Detroit Free Press

NYC workers on leave as vaccine mandate begins

Some resistance comes from public safety employees

- Michael R. Sisak and Karen Matthews

NEW YORK – About 9,000 New York City municipal workers were put on unpaid leave for refusing to comply with a COVID-19 vaccine mandate that took effect Monday and thousands of city firefighte­rs have called out sick in an apparent protest over the requiremen­t, Mayor Bill de Blasio said.

About 9 in 10 city workers covered by the mandate have gotten vaccinated and there have been no disruption­s to city services as a result of staffing shortages, de Blasio told reporters at his daily news briefing. New York has more than 300,000 city employees.

Firehouses remained open but 18 of the department’s 350 units were out of service and “many units are understaff­ed,” Fire Commission­er Daniel Nigro said. Sanitation workers made an extra pickup on Sunday to ensure trash wouldn’t pile up, the mayor said.

“I want to thank everyone who got vaccinated,” de Blasio said. “Thank you for getting vaccinated. Thank you for doing the right thing. Thank you for moving us forward.”

City officials have been battling fierce resistance among a minority of workers in some critical public safety jobs, including police officers and firefighte­rs, as well as a pending legal challenge to the mandate by the city’s largest police union.

As of Sunday, 1 in 4 of the city’s uniformed firefighte­rs still hadn’t gotten a first dose of the vaccine, as required. About 1 in 6 police personnel and 1 in 6 sanitation workers were unvaccinat­ed.

Police Commission­er Dermot Shea said the

vast majority of unvaccinat­ed workers in his department have applied for religious or medical exemptions to the vaccine mandate. So far, just 34 police officers and 40 civilian police employees have been placed on unpaid leave he said.

More than 3,500 city workers were vaccinated over the weekend. That was after a 5 p.m. Friday deadline to collect a $500 bonus for showing proof they’d gotten a dose of the vaccine but before they were to be put on unpaid leave.

About 12,000 workers have applied for religious or medical exemptions. They can remain on the job while city officials review those applicatio­ns.

About 2,300 firefighte­rs were out sick, up from what’s normally about 1,000 per day, in what Nigro said appeared to be a protest against the vaccine mandate. The fire department’s medical office normally sees about 200 people a day, Nigro said. The past week, it has been 700 a day, the majority unvaccinat­ed.

“I’ve asked them to rethink this, to remember their oath of office,” Nigro said. “It’s not only affecting the people they serve, it’s affecting their brothers and sisters in the department who are forced to fill their spots.”

De Blasio said the city is watching to see if the firefighte­rs union is coordinati­ng the sick outs and would take them to court if there’s evidence of an illegal strike. He said firefighte­rs who are found to be faking illness are “AWOL effectivel­y” and will face internal department discipline.

“People get really troubled really quick when people don’t show up to do their jobs if they’re not really sick,” de Blasio said. “And we have every reason to believe there’s a lot of people out there claiming to be sick, who are not. It’s not acceptable.”

 ?? SETH WENIG/AP FILE ?? Mayor Bill de Blasio said that about 9 in 10 New York City workers have gotten a COVID-19 vaccine.
SETH WENIG/AP FILE Mayor Bill de Blasio said that about 9 in 10 New York City workers have gotten a COVID-19 vaccine.

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