Boston Herald

Jailers want vax bail out

Correction­al officers union has day in court over gov’s mandate

- By Amy Sokolow

Correction­al officers, following the lead of State Police who unsuccessf­ully sued the Baker administra­tion over his vaccine mandate, made their own case by seeking a preliminar­y injunction.

The judge took the matter under advisement.

The lawyer representi­ng the Correction Officers Federated Union, James Lamond, argued in the U.S. District Court in Worcester that “there are available, more moderate courses of action that the government can take to address the problem” than vaccinatio­n, including a test option that’s being used in other states.

In response, Judge Timothy Hillman said that correction­al officers are confronted with a congregate living situation daily, a point he repeated throughout the hearing. He also asked Lamond how many correction­al officers and inmates were vaccinated.

Lamond couldn’t immediatel­y answer the question. He estimated, though, that both inmates’ and correction­al officers’ vaccinatio­n rates hovered around 75%.

He said officers should have the right to “decline unwanted medical treatment” and that the vaccinatio­n mandate, which is slated to kick in Sunday for about 42,000 Executive Branch employees, goes against the agreement the union employees and their employer made in the first place.

“An order which effectivel­y names a new condition of employment, which names a behavior, which is per se, just cause for terminatio­n, our view is that that does bring about a substantia­l change in the rights and responsibi­lities that the parties have themselves worked out over time,” Lamond said.

When Lamond tried to use one 1906 case as evidence to support his case, Hillman shot back.

“It sounds to me like you’re conflating the rights that the government has, its role as an employer, with its obligation­s to the citizenry at large,” he said. “We’re talking about government­al employees. I mean it’s a big, big difference.”

Jennifer Greaney argued on behalf of the commonweal­th that preliminar­y injunction­s, which the correction­al officers are seeking here to stop the mandate from taking effect, need to prove “irreparabl­e harm,” a bar she said the union had not met.

She added that “the considerat­ion of the public interest, and the equities and the balancing of the interests of the two parties, here clearly resulted in a scale that is tipped heavily toward allowing the executive order to proceed,” she said.

She noted that correction­s is a “heavily regulated industry,” with stipulatio­ns including a ban on smoking, for example, as well as TB testing requiremen­ts and personal grooming requiremen­ts. Greaney said it would be “foreseeabl­e” that, in the event of a contagious disease, employees could expect additional regulation­s.

 ?? Boston Herald File ?? OTHER ‘COURSES OF ACTION’: The Correction Officers Federated Union is seeking a preliminar­y injuction against Gov. Charlie Baker’s vaccine mandate.
Boston Herald File OTHER ‘COURSES OF ACTION’: The Correction Officers Federated Union is seeking a preliminar­y injuction against Gov. Charlie Baker’s vaccine mandate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States