Health workers win vax battle
Police share court victory
Dozens of police and health workers including paramedics have won a mammoth legal battle over mandatory vaccination orders after the Supreme Court declared they were unlawful.
In a 115-page decision handed down by Justice Glenn Martin on Tuesday, he declared police commissioner Katarina Carroll’s direction for mandatory Covid-19 vaccination issued in December 2021 was unlawful under the Human Rights Act and banned her from taking any steps to enforce the direction.
He also ruled that a similar order by John Wakefield, the director general of Queensland Health’s equivalent vaccination policy “is of no effect” and Mr Wakefield be blocked from forcing paramedics to have the injection.
Seventy-four people opposing vaccinations took the state government to the Supreme Court to challenge vaccination directives – they were included in three separate applications before the court.
Two related to police officers or civilian staff, and the third case related to Queensland Ambulance Service workers.
The workers did not have to be vaccinated while their legal fight was underway.
Ms Carroll and Mr Wakefield are also banned from disciplining any of the paramedics and police officers. The police staff and paramedics were represented in court by law firms Alexander Law and Sibley Lawyers, who have been contacted for comment.
A spokeswoman for the Nurses’ Professional Association of Queensland said the Supreme Court ruling “highlighted how Queensland Health has violated thousands of healthcare workers’ rights”.
The association highlighted that during a workforce crisis there were members who were stood down due to the vaccine mandate who were dying to return to work.
“We have nurses and midwives sitting at home during a workforce crisis and the healthcare system’s unlawful decisions are directly to blame,” the spokeswoman said.
“NPAQ is currently liaising with our legal team to explore legal avenues for our members in light of today’s Supreme Court outcome.”
Those who were a part of the legal challenge include Townsville cop Kevin Gehringer and former All Black rugby player turned Gold Coast cop Connan (Con) Barrell.
“I am not satisfied that the (police) Commissioner has demonstrated that she gave proper consideration to the human rights that might have been affected by her decisions,” Justice Martin said in relation to the police staff.
“I do not accept that the Commissioner had … considered whether the decision would be compatible with human rights,” he noted in his 115-page decision.
“By failing to give proper consideration, the making of each of those decisions was unlawful.
“Despite the revocation of the QPS Directions, a finding of unlawfulness is still available.”