| 
		Appellate court declines to block enforcement of vaccine, testing 
		mandate
		 Send a link to a friend 
		[April 18, 2022] 
		By PETER HANCOCKCapitol News Illinois
 phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
 
 
  SPRINGFIELD – A state appellate court ruled 
		this week that it will not block enforcement of the Pritzker 
		administration’s mandate that certain categories of public employees 
		either be vaccinated against COVID-19 or undergo regular testing. 
 The 2-1 ruling by the 4th District Court of Appeals upheld a Sangamon 
		County judge’s decision on April 1 not to issue a temporary restraining 
		order blocking enforcement of the policy.
 
 The decision involved three consolidated cases in which public employees 
		are seeking to overturn the mandate. The cases include suits against 
		Gov. JB Pritzker, various state agencies, the Pekin Fire Department and 
		the Deland-Weldon school district.
 
 Pritzker first issued a vaccine mandate on Aug. 26, 2021, through an 
		executive order that applied to health care workers, school employees, 
		higher education personnel and students, and state employees who work in 
		congregate facilities. The order also authorized other entities, both 
		public and private, to enact their own vaccination and testing 
		requirements.
 
		 
		The employees sued to block enforcement of the order citing the state’s 
		Health Care Right of Conscience Act which, among other things, makes it 
		illegal to discriminate against anyone for refusing to receive any 
		particular form of health care that they find contrary to their 
		conscience.
 That law was originally enacted to shield health care workers from 
		liability for refusing to perform or assist in abortions. During last 
		year’s fall veto session, however, lawmakers passed an amendment to that 
		law making a specific exception for health care measures that are 
		intended to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
 
 That provision does not officially go into effect until June 1. But 
		lawmakers inserted language in the measure stating the section “is a 
		declaration of existing law” rather than a new enactment.
 
 In other words, the General Assembly said it was only clarifying 
		something that was ambiguous in an existing law, which in this case 
		involved the word “discriminate.”
 
 The Sangamon County circuit court cited that law in denying the 
		plaintiffs’ request for a temporary restraining order, saying that even 
		though it hasn’t taken effect yet, it can still be used as an aid in 
		understanding the original statute.
 
 But the plaintiffs appealed, noting that the new law has not yet gone 
		into effect while also arguing that even though the amendment claims to 
		be a declaration of existing law, the legislature cannot retroactively 
		change the meaning of an otherwise unambiguous statute.
 
		
		 
		[to top of second column] | 
            
			 
            
			Pictured is the 4th District Illinois Court of 
			Appeals building in Springfield. (Capitol News Illinois photo by 
			Peter Hancock) 
            
			 
		In their appeal, the plaintiffs cited a 2020 decision from the 2nd 
		District Court of Appeals involving the same statute that said there was 
		nothing ambiguous about the word “discriminate.”
 “To the contrary, the ordinary meaning of the word is set forth in its 
		dictionary definition,” the 2nd District court wrote.
 
 That case involved a nurse in a public health clinic who claimed 
		religious objections to providing family planning services or referring 
		patients for abortions.
 
		In its ruling Wednesday, however, the 4th District appellate court said 
		that simply because a word has a dictionary definition does not make its 
		meaning within a statute unambiguous. In this case, the court said, it 
		would only be discriminatory if an employer punished workers who refused 
		to be vaccinated or tested as a matter of conscience but did not punish 
		those who refused for other reasons.
 The vaccine and testing requirements, the court wrote, could actually be 
		seen as merit-based policies because those who are vaccinated or tested 
		are less likely to spread COVID-19 in the workplace.
 
 The plaintiffs also challenged the vaccine and testing mandates under 
		the Illinois Department of Public Health Act, which gives that agency 
		“supreme authority in matters of quarantine and isolation.”
 
 But the appellate court rejected that argument as well, saying that the 
		employers in the three cases had not quarantined or isolated anyone, but 
		had instead only threatened loss of employment.
 
 “To be fired is not to be quarantined or isolated from the community at 
		large,” the majority wrote.
 
		
		 
		The opinion was written by Justice Peter Cavanagh, with Justice James 
		Knecht concurring.
 Justice Robert Steigmann wrote a dissenting opinion. He argued that the 
		word “discriminate” has a clear and understandable meaning and that the 
		legislature included in the statute numerous examples of the kinds of 
		discrimination that are prohibited.
 
 He also argued that the 2021 amendment to the Health Care Right of 
		Conscious Act could be used as an “interpretive aid” in understanding 
		the original statute because he found nothing unambiguous about the 
		original law.
 
		
		Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news 
		service covering state government and distributed to more than 400 
		newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press 
		Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |