools.
    4
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    B
    ¶69   Contrary to the majority's analysis, the statute itself
    is "perfectly clear"; there is no "troublesome statutory language"
    here that requires a "set of arcane rules" to understand.                    See
    Facebook, Inc. v. Duguid, 592 U.S. ___, 
    141 S. Ct. 1163
    , 1175
    (2021) (Alito, J., concurring); Benson v. City of Madison, 
    2017 WI 65
    , ¶31, 
    376 Wis. 2d 35
    , 
    897 N.W.2d 16
     (explaining that there
    is "no need to resort" to "canon[s]" of statutory interpretation
    when a statute's meaning is "not unclear").               In straying from the
    clear language of § 252.03, the majority opinion impermissibly
    adds language to the statute, misinterprets local health officers'
    other duties, and nullifies a host of other statutory provisions.
    1
    ¶70   Nowhere in the legislature's directive under § 252.03
    that a local health officer "promptly take all measures necessary
    to prevent, suppress[,] and control" disease outbreaks did the
    legislature add the caveat "except close schools" or "except the
    measures DHS may take under § 252.02."            The majority cannot "read
    into   the   statute   a      limitation    the   plain    language   does   not
    evidence."      See County of Dane v. LIRC, 
    2009 WI 9
    , ¶33, 
    315 Wis. 2d 293
    , 
    759 N.W.2d 571
    .         And there is no textual evidence for
    the majority to conclude that when the legislature directed local
    health officers to take "all" measures reasonable and necessary to
    control a disease outbreak, it did not mean exactly what it said.
    See State ex rel. Kalal v. Cir. Ct. for Dane Cnty., 
    2004 WI 58
    ,
    ¶39, 
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    , 
    681 N.W.2d 110
     ("We have stated time and
    again that courts must presume that a legislature says in a statute
    what it means and means in a statute what it says there." (quoting
    5
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    Conn. Nat'l Bank v. Germain, 
    503 U.S. 249
    , 253–54 (1992))); see
    also Benson, 
    376 Wis. 2d 35
    , ¶25 (explaining that courts must not
    "arbitrarily limit[]" general terms; rather such terms "are to be
    accorded their full and fair scope" (quoted source omitted)).
    Reading in to the statute a phantom restriction impossibly requires
    the legislature to write statutes today that specifically address
    all potential situations in the future, even those "not readily
    imagined."    See United States v. Persichilli, 
    608 F.3d 34
    , 40 (1st
    Cir. 2010).    The more sensible reading of § 252.03 is that when
    the legislature wrote "all measures," it meant all measures.
    ¶71   Similarly, there is no reason why DHS and local health
    officers cannot share the power to close schools.          The legislature
    is free to grant different entities similar powers to accomplish
    the same ends, as it did in granting both DHS and local health
    officers the same power to "forbid public gatherings."                   See
    §§ 252.02(3), 252.03(2); City of Kaukauna v. Vill. of Harrison,
    
    2015 WI App 73
    , ¶10, 
    365 Wis. 2d 181
    , 
    870 N.W.2d 680
    .             Moreover,
    while some disease outbreaks, such as COVID-19, are so widespread
    that DHS may need to close schools across the state, others may
    affect only one community.       Thus, to "remove any doubt and make
    doubly sure" that it left no gaps in officials' ability to respond
    to outbreaks both local and statewide, it is unsurprising that the
    legislature "employ[ed some] overlap or redundancy" in state and
    local officials' powers.      See Loving v. IRS, 
    742 F.3d 1013
    , 1019
    (D.C. Cir. 2014).     And without clear language to the contrary,
    nothing about DHS having the power to close schools statewide
    negates local health officers' power to close their local schools
    when reasonable and necessary to prevent the spread of disease.
