Business owners in Pennsylvania are suing Democrat Governor Tom Wolf, saying his reopening plan is arbitrary and confused.

Marc Scaringi, the lawyer for the business owners, has said, “Part of our legal challenge is the arbitrariness and capriciousness of the list, of which industry is on which classification. The whole thing is fundamentally based on terms that have no clear knowing, understandable definition. The governor kind of just made all of this up anyway, and he could just change his mind.”

One of the plaintiffs, Pennsylvania realtor Kathy Gregory, also commented. “The issue here isn’t [just] your income for March or April, but by shutting us down completely, when he reopens, you’re starting from scratch,” Gregory said to Fox News. “You’re not going to have any income in May, June and possibly July. You’re starting over, like a brand new agent with no inventory. I personally do feel that shutting down some of the industries that [Wolf] did and the manner that he did was not in the best [interests] of the people in the state of Pennsylvania.”

Meanwhile, GOP conservative U.S. Senator Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania has offered a state reopening of his own: “Pennsylvania’s health care systems [are] not being overwhelmed by COVID-19 patients…in most of the state —and definitely in the central and western parts of the state— our hospitals are virtually empty.”

Thus the senator wants counties to be able to consider “isolated statistical anomalies” and permit medical personnel to safely resume elective surgeries as soon as possible.

Said Toomey, “No one plan will account for all the variables that we must address to open Pennsylvania in a gradual and safe manner. I look forward to working with the Wolf administration on addressing these challenges.”

Toomey’s plan on medical procedures, and on other reopening matters, seems well thought out. Wolf’s actions up to now do not have the same level of detail or consideration.