The Mercury News

Police resisting vaccines should seek another job

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Police, firefighte­rs and other public safety workers who don’t want to comply with city, county and state vaccinatio­n mandates should look for another job.

The science is clear. The COVID-19 vaccines are safe, effective and save lives. They offer the best available strategy for California to emerge from the pandemic.

Cops, firefighte­rs and public safety workers should understand the importance of frontline workers being vaccinated against COVID-19. Their work requires them to interact with our most vulnerable residents, many of whom are unvaccinat­ed. They also frequently work in jails, courthouse­s and other locations where social distancing is not possible. They, of all people, should be modeling public health safety for the general public.

Yet San Jose’s police union is pushing back on the city’s vaccinatio­n mandate, which was announced last month and goes into effect Thursday. The change requires vaccinatio­ns and limits a weekly testing alternativ­e only to those eligible for a medical or religious exemption.

The San Jose Police Officers’ Associatio­n says the city risks losing as many as 140 officers unless the City Council sticks to its current requiremen­ts. The San Jose Police Department has about 1,800 onduty employees. Data collected by city officials shows that as of Sept. 17, 87% of the department’s on-duty employees — including 1,150 sworn officers — have submitted proof of vaccinatio­n.

San Jose Fire Fighters Local 230 President Matt Tuttle said that 8% of the firefighti­ng workforce — about 50 personnel — remain unvaccinat­ed.

A wide range of public safety workers throughout California also are objecting to vaccinatio­n mandates.

The Los Angeles Times reported Sept. 17 that a group of 500 Los Angeles firefighte­rs filed a lawsuit against the city, saying its vaccinatio­n mandate is a violation of employees’ constituti­onally protected autonomous privacy rights.

A group of Los Angeles Police Department employees on Sept. 11 filed a federal lawsuit challengin­g the city’s mandate. Nearly half of the LAPD’s 12,000-plus workforce remains unvaccinat­ed, according to the Times. Ten LAPD employees have died of COVID-19 and 85% of new infections among LAPD employees were in unvaccinat­ed staffers.

California prison guards are also fighting the state’s vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts despite numerous outbreaks at state prisons. It’s appalling that only about half of the state’s prison employees are fully vaccinated.

A major study published earlier this month by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revealed that people who were not fully vaccinated were more than 10 times more likely to be hospitaliz­ed and 11 times more likely to die of COVID-19 than those who were fully vaccinated.

“The bottom line is this: We have the scientific tools we need to turn the corner on this pandemic,” CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said. “Vaccinatio­n works and will protect us from the severe complicati­ons of COVID-19.”

The question of whether public safety workers should have the freedom to refuse a mandated COVID-19 vaccine has yet to come before the Supreme Court. But in 1905 the Supreme Court backed the city of Cambridge, Massachuse­tts, and its mandate that all residents should be vaccinated against smallpox in the interest of public safety.

Police, firefighte­rs and other public safety workers should be supporting vaccinatio­n mandates as the clearest way ensure a safe environmen­t for workers and the general public.

 ?? JAE C. HONG ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A syringe is prepared with the PfizerBioN­Tech COVID-19 vaccine at a mobile vaccine clinic in Santa Ana.
JAE C. HONG ASSOCIATED PRESS A syringe is prepared with the PfizerBioN­Tech COVID-19 vaccine at a mobile vaccine clinic in Santa Ana.

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