    6
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    2
    ¶72    The     statute's     plain        language    also     undermines     the
    majority's argument that local health officers' specific power to
    inspect      schools    under     § 252.03(1)       somehow       preludes    them   from
    closing schools under § 252.03(2).                 The text indicates that those
    powers have significantly different scopes and are not mutually
    exclusive. A local health officer may inspect a school "as needed"
    to verify that "the buildings are kept in a sanitary condition."
    § 252.03(1).        She may close a school, however, if doing so is
    reasonable      and     necessary       to   prevent        and    suppress    disease.
    § 252.03(2).        Nothing about being able to close local schools when
    "reasonable and necessary" to prevent and suppress disease is
    redundant with the power to inspect schools' sanitary conditions
    at any other time.          Moreover, local health officers' mandate to
    "take all measures necessary" and authorization to "do what is
    reasonable and necessary" become meaningless if, as the majority
    claims, § 252.03 allows them only to "inspect schools" and "forbid
    gatherings."        Cf. Moreschi v. Vill. of Williams Bay, 
    2020 WI 95
    ,
    ¶13, 
    395 Wis. 2d 55
    , 
    953 N.W.2d 318
    .
    3
    ¶73    The majority's reading nullifies not only much of the
    language of § 252.03, but also that of numerous other statutory
    provisions that acknowledge local health officers' power to close
    schools.      See id. (explaining that statutory terms must be read in
    their broader statutory context and in a way that is consistent
    with   other     statutes        that   address     the     same    subject    matter).
    Heinrich points to at least three statutes and one administrative
    code provision recognizing that local health officers' orders may
    7
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    close schools.     See 
    Wis. Stat. § 115.01
    (10)(b) (defining "school
    days" to include "[d]ays on which school is closed by order of a
    local health officer"); § 118.60(12) (precluding the department of
    public instruction from withholding payment to a private school
    under the parental-choice program if that school "is closed for at
    least   10    school    days . . . by       a   local   health       officer");
    § 120.12(27)(a)    (requiring       the    school   board   to      notify   the
    department of public instruction within 24 hours of a school being
    closed due to a local health officer's order); Wis. Admin. Code §
    PI 8.01(4) (defining "school closure," in part, as a closure by
    order of a local health officer).           Undoubtedly these provisions,
    some of which the legislature enacted in response to the COVID-19
    epidemic, have meaning only if local health officers have the
    authority to close schools under § 252.03.
    ¶74    In brushing off those provisions because they do not
    explicitly grant local health officers the power to close schools,
    the     majority       opinion       misunderstands         their       obvious
    implication:    § 252.03, by authorizing measures "reasonable and
    necessary for [disease] prevention and suppression," already gives
    local health officers that power.          The majority's reading of those
    provisions impermissibly renders them all meaningless, effectively
    repealed by the court. See Kalal, 
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    , ¶46 (explaining
    that "the court is not at liberty to disregard the plain, clear
    words of the statute" (quoted source omitted)).
    4
    ¶75    The majority's last gasp is a strawman:             that what is
    "reasonable and necessary" cannot mean that local health officers
    have "any powers necessary" to combat outbreaks.                    Of course,
    8
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    Heinrich argues no such thing.          The majority opinion ignores the
    limiting principle plainly present both in the statute's scope
    (authorizing     public   health    measures)    and   its    text     ("for   the
    prevention and suppression of disease").            See, e.g., Am. Power &
    Light Co. v. SEC, 
    329 U.S. 90
    , 104–05 (1946).                What the majority
    claims "cannot be" already isn't.
