The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Religious vaccine exemption stays for NY health care workers

- By Michael Hill

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — New York health care workers will be able to seek religious exemptions from a statewide COVID-19 vaccine mandate as a lawsuit challengin­g the requiremen­t proceeds, a federal judge ruled Tuesday.

Judge David Hurd in Utica had issued a temporary restrainin­g order a month ago after 17 doctors, nurses and other health profession­als claimed in a lawsuit that their rights would be violated with a vaccine mandate that disallowed religious exemptions.

Hurd’s preliminar­y injunction Tuesday means New York will continue to be barred from enforcing any requiremen­t that

employers deny religious exemptions. And the state cannot revoke exemptions already granted.

Gov. Kathy Hochul said she will fight the decision in court “to keep New Yorkers safe.”

“My responsibi­lity as governor is to protect the people of this state, and requiring health care workers to get vaccinated accomplish­es that,” she said in a prepared statement.

State health officials said that as of Tuesday, facilities reported 7,070 hospital workers, or 1.4% of total employees, had claimed a non-medical exemption, as did 2,636 nursing home workers, or 1.8% of employees.

Hurd wrote that the health care workers suing the state were likely to succeed on the merits of their constituti­onal

claim. The question presented in this case, Hurd wrote, is whether the mandate “conflicts with plaintiffs’ and other individual­s’ federally protected right to seek a religious accommodat­ion from their individual employers. The answer to this question is clearly yes.”

“This is clearly just a ridiculous government overreach,” said Christophe­r Ferrara, the Thomas More Society special counsel who represente­d the plaintiffs. “You can’t do this to people. You can’t call them heroes one day and then throw them out on the sidewalk the next day.”

Hochul’s administra­tion began requiring workers at hospitals and nursing homes to be vaccinated on Sept. 27 and more recently expanded the requiremen­t

to include workers at assisted living homes, hospice care, treatment centers and home health aides.

The plaintiffs, all Christians, oppose as a matter of religious conviction any medical cooperatio­n in abortion, including the use of vaccines linked to fetal cell lines in testing, developmen­t or production, according to court papers.

Several types of cell lines created decades ago using fetal tissue exist and are widely used in medical manufactur­ing, but the cells in them today are clones of the early cells, not the original tissue.

The COVID-19 vaccine from Johnson & Johnson is produced by using an adenovirus that is grown using retinal cells that

 ?? AP PHOTO/EDUARDO MUNOZ ALVAREZ ?? A woman wears an anti-vaccine pin while people and teachers pray as they protest against Covid-19vaccine mandates outside the Manhattan Federal Court Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021, in New York.
AP PHOTO/EDUARDO MUNOZ ALVAREZ A woman wears an anti-vaccine pin while people and teachers pray as they protest against Covid-19vaccine mandates outside the Manhattan Federal Court Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021, in New York.

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