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Supreme Court won't block vaccine mandate for New York health care workers

Supreme Court won't block vaccine mandate for New York health care workers
Vaccinated today. So you were talking about 82% of New Yorkers agreeing. While 95% of my nurses have agreed. Close to 98, of my doctors have agreed. All our facilities are open and fully functional. Um I have not heard of any negative reports from the private hospital system, but I confess I spent today making sure that health and hospitals is running well. Today's actions will be for people who are not vaccinated. They cannot come into our facilities uh and they will not be paid for their work. There are 43 oh employees for health and hospitals. We're over 90%, which means there are about 5000 people who are not yet vaccinated as of the best information we had last night going into this morning. And my concern. Yes, but am I seeing evidence of any substantial shortage in new york city private hospitals? No, I am not saying that at this moment, I think there are big challenges around the rest of the state. For sure. We're gonna be watching and be ready to work with the private hospitals. There is any problem. But I am not perceiving a major problem at this point. I think anything that we see is something that will be able to make adjustments to help address
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Supreme Court won't block vaccine mandate for New York health care workers
The Supreme Court refused Monday to halt a COVID-19 vaccine requirement for health care workers in New York that does not offer an exemption for religious reasons.The court acted on emergency appeals filed by doctors, nurses and other medical workers who say they are being forced to choose between their jobs and religious beliefs.Related video above from September: Vaccine deadline arrives for New York health care workersAs is typical in such appeals, the court did not explain its order, although it has similarly refused to get in the way of vaccine mandates elsewhere. Justices Neil Gorsuch, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito dissented. "Now, thousands of New York healthcare workers face the loss of their jobs and eligibility for unemployment benefits," Gorsuch wrote in a 14-page opinion that Alito joined.New York is one of just three states, along with Maine and Rhode Island, that do not accommodate health care workers who object to the vaccine on religious grounds.The court had previously turned away health care workers in Maine, who filed a similar challenge, with the same three justices in dissent.As of Oct. 19, roughly 90% of health care workers were fully vaccinated and most of the rest had received one of two doses, the state told the high court. Fewer than 2% of nursing home, adult care facility and hospital workers had sought a religious exemption, the state said.In his dissent, Gorsuch drew a link between the health care workers and the World War II-era Jehovah's Witnesses schoolchildren who refused on religious grounds to stand and salute the American flag for the Pledge of Allegiance.The court at first refused to intervene when a public school in Pennsylvania expelled the children. But three years later, the justices overruled the earlier case in a landmark decision that declared schools couldn't force students to salute the flag or recite the pledge."Today, our Nation faces not a world war but a pandemic. Like wars, though, pandemics often produce demanding new social rules aimed at protecting collective interests 鈥� and with those rules can come fear and anger at individuals unable to conform for religious reasons," Gorsuch wrote.

The Supreme Court refused Monday to halt a COVID-19 vaccine requirement for health care workers in New York that does not offer an exemption for religious reasons.

The court acted on emergency appeals filed by doctors, nurses and other medical workers who say they are being forced to choose between their jobs and religious beliefs.

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Related video above from September: Vaccine deadline arrives for New York health care workers

As is typical in such appeals, the court did not explain its order, although it has similarly refused to get in the way of vaccine mandates elsewhere.

Justices Neil Gorsuch, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito dissented. "Now, thousands of New York healthcare workers face the loss of their jobs and eligibility for unemployment benefits," Gorsuch wrote in a 14-page opinion that Alito joined.

New York is one of just three states, along with Maine and Rhode Island, that do not accommodate health care workers who object to the vaccine on religious grounds.

The court had previously turned away health care workers in Maine, who filed a similar challenge, with the same three justices in dissent.

As of Oct. 19, roughly 90% of health care workers were fully vaccinated and most of the rest had received one of two doses, the state told the high court. Fewer than 2% of nursing home, adult care facility and hospital workers had sought a religious exemption, the state said.

In his dissent, Gorsuch drew a link between the health care workers and the World War II-era Jehovah's Witnesses schoolchildren who refused on religious grounds to stand and salute the American flag for the Pledge of Allegiance.

The court at first refused to intervene when a public school in Pennsylvania expelled the children. But three years later, the justices overruled the earlier case in a landmark decision that declared schools couldn't force students to salute the flag or recite the pledge.

"Today, our Nation faces not a world war but a pandemic. Like wars, though, pandemics often produce demanding new social rules aimed at protecting collective interests 鈥� and with those rules can come fear and anger at individuals unable to conform for religious reasons," Gorsuch wrote.