    II
    A
    ¶76    The majority opinion's flawed conclusion is a direct
    result of its flawed methods. The majority over-relies on "canons"
    or "rules" of statutory interpretation from Antonin Scalia and
    Brian A. Garner's book, Reading Law:            The Interpretation of Legal
    Texts (2012), without due regard for their limits.                  To start with
    the obvious, Scalia and Garner's book is not the law.                 In a strict
    sense, it is an extrinsic source that has no binding authority on
    this court.     Indeed, some of the book's "rules" are irreconcilable
    with this court's precedent.         Compare MBS-Certified Pub. Accts.,
    LLC v. Wis. Bell, Inc., 
    2012 WI 15
    , ¶58, 
    338 Wis. 2d 647
    , 
    809 N.W.2d 857
           ("Remedial        statutes      should        be      liberally
    construed . . . ."),      with     Scalia   &   Garner,   supra,       at   364-66
    (alleging that it is a "false notion that remedial statutes should
    be liberally construed").        In a broader sense, it is a compilation
    of certain grammar rules, some of which can occasionally help
    determine what legislative text means.           In both senses, it is just
    one   toolbox     that    contains      some——but      not     all——statutory-
    interpretation tools.        Thus, we should be careful not to treat it
    as though it is the only toolbox available.
    9
    Nos.     2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    ¶77    We also should be wary of assuming that interpretive
    tools    are     necessary       or    even       relevant     to     every     statutory
    interpretation case.            See State v. Peters, 
    2003 WI 88
    , ¶14, 
    263 Wis. 2d 475
    , 
    665 N.W.2d 171
    .                Interpretive tools may be helpful in
    clearing up confusing or ambiguous text, but statutory text is
    often straightforward.           And when a statute's text "has a plain and
    reasonable       meaning     on       its     face,"     interpretive         tools   are
    "inapplicable."      
    Id.
         Worse, treating interpretive tools as "rigid
    rules" without acknowledging their caveats and limitations can
    "lead[] us astray" from the plain text.                  See Duguid, 141 S. Ct. at
    1173–75 (Alito, J., concurring).
    ¶78    Even when interpretive tools are relevant or helpful,
    they are not gospel.        See, e.g., id. at 1173 (cautioning that while
    Scalia     and    Garner's        chosen       canons    are        sometimes     "useful
    tools, . . . it is important to keep their limitations in mind").
    Although       certain     textualists         believe       that     applying     select
    interpretive canons will always reveal the legislative text's true
    meaning,       reality     offers       little      support     for     that      belief.
    Particularly damning is the fact that most legislative drafters
    have no idea what the interpretive canons are.                      See, e.g., William
    Baude & Stephen E. Sachs, The Law of Interpretation, 
    130 Harv. L. Rev. 1079
    , 1123-26 (2017); Abbe R. Gluck & Lisa Schultz Bressman,
    Statutory Interpretation from the Inside——An Empirical Study of
    Congressional Drafting, Delegation, and the Canons:                           Part II, 
    66 Stan. L. Rev. 725
    , 742-46, 745 tbl.1 (2014).                          And in the rare
    instance a drafter knows of a particular canon, such "awareness
    d[oes] not translate to routine use in the drafting process." Abbe
    R. Gluck & Lisa Schultz Bressman, Statutory Interpretation from
    10
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    the     Inside——An      Empirical         Study         of    Congressional        Drafting,
    Delegation, and the Canons:                Part I, 
    65 Stan. L. Rev. 901
    , 932-48
    (2013).      To take a specific example, statutory drafters who know
    that courts often refer to dictionaries to interpret statutory
    text note nevertheless that dictionaries are "mostly irrelevant"
    to writing statutes.             Id. at 938 (one drafter added, bluntly, "no
    one uses a freaking dictionary").                       Just like other interpretive
    tools, dictionaries, while sometimes helpful, can be misused if
    their limitations are ignored.                   See, e.g., Noffke v. Bakke, 
    2009 WI 10
    , ¶¶60-64, 
    315 Wis. 2d 350
    , 
    760 N.W.2d 156
     (Abrahamson, C.J.,
    concurring) (cautioning that while dictionaries reveal the many
    ways    a    word    "can   be     used,"    they       are     generally       unhelpful   in
    determining whether one meaning or another is how that word is
    commonly or ordinarily used).
