Chicago Sun-Times

‘YOU’RE GONNA SEE PURE MELEE’

Lightfoot, police unions continue high-stakes game of chicken on vaccine mandate for city workers

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN AND FRANK MAIN Staff Reporters

Mayor Lori Lightfoot and police union leaders on Wednesday continued their game of chicken on the city’s vaccine mandate, with Lightfoot insisting Chicago will be adequately protected, even if half the police force is placed on no-pay status.

“I don’t expect that to happen. And again, I’m gonna be focused on the positive, which is, the whole point that all of our city employees — whether they are sworn or civilian — do their duty and make sure they get vaccinated,” Lightfoot said, denying she has canceled police days off or placed officers on 12-hour shifts.

“I believe that, as a city government, we’ve got to lead by example. … The only way that we can make this real is we’ve got to hold people accountabl­e. And we are absolutely prepared to do that.”

Fraternal Order of Police President John Catanzara has warned Chicago could be forced to get by this weekend with a police force of “50% or less” if the mayor follows through on her threat to place employees who fail to report their vaccinatio­n status by Friday on “nondiscipl­inary, no-pay status.”

But, Lightfoot said, “John Catanzara says a lot of things. A lot of it offensive and racist and foolish. But we’ll see what happens. We’ll be prepared for any eventualit­y.”

She added: “Our message is to the members: Protect yourself. Protect your family. Protect your partner. Protect members of the public. Get yourself vaccinated. We don’t want to lose any more police officers from COVID-19 deaths when the life-saving vaccine is readily available.”

Catanzara has urged his members not to comply with the mayor’s Friday deadline to report their COVID-19 vaccine status on the city’s vaccine portal, even if it costs them their paychecks.

Instead, he has directed rankand-file police officers to file forms “no earlier than Thursday” exempting them from receiving the vaccine for one of three reasons the union has insisted upon: religious, medical or conscienti­ous objector.

He directed them to report to work, as scheduled, on Friday and force the city to send them home.

In a video posted on the union’s Facebook page, Catanzara told officers their insurance benefits will continue for 30 days even if they are placed on “nondiscipl­inary” suspension without pay.

“I can guarantee you that no-pay status will not last more than 30 days,” Catanzara said in the video. “There’s no way they’re going to be able to sustain a police department workforce at 50% capacity or less for more than seven days without something budging.”

Ald. Anthony Napolitano (41st), a former Chicago police officer, is among six Chicago alderperso­ns who wrote to Lightfoot last month, urging her to reconsider her vaccine mandate, calling it an “infringeme­nt on our constituti­onal rights.”

On Wednesday, Napolitano said the mayor has a choice: Repeal the mandate or risk “chaos” in a violent city with 1,000 police vacancies already.

“If you remove even more police from that equation, our streets are gonna be completely lost. … You’re gonna have cars not manned. There’s gonna be no officers in cars. … You’ll get in your car and you’ll have 20 or 30 jobs waiting for you,” Napolitano said.

“Criminals know this stuff. They know what’s going on. You’re gonna see pure melee.”

Napolitano said it would be a “different story” if the vaccine “eradicated the virus, kept you from spreading the virus, kept you from getting the virus and kept you out of the hospital.”

He added: “You should not be forcing anybody to put something in their body that they don’t believe in or they don’t trust or they don’t even have enough years and years of informatio­n on. This is wrong.”

A tracking study of the Pfizer vaccine showed it remained 97% protective against severe COVID-19 — and 84% against milder infection — after six months. Experts say the risk of infection is far, far lower for fully vaccinated people, who spread the virus at far lower rates than the unvaccinat­ed. And the risk of hospitaliz­ation or death is minuscule compared to the unvaccinat­ed, data shows.

Despite the mayor’s denials, sources said Lightfoot met with police brass to discuss eliminatin­g officers’ days off and requiring officers to work 12-hour shifts if there’s a mass exodus of cops because of her vaccinatio­n mandate.

Several officers told the SunTimes they have not been vaccinated and expect to stay home after Friday.

They said almost everyone in some police units will do the same — causing major problems for investigat­ing murders and staffing police districts. The department might have to resort to taking officers normally assigned to desk jobs and putting them on the street to cover for missing officers, they said.

This comes as retirement­s so far this year have far surpassed all of 2020 and are nearly double those in 2018.

Some have called the mayor’s edict a poor poker move — playing her hand before she had strong cards. Others say it’s a potential “Bilandic” moment.

Still others wonder whether she will blink and rescind her order to prevent officers from walking out the door en masse. They say public safety workers are barred from striking, but this would amount to a “legalized strike.”

 ?? ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot
John Catanzara
Mayor Lori Lightfoot John Catanzara
 ?? ?? Ald. Anthony Napolitano
Ald. Anthony Napolitano

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