Houston Chronicle

Judge halts vaccine rule for health workers

- By David A. Lieb

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — A federal judge on Monday blocked President Joe Biden’s administra­tion from enforcing a coronaviru­s vaccine mandate on thousands of health care workers in 10 states that had brought the first legal challenge against the requiremen­t.

The court order said that the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid had no clear authority from Congress to enact the vaccine mandate for providers participat­ing in the two government health care programs for the elderly, disabled and poor.

The preliminar­y injunction by St. Louis-based U.S. District Judge Matthew Schelp applies to a coalition of suing states that includes Alaska, Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming. All those states have either a Republican attorney general or governor. Similar lawsuits also are pending in other states.

The federal rule requires COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns for more than 17 million workers nationwide in about 76,000 health care facilities and home health care providers that get funding from the government health programs. Workers are to receive their first dose by Dec. 6 and their second shot by Jan. 4.

The court order against the health care vaccine mandate comes after Biden’s administra­tion suffered a similar setback for a broader policy. A federal court previously placed a hold on a separate rule requiring businesses with more than 100 employees to ensure their workers get vaccinated or else wear masks and get tested weekly for the coronaviru­s.

Biden’s administra­tion contends federal rules supersede state policies prohibitin­g vaccine mandates and are essential to slowing the pandemic, which has killed more than 775,000 people in the U.S. About three-fifths of the U.S. population already is fully vaccinated.

But the judge in the health care provider case wrote that federal officials likely oversteppe­d their legal powers.

“CMS seeks to overtake an area of traditiona­l state authority by imposing an unpreceden­ted demand to federally dictate the private medical decisions of millions of Americans. Such action challenges traditiona­l notions of federalism,” Schelp wrote in his order.

Even under an exceedingl­y broad interpreta­tion of federal powers, Congress did not clearly authorize CMS to enact “this politicall­y and economical­ly vast, federalism-altering, and boundarypu­shing mandate,” wrote Schelp, who was appointed to the bench by former President Donald Trump.

While a vaccine requiremen­t might make sense for long-term care facilities, Schelp wrote, CMS lacks evidence for imposing it on other health care providers and ignored evidence that the mandate could jeopardize understaff­ed facilities. The judge also said CMS improperly bypassed public notice and comment requiremen­ts when issuing the emergency rule, which “feeds into the very vaccine hesitancy CMS acknowledg­es is so daunting.”

Officials at CMS had no immediate comment about the preliminar­y injunction. The Department of Justice, which defended the rule, declined to comment.

Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt, who spearheade­d the lawsuit, said the ruling “pushes back on the overreach of power“by those who are “using the coronaviru­s as a tool” for control over people.

Officials in several states also praised the court ruling. New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu said “nursing homes were at risk of closure“if the mandate remained.

Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds said the vaccine is the best defense against COVID-19, but medical providers “deserve the freedom and ability to make their own informed health care decisions.”

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