Santa Cruz Sentinel

After military mandate lifted, litigation lingers

- By Kevin Mcgill

Federal appeals court judges closely questioned a Biden administra­tion attorney Monday on the consequenc­es military personnel might face for refusing COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns, even though Biden's vaccine mandate for military personnel has been rescinded.

Lawyers for a group of Navy SEALS and other Navy personnel who refuse to be vaccinated for religious reasons told a 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel that federal court injunction­s against the mandate are still needed, in part because decisions on deployment­s and assignment­s can still be made based on vaccinatio­n status.

“Is there any assurance on the record, that there will be no deployment decisions based on vaccinatio­n?” Judge James Ho, one of three judges hearing the case asked Department of Justice lawyer Casen Ross.

Ross said such questions were speculativ­e and not at issue in the case before the court. Ho and Judge Kyle Duncan noted that the administra­tion had only reluctantl­y ended the military mandate after December congressio­nal action, but Ross assured the panel that there are no plans to bring back the requiremen­t.

“Given the prevailing public health guidelines and the state of the virus, there is currently no intention to require universal vaccinatio­n of all service members,” Ross said.

The Pentagon formally dropped the requiremen­t in January following a December vote in Congress to end the mandate. However, vaccine opponents note that commanders can still make decisions on how and whether to deploy unvaccinat­ed troops, under a memo signed last month by Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin.

Military leaders have long argued that to maintain unit health and troop readiness, troops have for decades been required to get as many as 17 vaccines, particular­ly those who are deploying overseas.

Attorneys for the unvaccinat­ed Navy personnel argued in briefs to the 5th Circuit that Austin's memo and other Defense Department actions show that the Navy still intends to treat unvaccinat­ed personnel “like second-class citizens because of their religious beliefs.”

Government lawyers argue the policy is in line with “well-establishe­d principles of judicial noninterfe­rence with core military decision making,” in their briefs.

The Navy SEALS filed their lawsuit in November of 2021, describing what they saw as a cumbersome 50-step process to obtain religious exemptions for the COVID-19 vaccine. Their lawyers have called a “sham” with applicatio­ns being “categorica­lly denied.”

The Defense Department denied the process was onerous and said the Navy has a compelling interest in requiring vaccinatio­ns for personnel who often operate for long periods in “confined spaces that are ripe breeding grounds for respirator­y illnesses.”

On Monday, Heather Hacker, an attorney for the Navy personnel, said the situation could be seen as worse now for them now that the older mandate policy has been rescinded, because current policy does not provide for a sailor's religious objections to the vaccine to be considered when deployment or assignment decisions are made.

“We're going from a 50step process to a zero-step process?” Duncan asked.

“Exactly, your honor,” Hacker replied.

In January of last year, a federal judge in Texas barred the Navy from taking any action against the Navy plaintiffs for being unvaccinat­ed. A 5th Circuit panel rejected the Biden administra­tion's request to block the judge's order.

But the administra­tion won at least a temporary, partial victory last March when the Supreme Court approved a “partial stay.” The order allowed the Navy to consider the sailors' vaccinatio­n status in making decisions on deployment, assignment and other operationa­l issues while the case plays out.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin speaks during a briefing at the Pentagon in Washington on Nov. 16, 2022.
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin speaks during a briefing at the Pentagon in Washington on Nov. 16, 2022.

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