Toronto Star

Majority of police workers vaccinated

One in five miss deadline for disclosure, but 92% of the rest have both jabs

- WENDY GILLIS CRIME REPORTER

The majority of Toronto police employees are vaccinated against COVID-19 — but three days after the force’s deadline for disclosure, 20 per cent of staff have still not said if they’ve gotten the jab.

Of the 80 per cent of Toronto police employees who have disclosed their vaccine status, 92 per cent are fully vaccinated, while five per cent have received their first shot, according to police spokespers­on Allison Sparkes.

The new figures mean approximat­ely 78 per cent of roughly 7,500 police employees have told the service they are fully or partially vaccinated.

That number, which is in line with the provincewi­de average for adults under age 70, is expected to increase as more employees have continued to provide updates after the original Sept. 13 deadline, Sparkes said; the force has enabled employees to continue to update their vaccinatio­n status through a portal throughout the week and said some employees may not have provided informatio­n due to being on leave or vacation.

“We continue to educate and encourage members to be vaccinated and the vast majority are, according to our disclosure­s to date,” Sparkes said.

Dr. Naheed Dosani, a Torontobas­ed palliative care physician and health justice activist, said it’s “highly concerning” that as many as one in five Toronto police employees may not be vaccinated.

Because people typically don’t have a choice about interactin­g with police, members of the public will now be forced to be in close quarters with potentiall­y unvaccinat­ed officers “during a pandemic that is only getting worse in our communitie­s,” he said.

He added: “This puts the health of the general public at risk.”

Employees who have not provided their vaccinatio­n status won’t face any disciplina­ry action — an arrangemen­t negotiated by the Toronto Police Associatio­n, which has come out against a mandatory vaccinatio­n policy due to what it called missing “critical” details.

Toronto police also currently have no plan to transfer officers who refuse to disclose their vaccinatio­n status, including frontline officers regularly interactin­g with members of the public. All officers will “continue to respect and follow public health directives” including using personal protective equipment (PPE) during all public interactio­ns, Sparkes said.

Employees who have not disclosed their vaccinatio­n status will be considered by Toronto police to be unvaccinat­ed, which means “an increase in workplace limitation­s can be expected,” as well as increased education and awareness efforts, Sparkes said. The policy is still under developmen­t and TPA and other police services and stakeholde­rs are being consulted.

Next week, unvaccinat­ed officers will no longer be eligible for one aspect of the job, which applies only to off-duty work and comes in conjunctio­n with the provincial proof-of-vaccinatio­n requiremen­t.

As of Wednesday, unvaccinat­ed officers will not be allowed to perform paid duty work — assignment­s where off-duty officers are hired, typically as security — including at any City of Toronto jobs, and at Blue Jays Games, where paid duty officers were already required this week to provide proof of double vaccinatio­n.

Dosani said ensuring that all officers wear PPE during interactio­ns with the public is “simply not enough.”

“The only way to keep the public safe is to ensure that unvaccinat­ed officers are not interactin­g with them,” Dosani said.

There is currently no plan to transfer officers who refuse to disclose their vaccinatio­n status, including officers interactin­g with the public

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