A person sitting in a chair rolls up their sleeve as a county healthcare worker prepares to poke them with a needle
A Multnomah County worker gets vaccinated at a county health clinic. Credit: Motoya Nakamura / Multnomah County
A person sitting in a chair rolls up their sleeve as a county healthcare worker prepares to poke them with a needle
A Multnomah County worker gets vaccinated at a county health clinic. Motoya Nakamura / Multnomah County

Over one hundred City of Portland employees and 73 Multnomah County employees will be fired if they fail to get vaccinated against COVID-19โ€”or receive an exemptionโ€”by Monday, the day that both governments’ staff vaccine mandates goes into effect.

According to data released by the county this week, 92 percent of the countyโ€™s 5,601 employees are fully vaccinated and about 7 percent submitted an acceptable exemption. Multnomah County Chair Deborah Kafoury issued the vaccine mandate in August amid the surge of COVID cases throughout the state due to the highly contagious Delta variant.

The county originally sent notices of pending layoffs to 124 unvaccinated employees on October 1, but it appears that the threat of losing their job inspired 51 employees to get vaccinated or receive an approved exemption.

โ€œMultnomah County cares for people in crisis,โ€ Kafoury said in a press release Wednesday. โ€œWe work with seniors, people with disabilities, individuals in detention and with families needing health services. Our community needs to know we are doing everything we can to keep them safe and to end this pandemic.โ€

Following the countyโ€™s vaccine mandate, Portlandโ€™s City Commissioners issued the same ultimatum to all city employees in late August. As of October 14, 92 percent of Portlandโ€™s 6,146 city employees were vaccinated or in the process of completing their vaccine sequence. About 5 percent of the cityโ€™s employees requested an exemption to the mandate, and just over 2 percentโ€”or 136 peopleโ€”either donโ€™t plan on getting vaccinated or have not submitted any vaccine information.

Despite being city employees, Portland Police Bureau (PPB) staff are exempt from the city requirement, due to a legal loophole in vaccination requirements (paired with pushback from PPB’s union). The same exemption is allowed for county law enforcement staff with the Multnomah County Sheriffs Office.

PPB did not provide the Mercury with an estimate of how many PPB employees are vaccinated, despite the exemption.

Governor Brownโ€™s statewide vaccine mandate for healthcare workers also goes into effect Monday. According to the most recent data from the Oregon Health Authority (OHA), 82 percent of the 41,184 healthcare workers in Multnomah County were fully vaccinated as of October 4. Thatโ€™s still higher than the 80 percent vaccination rate for Multnomah Countyโ€™s general population, but could trigger layoffs for several thousand healthcare workers in the county.

When the statewide vaccine mandate was announced in August, Oregon Nurses Associationโ€”a union representing more than 15,000 nurses statewideโ€” called the move a โ€œreasonable and sensible approach which respects the individual choices of health care workers while also protecting public health.โ€

Brown also called for executive branch state workers to get vaccinated by Monday, but has since reached a deal with two major public employee unions, allowing executive branch workers who have received at least one dose of the vaccine to finish their vaccination process by November 30.

Of the stateโ€™s estimated 40,000 employees, 78 percent are fully vaccinated, 9 percent have requested an exemption, and about 12 percent have not submitted proof of vaccination or requested an exemption as of October 14. A spokesperson from Brownโ€™s office told OPB that the agreement was โ€œa more productive path than someone not getting vaccinated at all and leaving state service.โ€

Isabella Garcia is the former News Editor for the Portland Mercury. She covered City Hall, transportation, the environment, breaking news, and more.

2 replies on “Over 200 City, County Employees Poised to Lose Their Job Monday Over Vaccine Mandates”

  1. Good riddance. People who can’t be bothered to give a shit about the public they serve (or humanity in general) deserve to be fired from their jobs. Good luck getting a new job without being vaccinated. There is no right to spread disease. There is no right to sicken other people or kill them.

    The Supreme Court decided this in 1905. It’s why smallpox doesn’t exist. And everyone in jobs today refusing vaccines to stop the spread of COVID all had to get vaccinated to attend school in this country. Getting vaccinated is not a hardship. It is something you do as a member of a (so-called) civilized society. Feel free to go live in a hole in the ground and leave the rest of us to get on with our lives.

  2. The County approved 192 religious exemptions and denied only 11. That means that among County employees who claim that their religion prohibits them from being vaccinated, 95% were granted the County’s seal of approval.

    Seems like a rather sudden burst of religiosity in a community not previously known for such things.

    The Mercury should request details of these exemptions (with the individual names redacted), so that the public can find out more about these religions that are so wildly at odds with all the major world faiths.

    What duties will their acolytes be assigned to do? Besides waiving the vaccination requirement, what other accommodations will be required? Do these folks have holidays? Dietary restrictions?

    The County operates three jails, and it’s common for prisoners to ask for accommodation for their religious views, especially dietary ones. These are routinely denied. Are inmates allowed to use this new 95%-approval standard for their claims too?

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