Yuma Sun

Court blocks COVID-19 vaccine mandate for US government workers

- BY KEVIN MCGILL

NEW ORLEANS – President Joe Biden’s order that federal employees get vaccinated against COVID-19 was blocked Thursday by a federal appeals court.

The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans rejected arguments that Biden, as the nation’s chief executive, has the same authority as the CEO of a private corporatio­n to require that employees be vaccinated.

The ruling from the full appeals court, 16 full-time judges at the time the case was argued, reversed an earlier ruling by a threejudge 5th Circuit panel that had upheld the vaccinatio­n requiremen­t. Judge Andrew Oldham, nominated to the court by then-president Donald Trump, wrote the opinion for a 10-member majority.

The ruling maintains the status quo for federal employee vaccines. It upholds a preliminar­y injunction blocking the mandate issued by a federal judge in January 2022. At that point, the administra­tion said nearly 98% of covered employees had been vaccinated.

And, Oldham noted, with the preliminar­y injunction arguments done, the case will return to that court for further arguments, when “both sides will have to grapple with the White House’s announceme­nt that the COVID emergency will finally end on May 11, 2023.”

Opponents of the policy said it was an encroachme­nt on federal workers’ lives that neither the Constituti­on nor federal statutes authorize.

Biden issued an executive order in September 2021 requiring vaccinatio­ns for all executive branch agency employees, with exceptions for medical and religious reasons. The requiremen­t kicked in the following November. U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Brown, who was appointed to the District Court for the Southern District of Texas by Trump, issued a nationwide injunction against the requiremen­t the following January.

The case then went to the 5th Circuit.

One panel of three 5th Circuit judges refused to immediatel­y block the law.

But a different panel, after hearing arguments, upheld Biden’s position. Judges Carl Stewart and James Dennis, both nominated to the court by President Bill Clinton, were in the majority. Judge Rhesa Barksdale, nominated by President George H.W. Bush, dissented, saying the relief the challenger­s sought does not fall under the Civil Service Reform Act cited by the administra­tion.

The broader court majority agreed, saying federal law does not preclude court jurisdicti­on over cases involving “private, irreversib­le medical decisions made in consultati­on with private medical profession­als outside the federal workplace.”

A majority of the full court voted to vacate that ruling and reconsider the case. The 16 active judges heard the case on Sept. 13, joined by Barksdale, who is now a senior judge with lighter duties than the fulltime members of the court.

Judge Stephen Higginson, a nominee of former President Barack Obama, wrote the main dissenting opinion. “For the wrong reasons, our court correctly concludes that we do have jurisdicti­on,” Higginson wrote. “But contrary to a dozen federal courts – and having left a government motion to stay the district court’s injunction pending for more than a year – our court still refuses to say why the President does not have the power to regulate workplace safety for his employees.”

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/AP ?? PRESIDENT-ELECT JOE BIDEN receives his first dose of the coronaviru­s vaccine from nurse partitione­r Tabe Mase at Christiana Hospital in Newark Del., on Dec. 21, 2020.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP PRESIDENT-ELECT JOE BIDEN receives his first dose of the coronaviru­s vaccine from nurse partitione­r Tabe Mase at Christiana Hospital in Newark Del., on Dec. 21, 2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States