Boston Herald

UNVACCINAT­ED FACE FIRING

Thousands still resisting despite knowing they will be suspended or terminated

- by Erin Tiernan

Up to 5,000 state workers could be at risk of suspension or terminatio­n as the deadline for workers to submit proof of their vaccine status hits this week, according to state officials.

That amounts to about 11% of the 45,000 executiveb­ranch workers required to be fully vaccinated as of Oct. 17.

“The Baker-Polito Administra­tion is encouraged by the response by Executive Department employees completing the vaccinatio­n verificati­on process ahead of the October 17 deadline and will continue to work with employees to address questions and requests for exemptions,” said Terry MacCormack, press secretary for Gov. Charlie Baker.

More than 40,000 employees have submitted proof of full vaccinatio­n against coronaviru­s or applied for an exemption as of Sunday, MacCormack said.

The administra­tion’s vaccine policy involves “progressiv­e discipline,” according to an online post, starting with a five-day, unpaid suspension for all noncomplia­nt workers. Continued noncomplia­nce for managers “will then result in terminatio­n of employment,” while bargaining unit members will first move on to a 10-day suspension.

Executive-branch offices won’t start to tally the exact number of state workers in violation of the administra­tion’s vaccine mandate until Monday when managers will begin contacting people who have not submitted paperwork.

Agencies are still working through requests for religious and medical exemptions, which would be completed in the “coming weeks,” according to the governor’s office.

But unions are sounding the alarm, concerned about staffing shortages as as the state refuses to budge on its vaccine mandate requiremen­ts — which are among the strictest in the nation.

Chris Keohane, a spokesman for the State Police Associatio­n of Massachuse­tts, said he anticipate­s up to 200 — or 13% — of the state’s roughly 1,500 troopers could be at risk of suspension or terminatio­n over refusal to take the vaccine.

State Police spokesman David Procopio said the department “has plans in place to deploy personnel” if needed.

A State Police source told the Herald that overtime shifts for the coming week are piling up as the department looks for troopers to fill in. Shift call outs sent to State Police that were shared with the Herald enticed troopers on Sunday to sign up for overtime to “make some $$,” and saying “we need to work together.”

As many as 1,400 state correction­s officers could be off the job, a dozen Republican state lawmakers warned in a Saturday letter to Baker in which they demanded the governor, “consider other options” such as regular testing, masking and social distancing in lieu of vaccinatio­n.

Baker, a Republican, has so far refused to bend and has activated the National Guard to step in should the Department of Correction­s find itself shorthande­d.

MacCormack said the administra­tion would “continue to work with employees to address questions and requests for exemptions.”

A federal judge on Friday shot down a lawsuit by the correction­s officers’ union asking for an injunction to block the Baker administra­tion’s vaccine mandate for executive-branch workers that went into effect on Sunday. The state’s high court previously rejected a similar appeal by the State Police union.

 ?? BOstOn HEraLd FILE ?? NOT CAVING IN: Gov. Charlie Baker has not budged on requiring state workers to be vaccinated, as of yesterday, winning two lawsuits that challenged his power to enforce the mandates, though enforcemen­t is expected to go slowly.
BOstOn HEraLd FILE NOT CAVING IN: Gov. Charlie Baker has not budged on requiring state workers to be vaccinated, as of yesterday, winning two lawsuits that challenged his power to enforce the mandates, though enforcemen­t is expected to go slowly.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States