The Record (Troy, NY)

CONTINUED FIGHT

Religious vaccine exemption stays for health care workers

- By MICHAEL HILL

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — New York health care workers will be able to seek religious exemptions from a statewide COVID-19 vaccine mandate as a lawsuit challengin­g the requiremen­t proceeds, a federal judge ruled Tuesday.

Judge David Hurd in Utica had issued a temporary restrainin­g order a month ago after 17 doctors, nurses and other health profession­als claimed in a lawsuit that their rights would be violated with a vaccine mandate that disallowed the exemptions.

Hurd’s preliminar­y injunction Tuesday means New York will continue to be barred from enforcing any requiremen­t that employers deny religious exemptions.

Gov. Kathy Hochul said she will fight the decision in court “to keep New Yorkers safe.”

“My responsibi­lity as governor is to protect the people of this state, and requiring health care workers to get vaccinated accomplish­es that,” she said in a prepared statement.

The state has not provided informatio­n on the total number of workers who have sought religious exemptions.

Hurd wrote that the health care workers suing the state were likely to succeed on the merits of their constituti­onal claim. The question presented in this case, Hurd wrote, is whether the mandate “conflicts with plaintiffs’ and other individual­s’ federally protected right to seek a religious accommodat­ion from their individual employers. The answer to this question is clearly yes.”

“This is clearly just a ridiculous government overreach,” said Christophe­r Ferrara, the Thomas More Society special counsel who represente­d the plaintiffs. “You can’t do this to people. You can’t call them heroes one day and then throw them out on the sidewalk

the next day.”

Hochul’s administra­tion began requiring workers at hospitals and nursing homes to be vaccinated on Sept. 27 and more recently expanded the requiremen­t to include workers at assisted living homes, hospice care, treatment centers and home health aides.

The plaintiffs, all Christians, oppose as a matter of religious conviction any medical cooperatio­n in abortion, including the use of vaccines linked to fetal cell lines in testing, developmen­t or production, according to court papers.

Several types of cell lines created decades ago using fetal tissue exist and are widely used in medical manufactur­ing, but the cells in them today are clones of the early cells, not the original tissue.

The COVID-19 vaccine from Johnson & Johnson is produced by using an adenovirus that is grown using retinal cells that trace to a fetus from 1985, according to the Vaccine Education Center at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia.

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops said in a January statement that “abortion-derived” cell lines were used to test the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines but not in their developmen­t or production.

Hurd also allowed the plaintiffs to keep their identities private by using pseudonyms such as “Dr. A.” and “Nurse J.” The plaintiffs said they wanted to proceed anonymousl­y because they feared the risk of ostracizat­ion or retaliatio­n.

 ?? AP PHOTO/EDUARDO MUNOZ ALVAREZ ?? A woman wears an anti-vaccine pin while people and teachers pray as they protest against COVID-19vaccine mandates outside the Manhattan Federal Court Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021, in New York.
AP PHOTO/EDUARDO MUNOZ ALVAREZ A woman wears an anti-vaccine pin while people and teachers pray as they protest against COVID-19vaccine mandates outside the Manhattan Federal Court Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021, in New York.
 ?? AP PHOTO/EDUARDO MUNOZ ALVAREZ ?? People and teachers pray as they protest against COVID-19vaccine mandates outside the Manhattan Federal Court Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021, in New York.
AP PHOTO/EDUARDO MUNOZ ALVAREZ People and teachers pray as they protest against COVID-19vaccine mandates outside the Manhattan Federal Court Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021, in New York.
 ?? AP PHOTO/EDUARDO MUNOZ ALVAREZ ?? Police watch as people and teachers hold a protest against COVID-19 vaccine mandates outside the Manhattan Federal Court Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021, in New York.
AP PHOTO/EDUARDO MUNOZ ALVAREZ Police watch as people and teachers hold a protest against COVID-19 vaccine mandates outside the Manhattan Federal Court Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021, in New York.

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