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Morning Briefing

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Friday, Nov 5 2021

Full Issue

Unions For 75,000 Employees Make Vax Mandate Deal With New York City

The city agreed with at least four unions to establish rules for workers to apply for medical or religious exemptions to the city's covid shot mandate. AP reports a former Washington State coach, fired for refusing the vaccine, has filed an appeal. A poll shows young people mostly support mandates.

New York City said Thursday that it had reached an agreement with at least four unions representing some 75,000 city employees to establish rules about how workers can apply for medical or religious exemptions to the city鈥檚 coronavirus vaccine mandate. The development eases tensions between some city workers and Mayor Bill de Blasio鈥檚 (D) administration over requirements to get vaccinated against the coronavirus or go on unpaid leave. Though about 92 percent of city employees were compliant with vaccine mandates as of Wednesday, there are small pockets of resistance to the mandate, particularly among some police officers and firefighters. (Jeong and Suliman, 11/5)

Attorneys for former Washington State coach Nick Rolovich sent a letter to the university appealing his firing for refusing to get the coronavirus vaccine, contending school officials did not conduct a fair process to determine whether he should receive a religious exemption to a state mandate that all state employees must be vaccinated. Attorneys Brian Fahling and Eric Kniffen鈥檚 letter to athletic director Pat Chun lays out their appeal of Rolovich鈥檚 firing for just cause. (Geranios, 11/4)

Young people in the United States broadly support COVID-19 vaccine mandates to support in-person learning and work, and a majority believe that getting vaccinated is 鈥 at least in part 鈥 an obligation we owe to each other, according to a new poll among 13- to 29-year-olds from the PBS NewsHour and Generation Lab. And even though their lives have been upended, most Gen Zers and millennials say they do not feel more stressed now than they were before the pandemic, suggesting that hardships have perhaps reinforced resiliency for Americans under 30. (Santhanam, 11/4)

In mask updates 鈥

Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey is defying a demand that he stop using federal coronavirus relief money to fund an education grant program that can only go to schools without mask mandates. The Republican governor also is continuing a program that gives private school vouchers to parents upset that their children鈥檚 schools require masks or quarantines after being exposed to COVID-19. (Christie, 11/5)

Dallas schools鈥 mask mandate will remain in place as young children begin rolling up their sleeves for the COVID-19 vaccine. Superintendent Michael Hinojosa announced the decision at Thursday鈥檚 board briefing. He also informed trustees that he will reconsider the district鈥檚 safety protocols in December, after analyzing how many elementary students are fully vaccinated and whether the Thanksgiving holiday leads to a spike in cases. 鈥淲e know that it takes six-to-eight weeks for the vaccines to take full effect,鈥 Hinojosa said. 鈥淲e also know that we have two holiday periods that are coming up for us right now. So we are not going to lift the mask protocol at this time.鈥 (Richman, 11/4)

The Kansas City, Missouri, City Council has rescinded its order requiring masks in public places to stop the spread of the coronavirus, but masks will still be required for both kids and adults in schools, and private businesses still can choose to require them. The City Council voted 11-2 on Thursday to continue to require masks in school buildings and on school buses through Dec. 2, The Kansas City Star reported. A mask order for everyone 5 years and older expired Thursday afternoon. (11/4)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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