Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Boston's Vaccine Mandate Dealt Setback As Local Fights Stretch Out
An appeals court judge Tuesday granted an injunction blocking Mayor Michelle Wu鈥檚 administration from enforcing a COVID-19 vaccination mandate for workers from three municipal unions until the two sides hash out a solution at the bargaining table, state labor authorities decide the matter, or there is a court resolution to the case. The decision from Justice Sabita Singh represented a blow to Wu鈥檚 vaccination mandate, a policy that has dominated her early tenure in City Hall鈥檚 fifth-floor corner office, and the latest turn in a COVID-19 fight that has pitted the city鈥檚 new and progressive mayor against a bloc of decidedly old-school Boston power: a trio of public safety unions. (McDonald, 2/15)
A panel of Idaho lawmakers has advanced a bill that would make it a crime for Idaho businesses to require employees to get vaccinated against the coronavirus. The federal government and companies employing health care workers would be exempt under the bill from Rep. Charlie Shepherd. But all other businesses would be barred from firing, segregating or otherwise treating unvaccinated workers differently than vaccinated employees. (Boone, 2/15)
A Los Angeles Superior Court judge Tuesday dismissed a lawsuit brought by a group of Los Angeles firefighters over a city requirement that employees be vaccinated against COVID-19. Judge Michael P. Linfield wrote that 鈥渃ourts have consistently held that government has the power to require vaccinations to protect the public鈥檚 health and safety.鈥 He cited several cases, including a 1905 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that compulsory vaccinations are allowed under the Constitution. The city last year made COVID-19 vaccination a requirement of employment, while also granting exemptions for employees based on medical conditions or religious beliefs. (Smith, 2/15)
About three-quarters of D.C. residents support the city鈥檚 vaccine requirement to enter certain businesses, a policy that Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) ended Tuesday. The citywide Washington Post poll finds 74 percent of residents support D.C.鈥檚 requirement to show proof of vaccination before going inside restaurants, gyms, concert venues and sports arenas. Most D.C. residents also say Bowser鈥檚 restrictions on residents and businesses have been 鈥渁bout right.鈥 (Moyer, Guskin and Brice-Saddler, 2/15)
Hospitals, nursing homes and all other Medicaid-accepting facilities across Montana have been busy processing data on staff vaccination, exemptions and, in some cases, unemployment. Feb. 14 marked the first deadline for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) COVID-19 vaccine mandate. All employees working at a facility receiving reimbursement from the federal agency are required to provide proof of at least one dose of vaccine or a medical or religious exemption. At Benefis Health System in Great Falls, 37 employees opted to end their employment rather than get vaccinated or try for an exemption. The resignations were not concentrated in a specific department or employee type, according to Whitney Bania, senior communications specialist at Benefis. (Schabacker, 2/15)