They’re hoping this time will be different.
In their petition, they’re asking the judge review a dozen actions taken by DHHS, including whether the decision by DHHS not to renew the restaurant’s health license was “proper.”
They’re also asking the judge to determine whether DHHS “is selectively going after Two Brothers, LLC (the restaurant’s corporation) because of their outspoken dissatisfaction with the governor’s ability to govern in violation of Sunday River Brewing Company’s constitutional rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments.”
The petition asks whether the alleged difference by DHHS in its treatment of the restaurant compared to other businesses “is retribution for Sunday River Brewing Company exercising its First Amendment right to speak out” and is therefore a violation of its constitutional rights.
Maine to get fewer shots than hoped; school safety downgrade
December 19, 2020 GMT
AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) Federal authorities have informed Maine that it will receive fewer of the new Pfizer coronavirus vaccines next week than it had expected.
Maine public health officials had planned for 13,650 doses, but the number will instead be 8,775.
“The news that Maine and other states will now receive fewer doses of Pfizer vaccines next week, with no explanation, is frustrating and disrupts our distribution plans,” Democratic Gov. Janet Mills said in a statement.
The state is in the midst of vaccinating front-line health care workers against the virus. Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Nirav Shah said Friday that more than 2,200 people have received the first dose.
Maine to get fewer shots than hoped; school safety downgrade
December 19, 2020 GMT
AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) Federal authorities have informed Maine that it will receive fewer of the new Pfizer coronavirus vaccines next week than it had expected.
Maine public health officials had planned for 13,650 doses, but the number will instead be 8,775.
“The news that Maine and other states will now receive fewer doses of Pfizer vaccines next week, with no explanation, is frustrating and disrupts our distribution plans,” Democratic Gov. Janet Mills said in a statement.
The state is in the midst of vaccinating front-line health care workers against the virus. Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Nirav Shah said Friday that more than 2,200 people have received the first dose.