Robust state aid, uniform public health rules outweigh proposals such as liability shields. //end headline wrapper ?>Lazy Susan. File pPhoto from Lazy Susan.
Michelle Tressler recalls the evening of May 13 after the state Supreme Court canceled Wisconsin’s Safer at Home order that had blocked sit-down traffic at bars and restaurants like hers to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.
People she knew texted her with congratulatory messages. “I had no congratulatory feeling,” says Tressler, who with her husband
Bill owns Hinterland Brewery and restaurant across the street from Lambeau Field in the Green Bay Titletown District. “I found it very scary that the governor had been stripped of his ability to use science to give us the best parameters and business practices.”