VI News Staff 4 years ago
VINStaff Verified #visource

Government Asks Court to Dismiss Suit to Block Hospitals’ Vaccine Mandate

The V.I. government has asked the V.I. Superior Court to dismiss an emergency motion that seeks to block a COVID-19 vaccine mandate for employees of the territory’s hospitals. The mandate adopted by the V.I. Government Hospital and Health Facilities Corporation on Aug. 4 requires hospital employees to either get vaccinated against the virus or request an exemption for medical or religious reasons by Oct. 1 or face termination. “With more than 331 million doses administered in the U.S., the vaccines have proven safe and extremely effective against symptomatic infections, hospitalizations and death. The vaccines are so effective that today more than 99 percent of people who die from COVID-19 are unvaccinated. The science is clear — vaccines save lives,” corporation Chairman Christopher Finch said in a memorandum announcing the mandate. The Virgin Islands State Nurses’ Association Collective Bargaining Unit filed an emergency motion on Aug. 13 in V.I. Superior Court, later amended to include the Registered Nurses’ Leadership Union, seeking to block the mandate.

However, the V.I. Superior Court lacks jurisdiction to issue an order on what is essentially a labor dispute without a hearing, the government said in its response to the motion on Friday.

Moreover, the V.I. Government Hospital and Health Facilities Corporation, Gov. Juan F. Luis Hospital and Schneider Regional Medical Center are within their rights to implement a vaccine mandate given the ongoing COVID-19 emergency, Assistant Attorney General Venetia H. Velazquez wrote in the government’s response to the unions’ motion.

“The Plaintiffs improperly seek to enjoin their employer, VIGHHFC, from taking actions deemed necessary in light of the ongoing COVID-19 emergency at the hospital facilities in the Virgin Islands. Additionally, applicable law would deprive the court of jurisdiction to grant this request for injunctive relief, as this controversy arises of a labor dispute and the facts as alleged, preclude said relief,” Velazquez states.

According to the unions’ Aug. 13 emergency motion, the mandate will result in crippling staff shortages at the territory’s hospitals, where they say more than 55 percent of nurses are not vaccinated.

Moreover, their motion says the mandate violates their collective bargaining agreement, or CBA, and due process rights.

“The vaccine mandate is a violation of the CBA and interferes with and prevents employees from exercising their rights under the CBA,” the unions’ motion states.

“Employees stand to lose their jobs at the only two hospitals in the territory, wages, benefits and the bargained for consideration under the parties’ CBA. In addition, the hospitals’ employees are under threat of employment termination, and to remain employed, are being forced to take a substance into their body that the long-term effects of which are unknown,” the motion states.

However, the government responded Friday that “the vaccine policy was implemented in keeping with the hospitals’ mission to protect its patients during the pandemic as well as its staff and visitors, and in line with the American Hospital Association’s guidance that hospitals adopt mandatory vaccine policies to preserve their overarching health care mission.”

The hospitals’ medical staff presidents, Dr. Tai Hunte-Ceasar on St. Thomas and Dr. Ramesh Lakhram on St. Croix, also wrote letters noting the need to ensure workplace safety and that of hospitalized patients through vaccinations.

READ MORE: ST. CROIX SOURCE

U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS WEATHER

Hot Topics To Be Explored at Upcoming Heat Summit

VI News Staff
6 months ago

Winair launches flights to three new Eastern Caribbean destinations

VI News Staff
1 year ago

Wheatley Center Celebrates 50 Years of Resilience and Community Spirit

VI News Staff
1 year ago

DPP seeks $2.3M for new office infrastructure

VI News Staff
11 months ago

Police Association calls for payment of 'long overdue' increments & al...

VI News Staff
3 years ago