The Oklahoman

Vaccine hesitancy

Oklahomans claiming religious exemptions to vaccine mandates.

- Colleen Long and Andrew DeMillo

About 3,000 Los Angeles Police Department employees are citing religious objections to try to get out of the required COVID-19 vaccinatio­n. In Washington state, thousands of state workers are seeking similar exemptions.

An Arkansas hospital has been swamped with so many such requests from employees that it is apparently calling their bluff.

And in Tulsa, pastor Jackson Lahmeyer is offering a “religious exemption” form on his church’s website for download, along with links for suggested donations to the church. The 29-year-old is running for the U.S. Senate as a Republican.

Anyone interested can get the form signed by a religious leader, or Lahmeyer can sign it himself if the person joins the church and donates. He said more than 35,000 people downloaded the form in just three days.

“We’re not anti-vaxxers. We’re just pro-freedom,” Lahmeyer said. “A lot of these people who have signed … have already taken the vaccine. They just don’t think it’s right that somebody else should be forced or lose their job.”

Religious objections, once used sparingly around the country to get exempted from various required vaccines, are becoming a much more widely used loophole against the COVID-19 shot.

And it is only likely to grow following President Joe Biden’s sweeping new

vaccine mandates covering more than 100 million Americans, including executive branch employees and workers at businesses with more than 100 people on the payroll.

The administra­tion acknowledg­es that some small minority of Americans will use — and some may seek to exploit — religious exemptions. But it said it believes even marginal improvemen­ts in vaccinatio­n levels will save lives.

It’s not clear yet how many federal employees have requested a religious exemption. The Labor Department has said an accommodat­ion can be denied if it causes an undue burden.

In the states, mask and vaccine requiremen­ts vary, but most offer exemptions for certain medical conditions or religious or philosophi­cal objections. The use of such exemptions, particular­ly by parents on behalf of their schoolchil­dren, has been growing over the past decade.

The allowance was enshrined in the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964, which says employers must make reasonable accommodat­ions for employees who object to work requiremen­ts because of “sincerely held” religious beliefs.

A religious belief does not have be recognized by an organized religion, and it can be new, unusual or “seem illogical or unreasonab­le to others,” according to rules laid out by the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission. But it can’t be founded solely on political or social ideas.

That puts employers in the position of determinin­g what is a legitimate religious belief and what is a dodge.

Many major religious denominati­ons have no objections to the COVID-19 vaccines. But the rollout has prompted heated debates because of the longtime role that cell lines derived from fetal tissue have played, directly or indirectly, in the research and developmen­t of various vaccines and medicines.

Roman Catholic leaders in New Orleans and St. Louis went so far as to call Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 shot “morally compromise­d.” J&J has stressed that there is no fetal tissue in its vaccine.

Moreover, the Vatican’s doctrine office has said it is “morally acceptable” for Catholics to receive COVID-19 vaccines that are based on research that used cells derived from aborted fetuses. Pope Francis himself has said it would be “suicide” not to get the shot.

In New York, state lawmakers attempted to make the vaccine mandatory for medical workers, with no religious exemptions. On Tuesday, a federal judge blocked the rule because it lacked the opt-out.

An August AP-NORC poll found that 58% of white evangelica­l Protestant­s, 72% of white mainline Protestant­s, 80% of Catholics and 73% of Americans who are religiousl­y unaffiliated say they have been vaccinated. Seventy percent of nonwhite Protestant­s say they have been, including 70% of Black Protestant­s.

Among white evangelica­l Protestant­s, the religious group least likely to have been vaccinated, 33% say they will not get the shot.

Across the U.S., public officials, doctors and community leaders have been trying to help people circumvent COVID-19 mask and vaccine requiremen­ts.

But obtaining a religious exemption is not as simple as producing a signed form. Measles outbreaks in schools over the past decade prompted some states to change their policies. Some now require an actual signed affidavit from a religious leader, instead of an online form. California got rid of nonmedical exemptions in 2015.

Some private employers are taking a hard line. United Airlines told employees last week that those who obtain religious exemptions will be put on unpaid leave until new coronaviru­s testing procedures are in place.

In Los Angeles, Police Chief Michel Moore said he is waiting for guidance from the city’s personnel department regarding the exemptions. The city has mandated that municipal employees get vaccinated by Oct. 5 unless they are granted a medical or religious exemption. A group of LAPD employees is suing over the policy.

“I can’t and won’t comment on the sincerity level” of people claiming a religious exemption, the police chief said. “I don’t want to speculate. Religion in America has many different definitions.”

Ten LAPD employees have died of COVID-19, and thousands in the department have been infected.

In Washington state, approximat­ely 60,000 state employees are subject to a mandate issued by Gov. Jay Inslee that they be fully vaccinated by Oct. 18 or lose their job, unless they obtain a medical or religious exemption and receive an accommodat­ion that allows them to remain employees.

As of Tuesday, more than 3,800 workers had requested religious exemptions. So far, 737 have been approved, but officials stressed that an exemption does not guarantee continued employment.

Once the exemption is approved, each agency has to evaluate whether the employee can still do the job with an accommodat­ion while ensuring a safe workplace. Seven accommodat­ions so far have been granted.

Inslee spokeswoma­n Tara Lee said the process “may help distinguis­h between a sincerely held personal belief and a sincerely held religious belief.”

In Arkansas, about 5% of the staff at the privately run Conway Regional Health System has requested religious or medical exemptions.

The hospital responded by sending employees a form that lists a multitude of common medicines — including Tylenol, Pepto-Bismol, Preparatio­n H and Sudafed — that it said were developed through the use of fetal cell lines.

The form asks people to sign it and attest that “my sincerely held religious belief is consistent and true and I do not use or will not use” any of the listed medication­s.

In a statement, Conway Regional Health President and CEO Matt Troup said: “Staff who are sincere … should have no hesitancy with agreeing to the list of medicines listed.”

 ?? MARK MIRKO, AP ?? Opponents of a bill to repeal Connecticu­t's religious exemption for required school vaccinatio­ns march in April. Religious objections, once used only sparingly around the country to get exempted from various required vaccines, are becoming a much more widely used loophole against the COVID-19 shot.
MARK MIRKO, AP Opponents of a bill to repeal Connecticu­t's religious exemption for required school vaccinatio­ns march in April. Religious objections, once used only sparingly around the country to get exempted from various required vaccines, are becoming a much more widely used loophole against the COVID-19 shot.
 ??  ?? Lahmeyer
Lahmeyer

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