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Multnomah County law enforcement exempt from vaccine mandate

Sara Cline | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 3 years, 2 months AGO
by Sara Cline
| September 10, 2021 12:06 AM

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Officials from Oregon's most populous county — Multnomah — joined Portland on Thursday in exempting law enforcement from a COVID-19 vaccine order after county officials say a vaccination requirement for local officers is now legally dubious due to new guidance from the state health authority.

Under Oregon law, local municipalities can only issue vaccine mandates for police officers if a federal or state rule requires it. The county believed Gov. Kate Brown’s vaccination mandate issued last month for state healthcare workers covered officers because they receive some medical training.

But new guidance from the Oregon Health Authority said law enforcement was “probably not” subject to the governor’s orders as providing medical care was “likely not a fundamental part of their job.”

Multnomah County Chair Deborah Kafoury said on Thursday she had no choice but to exempt deputy sheriffs, parole and probation officers as “the state has tied our hands.” She called on the state to require vaccinations of local law enforcement, which would allow the county to move forward with their own vaccine mandate that encompasses law enforcement.

The governor’s office has not yet responded to any inquiry into whether such a legislative fix is being considered.

“We have asked — and are still asking — the state to require these vaccinations,” Kafoury said in a statement. “The Legislature is having a short session in a matter of days and could change this. We are not giving up.”

In the meantime, Kafoury said the county is working to possibly require unvaccinated county employees, including law enforcement, to be fitted for and wear an N95 mask.

The health authority's new guidance also caused confusion in Oregon’s largest city, where Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler announced on Wednesday that he would not be mandating the city’s police force get vaccinated.

“I am disappointed that we can’t hold all of our City employees to the same vaccine requirement,” Wheeler said in a statement. “However, state law prohibits us from requiring vaccinations for police officers unless there’s a federal or state law, regulation or rule that mandates they get vaccinated.”

Currently, statewide, staff and volunteers in K-12 schools, health care workers and state employees are required to be fully vaccinated by Oct. 18.

On Thursday President Joe Biden announced sweeping new federal vaccine requirements affecting as many as 100 million Americans in an all-out effort to increase COVID-19 vaccinations and curb the surging delta variant.

The expansive rules mandate that all employers with more than 100 workers require them to be vaccinated or test for the virus weekly. And the roughly 17 million workers at health facilities that receive federal Medicare or Medicaid also will have to be fully vaccinated.

Biden is also signing an executive order to require vaccination for employees of the executive branch and contractors who do business with the federal government — with no option to test out.

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Sara Cline is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

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