    ¶79    Additionally, most canons are notoriously malleable, and
    there is no concrete approach for choosing between multiple or
    conflicting         canons.        See,     e.g.,       Anita    Krishnakumar,       Dueling
    Canons, 
    65 Duke L.J. 909
     (2016).                    Those problems undermine the
    claim,      touted    by    devotees        of    Scalia        and    Garner's    brand    of
    textualism, that strictly adhering to the canons leads to strictly
    objective results; in reality, that approach is just as subjective
    as any other.          See, e.g., Brett M. Kavanaugh, Fixing Statutory
    Interpretation, 
    129 Harv. L. Rev. 2118
    , 2156-57, 2159-62 (2016)
    (book        review)        (explaining            that         some      "fancy-sounding
    canons . . . warrant               little        weight         in     modern      statutory
    interpretation," in part because they often lead to "wrongheaded"
    judicial      "policymaking");            Baude     &    Sachs,        supra,    at 1140-43;
    Richard       A.     Posner,       The      Incoherence           of     Antonin     Scalia,
    11
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    https://newrepublic.com/article/106441/scalia-garner-reading-
    the-law-textual-originalism.           For that reason, some states, such
    as Oregon, have "virtually banished the substantive canons of
    construction"         because      they        "inject[]        subjectivity       and
    unpredictability into . . . statutory interpretation."                       Abbe R.
    Gluck,     Statutory        Interpretation       Methodology         as   "Law",    
    47 Willamette L. Rev. 539
    , 546-47 (2011).                      Oregon's approach, of
    course, still allows courts to use the textual canons, which are
    really just general grammar rules.                  But see Lockhart v. United
    States,    
    577 U.S. 347
    ,       363-69    (2016)         (Kagan, J.,     dissenting)
    (pointing out that even certain textual "rules," such as the last-
    antecedent rule, often conflict with "ordinary usage"); Baude &
    Sachs, supra, at 1125-26.          In any event, when we employ any tool
    or canon, we must do so with our eyes open to its shortcomings
    rather    than   naïvely      championing      it    as    a   perfect    method   for
    interpreting all statutory language.
    B
    ¶80    These shortcomings pervade the majority opinion, where
    the majority's resorting to statutory interpretation canons leads
    it astray from the statute's plain language.                    It misapplies, for
    instance, the general principle that a specific provision controls
    over a broader one.         That principle applies only when necessary to
    harmonize two conflicting statutes.                 See Kramer v. Hayward, 
    57 Wis. 2d 302
    , 311, 
    203 N.W.2d 871
     (1973); Scalia & Garner, supra,
    at 183 ("The general/specific canon . . . deals with what to do
    when conflicting provisions simply cannot be reconciled——when the
    attribution      of    no     permissible       meaning        can   eliminate     the
    conflict.").      But here, there is no conflict between DHS's and
    12
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    local health officers' authority.               The legislature simply gave
    local health officers, who are potentially the first to respond to
    a communicable disease, more flexibility.
    ¶81    Similarly, the majority's use of the "surplusage" canon
    is unhelpful because it supports Heinrich's position just as much
    as the majority's, if not more.                Using that tool, courts are
    supposed to read a statute to give full effect, when possible, to
    every word in the statute:         "If a provision is susceptible of (1)
    a meaning that . . . deprives [a] provision of all independent
    effect, and (2) another meaning that leaves both provisions with
    some   independent     operation,      the    latter   should   be   preferred."
    Scalia & Garner, supra, at 176. As explained above, the majority's
    position deprives of independent effect § 252.03's mandate that a
    local health officer take "all" necessary measures as well as every
    statutory provision that references a local health officer closing
    schools.      Supra, ¶¶11-13.    Heinrich's position, on the other hand,
    maintains the independent effect of all relevant provisions.                  Id.
    Thus, to the extent the canon against surplusage counsels in favor
    of either position, it does so more strongly for Heinrich's.
