New York Gov. Kathy Hochul vowed this week to fight a lawsuit launched by a group of Christian healthcare practitioners who argue that New York's COVID-19 vaccine mandate for many healthcare workers is unconstitutional because it lacks a religious exemption.
A federal judge temporarily blocked the state Tuesday from enforcing the mandate, which was set to take effect Sept. 27, until the court has had a chance to consider arguments.
Hochul said Wednesday that she's not aware of any major religious group that has prohibited adherents from receiving the COVID-19 vaccine.
"Everyone from the Pope on down is encouraging people to get vaccinated," she said, referring to Pope Francis, the head of the Roman Catholic Church.
The nurses, doctors and other New York healthcare workers in the lawsuit say they don't want to be forced to take any vaccine that employs aborted fetus cell lines in their testing, development or production.
Fetal cell lines were used during research and development of the Pfizer and Moderna mRNA vaccines, and during production of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.
Thomas More Society senior counsel Stephen Crampton, who is representing the anonymous group of nurses, doctors and other healthcare workers, said he's confident the courts will find that people have a right to refuse the vaccine on religious grounds, even if they are part of a religious group that is endorsing the shots.
"My sincere religious convictions may not be 100% the same as the leader of my church or my denomination," Crampton said. "And the law respects that and it should."
New York has a long history of requiring healthcare workers to be immunized against diseases that pose a major public health threat, including measles, mumps and rubella. Schoolchildren are required to be vaccinated against many diseases, too.
The state doesn't offer religious exemptions for vaccination requirements for schoolchildren or healthcare workers and has argued it isn't obligated to do so for the COVID-19 vaccine, either.
Students at colleges and universities, however, don't have to comply with New York's vaccine mandates if they hold "genuine and sincere religious beliefs which are contrary to the practices herein required." New York also has a religious exemption for a requirement to vaccinate infants born to a mother with Hepatitis B.
The use of human cell lines is commonplace in the manufacture of vaccines including rubella, chickenpox, shingles and Hepatitis A. For decades, researchers have multiplied cells from a handful of legally aborted fetuses from the 1960s to produce human cell lines that provide cell cultures used to grow vaccines. Those cell lines are also used to make drugs treating rheumatoid arthritis and cystic fibrosis.
Religious leaders have disagreed over the issue: the Vatican issued guidance saying it's morally acceptable to receive COVID-19 vaccines developed or tested using cell lines originating from aborted fetuses when alternative vaccines aren't available.
When asked whether the healthcare practitioners have received other vaccines, Crampton claimed the group isn't "anti-vax" in general.
Hochul, a Democrat, said the mandate isn't "dictatorial," but based on a desire to save more lives. She said getting vaccinated is the "most beautiful way" for individuals in healing professions to demonstrate their passion and concern for others.
Seven other states besides New York also don't offer a religious exemption for school and childcare immunization requirements, according to the Minnesota-based Immunization Action Coalition. Some have removed such exemptions in recent years over concern about outbreaks of once-contained diseases: Maine's sweeping law removed both religious and personal belief exemptions.
The Thomas More Society is a national not-for-profit law firm that describes its mission as "restoring respect in law for life, family and religious liberty." Last year, the law firm represented two Catholic priests and three Orthodox Jews who successfully overturned Gov. Andrew Cuomo's attendance limits for houses of worship during the pandemic.
New York state is now averaging around 5,200 new cases of COVID-19 per day, up from a low of around 300 per day in late June.