Big Spring Herald

Federal Judge tosses hospital workers' vaccine requiremen­t challenge case

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HOUSTON (AP) — A federal judge threw out a lawsuit filed by employees of a Houston hospital system over its requiremen­t that all of its staff be vaccinated against COVID-19.

The Houston Methodist Hospital system suspended 178 employees without pay last week over their refusal to get vaccinated. Of them, 117 sued seeking to overturn the requiremen­t and over their suspension and threatened terminatio­n.

In a scathing ruling Saturday, U.S. District Judge Lynn Hughes of Houston deemed lead plaintiff Jennifer Bridges' contention that the vaccines are "experiment­al and dangerous" to be false and otherwise irrelevant. He also found that her likening the vaccinatio­n requiremen­t to the Nazis' forced medical experiment­ation on concentrat­ion camp captives during the Holocaust to be "reprehensi­ble."

Hughes also ruled that making vaccinatio­ns a condition of employment was not coercion, as Bridges contended.

"Bridges can freely choose to accept or refuse a COVID-19 vaccine; however, if she refuses, she will simply need to work somewhere else. If a worker refuses an assignment, changed office, earlier start time, or other directive, he may be properly fired. Every employment includes limits on the worker's behavior in exchange for remunerati­on. That is all part of the bargain," Hughes concluded.

Jared Woodfill, a Houston lawyer representi­ng Bridges and the other clients, promised an appeal.

"All of my clients continue to be committed to fighting this unjust policy," Woodfill said in a statement. "What is shocking is that many of my clients were on the front line treating COVID-positive patients at Texas Methodist Hospital during the height of the pandemic. As a result, many of them contracted COVID-19. As a thank you for their service and sacrifice, Methodist Hospital awards them a pink slip and sentences them to bankruptcy."

Employees had a June 7 deadline to complete their immunizati­on.

In a Tuesday memo, the hospital system's CEO, Marc Boom, said that 24,947 employees had complied with the vaccinatio­n requiremen­t and that 27 of the 178 others had received the first of a two-dose vaccine and wouldn't be fired if they got their second. The rest are subject to terminatio­n.

He also wrote that 285 other employees received medical or religious exemptions, and 332 were deferred because they were pregnant or for some other reason.

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