    ¶82    The point is that statutory interpretation tools are
    just like every other tool:            they are useless without a matching
    problem.      When an interpretive tool is needlessly or incorrectly
    applied, it can lead to a result contrary to the "more natural
    reading" of the text; and in such cases, the tool should be
    rejected.       See, e.g.,     Encino Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro, 584
    U.S. ___, 
    138 S. Ct. 1134
    , 1141-42 (2018) (declining to apply a
    "canon"      because   it   resulted    in    an   "unnatural   fit"   with   the
    statute's plain text).         When interpretive aids are necessary, we
    13
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    should use them; whichever tool will help us get closest to the
    meaning of the legislative text, that is the tool we should use.
    But    sometimes,      such    as     here,       we   need    only    our       "ordinary
    understanding     of    how    English      works"      to    decide   a    case.       See
    Lockhart, 136 S. Ct. at 969 (Kagan, J., dissenting).
    C
    ¶83   No special tools are necessary to understand the plain
    text of § 252.03, which clearly and unambiguously authorizes "all
    measures     necessary         to     prevent,         suppress[,]         and    control
    communicable diseases."             Cf. Peters, 
    263 Wis. 2d 475
    , ¶14.               On its
    face, nowhere does § 252.03 prevents local health officers from
    closing schools.         The majority offers no persuasive statutory
    analysis for why we should interpret the legislative text contrary
    to its plain meaning.           So long as it is reasonable or necessary
    for local health officers to close schools to prevent and suppress
    disease, nothing in the plain text of § 252.03, its background, or
    the relevant statutory context prevents them from doing so.
    III
    ¶84   Even though the majority resolves the case on statutory
    grounds,     it     bulldozes         its       way    through        an     unnecessary
    constitutional analysis.             It is well settled that we should avoid
    constitutional questions when we can resolve the case on statutory
    grounds.     The majority offers no legal basis for deviating from
    that   practice     here.       Thus,       the    majority's      analysis        of   the
    petitioners' free-exercise-of-religion claim is wholly beside the
    point.
    ¶85   This court has stated time and again that it decides
    cases on the narrowest available grounds.                     See, e.g., Voters with
    14
    Nos.    2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    Facts v. City of Eau Claire, 
    2018 WI 63
    , ¶26, 
    382 Wis. 2d 1
    , 
    913 N.W.2d 131
    .        When     a    party    raises     both    a    statutory    and    a
    constitutional challenge, as is the case here, we should attempt
    to interpret the challenged statute in a way that both resolves
    the case and avoids the constitutional question.4 Milwaukee Branch
    of the NAACP v. Walker, 
    2014 WI 98
    , ¶64, 
    357 Wis. 2d 469
    , 
    851 N.W.2d 262
    .         That     approach      is     known     as    the   doctrine     of
    constitutional       avoidance,          under     which     we    generally    reach
    constitutional claims only if the case is "incapable of resolution
    without deciding the constitutional conflict."                      Gabler v. Crime
    Victims Rts.       Bd., 
    2017 WI 67
    ,              ¶¶51-52, 
    376 Wis. 2d 147
    , 
    897 N.W.2d 384
    ;       Kollasch       v.    Adamany,    
    104 Wis. 2d 552
    ,    561,      
    313 N.W.2d 47
     (1981).
    ¶86    The     reason       our    precedent     so    strongly     discourages
    reaching unnecessary constitutional questions is that we have no
    established method for deciding when to do so.                    For example, there
    is no objective test for what constitutes a constitutional issue
    of great public importance.              In fact, one could reasonably argue
    that nearly every case with a constitutional dimension raises such
    an issue.     And the majority offers no explanation for why this
    particular constitutional question, about an expired local health
    order that applies to just one of Wisconsin's 72 counties, is of
    any greater public import than any other claim involving an alleged
    violation of individual liberties.                   See, e.g., Kollasch, 
    104 Wis. 2d at 561
    .       Such a malleable exception all but abandons what
    4 Indeed, the same rationale the majority offers for declining
    to address the petitioners' other constitutional claims applies
    with equal force to their free-exercise claim. See majority op.,
    ¶13 n.9.
