New York City's unvaccinated workers face termination
About 3,000 municipal workers in New York City -- less than 1% of the city's workforce —- face termination Friday after refusing to abide by a COVID-19 vaccine mandate.
The requirement, established under former New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, applies to municipal employees hired after Aug. 2, 2021, who were told to be vaccinated against COVID-19 as a condition of employment and to unvaccinated police officers, correction officers, firefighters and others who opted to forego city health benefits and are currently on leave because they are not vaccinated.
The mandate achieved a vaccination rate among municipal workers of more than 95%. A number of exceptions were approved in recent months.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams said Thursday that some workers initially facing termination had submitted their proof of vaccination, so the final number wasn't yet clear. He reiterated that the stragglers aren't being fired but are "quitting."
"The responsibility is clear," Adams told reporters Thursday. "We said it. If you were hired, you get this job, you have to be vaccinated. If you are not following the rules, you are making that decision. You are making the decision that you are not going to follow the rules of getting vaccinated. And that is a decision they are making."
"I want them to stay, I want them to be employees of the city," he added. "But they have to follow the rules."
-ABC News' Mark Crudele and Aaron Katersky