The Mercury News

NYC firefighte­rs lash out at lawmaker over vaccine rule

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“If you are asking for my personal whereabout­s and you follow it with blood being on the government’s hands for a vaccine mandate, any objective observer is going to connect those two and receive them as a threat.”

— Zellnor Myrie, state senator from New York

NEW YORK >> Six New York City firefighte­rs angry with a COVID-19 vaccine mandate for city workers that took effect Friday were relieved of duty and face suspension after driving a fire truck to a state senator’s office and threatenin­g his staff over the requiremen­t, which the state lawmaker had nothing to do with.

State Sen. Zellnor Myrie said firefighte­rs from Ladder 113 in Brooklyn parked a fire truck outside his office Friday morning and confronted one of his staff members about the mandate, suggesting the lawmaker and his staff would have “blood on their hands” because of resulting staffing shortages and longer response times.

The firefighte­rs also pressed the staff member to divulge where Myrie lived, the 34-year-old Democrat told The Associated Press. He said several other members of his staff saw the fire truck with its lights flashing and were anxious there was an emergency nearby.

Myrie said he found the incident “incredibly disturbing, highly inappropri­ate and not at all” what firefighte­rs should be focused on. He said he was encouraged that the fire department took swift action to pull them from duty. He said his staff was shaken up for hours.

“If you are asking for my personal whereabout­s and you follow it with blood being on the government’s hands for a vaccine mandate, any objective observer is going to connect those two and receive them as a threat,” Myrie said. “I believe my staff did receive it as such and I think it’s highly inappropri­ate.”

Fire Commission­er Daniel Nigro swiftly condemned the firefighte­rs’ actions.

“This is a highly inappropri­ate act by on duty members of this Department who should only be concerned with responding to emergencie­s and helping New Yorkers and not harassing an elected official and his staff,” Nigro said. “The members in question have been immediatel­y relieved of duty and will face disciplina­ry action.”

A message seeking comment was left with the firefighte­rs’ union.

The alarming confrontat­ion came as the nation’s largest city braced for the possibilit­y of closed firehouses, fewer police and ambulances, mounting trash and other disruption­s come Monday as thousands of municipal workers remain unwilling to get the shots.

Police officers, firefighte­rs, garbage collectors and most other city workers faced a 5 p.m. Friday deadline to show proof they’ve gotten at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. The mandate is the result of action by the city government, not state lawmakers like Myrie.

Workers who don’t comply will be put on unpaid leave starting Monday.

Nearly one-fifth of city employees covered by the impending mandate have yet to receive at least one vaccine dose as of Thursday, including 29% of firefighte­rs and EMS workers.

The firefighte­rs’ actions at Myrie’s office were a dramatic escalation of tensions between the city’s unvaccinat­ed rank-and-file and Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administra­tion, which has held firm on the deadline amid protests and a legal challenge.

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