    15
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    has been this court's "[s]ound judicial policy" for over 100
    years:   avoiding constitutional questions unless answering them is
    "essential" to deciding the case.            See, e.g., State ex rel.
    Rosenhein v. Frear, 
    138 Wis. 173
    , 176, 
    119 N.W. 894
     (1909); Smith
    v. Journal Co., 
    271 Wis. 384
    , 390, 
    73 N.W.2d 429
     (1955); Kollasch,
    
    104 Wis. 2d at 554
    ;   Adams   Outdoor   Advert.,    Ltd.    v.   City   of
    Madison, 
    2006 WI 104
    , ¶91, 
    294 Wis. 2d 441
    , 
    717 N.W.2d 803
    ; State
    v. Scott, 
    2018 WI 74
    , ¶12, 
    382 Wis. 2d 476
    , 914, N.W.2d 141.                 At
    its core, "the doctrine of constitutional avoidance requires that
    we act with restraint."      Tetra Tech EC, Inc. v. DOR, 
    2018 WI 75
    ,
    ¶138, 
    382 Wis. 2d 496
    , 
    914 N.W.2d 21
    (Ziegler, J., concurring).
    ¶87   The majority acts with anything but.               Its tortured
    statutory interpretation fully resolves this case; yet it barrels
    its way to a constitutional challenge no longer in play.                    The
    majority makes no claim that this case is incapable of being
    resolved on statutory grounds.       Cf. Gabler, 
    376 Wis. 2d 147
    , ¶51.
    Nor could it, having already resolved the case on statutory
    grounds.     See Labor & Farm Party v. Wis. Elections Bd., 
    117 Wis. 2d 351
    , 354, 
    344 N.W.2d 177
     (refusing to address "various
    constitutional issues" because the court resolved the case "on
    statutory construction grounds alone").            Rather, the majority
    opinion "reaches for the constitution unnecessarily," exemplifying
    the antithesis of judicial restraint.           See Tetra Tech EC, 
    382 Wis. 2d 496
    , ¶138 (Ziegler, J., concurring); Wis. Legislature v.
    Palm, 
    2020 WI 42
    , ¶168, 
    391 Wis. 2d 497
    , 
    942 N.W.2d 900
     (Hagedorn,
    J., dissenting) (explaining that the court's proper role is not
    "to do freewheeling constitutional theory" or "to decide every
    16
    Nos.   2020AP1419-OA & 2020AP1420-OA & 2020AP1446-OA.rfd
    interesting legal question" but to "precise[ly]" and "carefully
    focus[]" on the narrow . . . question[]" before it).
    ¶88   Furthermore, the facts here counsel strongly against
    reaching the constitutional question.                  Section 8 of the Order
    explicitly      exempts     religious      practices     from      its     in-person
    gathering restrictions:           "[r]eligious entities are exempt from
    mass gathering requirements for religious services and religious
    practices" (emphases added).             The majority makes no mention of
    that   provision——possibly          because     it   torpedoes     the    majority's
    constitutional analysis.          If in-person education on every subject,
    religious or not, is truly religious practice, as some petitioners
    here claim, nothing in the Order burdens that practice.                             But
    regardless of the constitutional question presented, there is no
    need to reach it.
    IV
    ¶89   The   plain   text     of   
    Wis. Stat. § 252.03
            contains    no
    indication that closing schools falls outside of local health
    officers' directives to "take all measures necessary to prevent,
    suppress[,] and control communicable diseases," and to do what is
    "reasonable and necessary for the prevention and suppression of
    disease."      Nothing about DHS's directive under § 252.02 suggests
    otherwise.     The majority reaches a contrary interpretation through
    an unnecessary reliance on, and misuse of, tools for interpreting
    ambiguous statutes.        That erroneous interpretation fully resolves
    this   case,    obviating     any    reason     to   reach   the   constitutional
    question. Thus, for the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
    ¶90   I am authorized to state that Justices ANN WALSH BRADLEY
    and JILL J. KAROFSKY join this dissent.
    17
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    18
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    1