Albany Times Union

Military weighs penalties for those who refuse shots

Exemptions made on “case-by-case” basis by leaders

- By Lolita C. Baldor

As deadlines loom for military and defense civilians to get mandated COVID-19 vaccines, senior leaders must now wrestle with the fate of those who flatly refuse the shots or are seeking exemptions, and how to make sure they are treated fairly and equally.

The vast majority of the active duty force has received at least one shot, but tens of thousands have not. For some it may be a career-ending decision. Others could face transfers, travel restrictio­ns, limits on deployment­s and requiremen­ts to repay bonuses.

Exemption decisions for medical, religious and administra­tive reasons will be made by unit commanders around the world, on what the Pentagon says will be a “case-by-case” basis. That raises a vexing issue for military leaders who are pushing a vaccine mandate seen as critical to maintainin­g a healthy force, but want to avoid a haphazard, inconsiste­nt approach with those who refuse.

Brig. Gen. Darrin Cox, surgeon general at Army Forces Command, said commanders want to ensure they are following the rules.

“Because of some of the sensitivit­ies of this particular vaccine, I think that we just wanted to ensure that we were consistent and equitable” in meting out a punishment that would be “a repercussi­on of continuing to refuse a valid order.”

Military vaccinatio­n rates are higher than those of the general population in the United States and the reasons for objecting — often based on misinforma­tion — are similar to those heard throughout the country. But unlike most civilians, military personnel are routinely required to get as many as 17 vaccines, and face penalties for refusing.

The military services are reporting between 1 percent and 7 percent remain unvaccinat­ed. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has called for compassion in dealings with those troops, which totals nearly 60,000 active duty service members, according to data released last week. Officials say the numbers change daily, and include those who may have gotten or requested an exemption. They have declined to say how many troops are still seeking an exemption or refused the vaccine.

Asked about possible variations in the treatment of those seeking exemptions or refusing the vaccine, Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said it’s up to the services. “Each case is going to be treated specifical­ly and individual­ly as it ought to be,” he said.

Kirby said Monday that the secretary doesn’t want to tell commanders how to resolve the punitive measures, and instead trusts that they will do what is best for their units.

“So can we promise you that there will be absolute uniformity across the board? No. And we wouldn’t want to promise that because it wouldn’t be the same way we handle the orders violations for other offenses as well,” said Kirby.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Pentagon spokesman John Kirby speaks during a briefing Monday at the Pentagon in Washington.
Associated Press Pentagon spokesman John Kirby speaks during a briefing Monday at the Pentagon in Washington.

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