By Tom Hals
(Reuters) – A U.S. judge on Tuesday ruled that New York state cannot impose a COVID-19 vaccine mandate on healthcare workers without allowing for religious exemption requests.
The decision by U.S. District Judge David Hurd in Albany, New York prevents the state from interfering with religious exemptions requests.
Seventeen workers sued over the mandate, alleging their employer revoked an exemption or refused to consider it because of the state’s emergency vaccine requirement, which was announced on Aug. 26.
The ruling provides a test case as vaccine opponents gear up to fight plans to be unveiled soon by the Biden administration to extend COVID-19 vaccine requirements to tens of millions of unvaccinated Americans.
New York’s Department of Health on Aug. 26 ordered healthcare professionals to be vaccinated by Sept. 27 and the order did not allow for the customary religious exemptions.
The plan was challenged by a group of healthcare workers who said they opposed COVID-19 vaccines because some vaccines were developed from cell lines of aborted fetuses. The workers sued using pseudonyms because they said they feared being vilified in the media and because they shared sensitive health information in their lawsuit.
The employees argued that by granting medical exemptions, the state and healthcare companies were treating those with religious objections to vaccines less favorably, violating the U.S. Constitution’s equal protection clause.
Earlier, Hurd ordered on Sept. 20 that healthcare companies could not deny requests for religious exemptions until he had ruled on the request for an injunction.
Vaccines have become highly politicized in the United States, where less than 60% of Americans are vaccinated, well short of the initial goals of the Biden administration.
At least 24 states have imposed vaccine requirements on workers, usually in healthcare.
(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware and Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Aurora Ellis)