New York prepares for fallout from vaccine mandate resisted by many
police, firefighters
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[November 01, 2021]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York woke
up on Monday to its first full workday under Mayor Bill de Blasio's
order that all city workers be vaccinated for COVID-19, with many police
officers and firefighters still refusing the shot and one labor leader
calling the mandate a recipe for disaster.
De Blasio, a Democrat who announced the mandate less than two weeks ago,
has assured the city of 8.8 million people that officials could handle
any shortage of police, firefighters or sanitation workers through
schedule changes and overtime.
"Another great uptick to report. @FDNY EMS vaccine rates are up to 87%,"
Danielle Filson, a press deputy for de Blasio, tweeted on Sunday night.
The percentage of inoculated police officers and firefighters is below
that of other city employees, and union leaders say de Blasio will be to
blame if emergency services are left in disarray in the largest U.S
city.
"We need everyone we can to keep the city running and keep it safe.
We're trying to avoid what is going to be an inevitable disaster by
design on Monday morning," Andrew Ansbro, president of the Uniformed
Firefighters Association, told a news conference on Friday.
Union leaders say their members were given only nine days to comply with
the mayor's vaccination deadline and that workers who have already been
ill with COVID-19 should be granted an exemption. That includes some 70%
of firefighters, Ansbro said.
The dispute is the latest nationwide over vaccine
mandates that have been increasingly imposed by political leaders,
including President Joe Biden, to help stem the spread of the highly
contagious Delta variant. Police officers and firefighters in Chicago
and Los Angeles have also pushed back hard.
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New York City Fire Department (FDNY) Uniformed Firefighters
Association (UFA) President Andrew Ansbro speaks while a NYFD truck
exit the building during a news conference as the city's COVID-19
vaccine mandate deadline approaches at Ladder Co. 24 in Manhattan,
New York City, New York, U.S., October 29, 2021. REUTERS/Eduardo
Munoz/File Photo
New York City health officials say that while research has yet to
determine the degree and length of immunity from COVID-19 following
an infection and illness, experts agree that vaccines can afford
additional protection.
De Blasio has forecast that vaccination rates for city workers would
continue to rise significantly.
The mayor said similar deadlines for other New York state and city
workers prompted a rush for last-minute shots as reality set in that
paychecks were about to stop coming.
Legal challenges by police and fire unions in New York City and
elsewhere have so far been unsuccessful, with state and federal
courts reluctant to overturn vaccine mandates.
(Reporting by Peter Szekely and Trevor Clifford in New York; Writing
and additional reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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