Bead Abode, Inc. filed the lawsuit this month in Leon County circuit court and cited an August federal-court ruling that backed Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings in a challenge to the state’s so-called “vaccine passport” ban.
Bead Abode contends in the lawsuit that the law, a priority of Gov. Ron DeSantis, violates First Amendment rights.
The business said in the lawsuit that after shutting its doors early in the pandemic, it developed a reopening plan that included a requirement for customers to provide documentation of vaccination. But it said the law, which the Legislature passed in April, is an obstacle to the plan.
In addition to seeking to have the law ruled unconstitutional, the business is seeking a temporary emergency injunction.
“Absent the relief being sought to enjoin defendant (the state) from enforcement of this clearly unconstitutional content-based restriction on protected speech, Bead Abode would be forced to choose between its commitment to the safety of its customers and crushing penalties from enforcement of this law,” the lawsuit said.
A federal judge in South Florida last month ruled in favor of Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings, which argued the vaccine-passport ban violated the First Amendment and what is known as the dormant Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution.
The state has appealed that decision, which applied only to Norwegian, to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
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This article appears in Sep 23-29, 2021.

