The Columbus Dispatch

Lightfoot takes leader of police union to court

- Don Babwin

CHICAGO – Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Friday that she took her fight with the head of the city’s police officers union to court, arguing that his call for officers to ignore the order to report their COVID-19 vaccinatio­n status was illegal.

The mayor said in a statement that the city’s law department filed a complaint in Cook County Circuit Court for injunctive relief against Fraternal Order of Police President John Catanzara, whom she accused of “engaging in, supporting and encouragin­g work stoppage or strike.”

Lightfoot asked the court to prohibit the union and its officers from “engaging in any concerted refusal to submit vaccinatio­n status informatio­n” to the city’s portal. She also asked it to order Catanzara to stop urging members to refuse to provide their vaccinatio­n status informatio­n and to “issue a retraction and disavowal of his ... directives to FOP members.”

Lightfoot said that by urging union members not to report their COVID-19 vaccinatio­n status by Friday’s deadline, Catanzara put the public in danger. “By doing so, and by predicting that 50% or more officers will violate their oaths and not report for duty, Catanzara is encouragin­g an unlawful strike and work stoppage which carries the potential to undermine public safety,” she wrote in the court filing.

Catanzara has maintained that the officers have a legal right to follow his request to show up for work and be sent home for refusing to fill out the city’s COVID-19 portal. “This is not a job action, not a call for a strike – none of that illegal stuff that I’m sure the city is going to make it out to be,” he said in a video posted Tuesday.

Then on Friday, the FOP filed its own complaint seeking a temporary restrainin­g order to compel the city to go into arbitratio­n over the mandate.

“They can take us to court all they want,” Catanzara said in a video posted on the union’s website along with a copy of the complaint. “We already are filing paperwork to dismiss that silly motion.”

In a video posted Thursday, he told union members that if a superior orders them to submit their vaccinatio­n status to the portal, they should refuse because he said it would be an improper and illegal order.

On Thursday afternoon, Lightfoot and top police officials tried to assuage public concerns that the department would be severely understaffed this weekend, saying officers would not be sent home if they showed up to work Friday and refused

to go onto the portal and provide the vaccinatio­n status.

Lightfoot said officers who do refuse to the provide the informatio­n will be placed on unpaid leave, but that it wouldn’t happen until after the weekend because confirming compliance would take a few days.

First Deputy Eric Carter said that officers were expected to meet Friday’s deadline unless they had an approved medical or religious exemption. Those who don’t comply could face discipline as severe as being fired. He also said that under the city’s rules, those who aren’t vaccinated by Friday must get tested twice per week on their own time and at their own expense until the end of the year, when they would be required to be vaccinated.

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/AP ?? Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Fraternal Order of Police President John Catanzara put the public in danger.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/AP Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Fraternal Order of Police President John Catanzara put the public in danger.

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