COVID-19: New York must allow religious exemptions to jab mandate, judge rules

COVID-19: New York must allow religious exemptions to jab mandate, judge rules

by Joseph Anthony
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A man wears an anti-vaccine button

A federal judge ruled on Tuesday that New York state cannot impose a COVID-19 vaccine mandate on healthcare workers without allowing their employers to consider religious exemption requests.

U.S. District Judge David Hurd in Albany, New York, ruled that the stateโ€™s workplace vaccination requirement conflicted with healthcare workersโ€™ federally protected right to seek religious accommodations from their employers.
The ruling provides a test case as vaccine mandate opponents gear up to fight plans by President Joe Bidenโ€™s administration to extend COVID-19 inoculation requirements to tens of millions of unvaccinated Americans.
Vaccines have become highly politicized in the United States, where only 66% of Americans are vaccinated, well short of the initial goals of the Biden administration.
Seventeen healthcare workers opposed to the mandate sued, saying the requirement violated their rights under the U.S. Constitution and a federal civil rights law requiring employers to reasonably accommodate employeesโ€™ religious beliefs.
Hurd agreed, saying the stateโ€™s order โ€œclearlyโ€ conflicted with their right to seek religious accommodations.
โ€œThe court rightly recognized that yesterdayโ€™s โ€˜front line heroesโ€™ in dealing with COVID cannot suddenly be treated as disease-carrying villains and kicked to the curb by the command of a state health bureaucracy,โ€ said Christopher Ferrara, a lawyer for the workers at the conservative Thomas More Society.
New York Governor Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, vowed in a statement to fight the decision, saying her โ€œresponsibility as governor is to protect the people of this state, and requiring health care workers to get vaccinated accomplishes that.โ€
At least 24 states have imposed vaccine requirements on workers, usually in healthcare.
New Yorkโ€™s Department of Health on Aug. 26 ordered healthcare professionals to be vaccinated by Sept. 27 and the order did not allow for the customary religious exemptions.
Hurd issued a temporary restraining order on Sept. 14 in favor of the workers while he considered whether to issue a preliminary injunction.
REUTERS

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