Skip to Content

US Navy can no longer separate service members who are unvaccinated and sought religious exemption, federal judge rules

<i>Seaman Jackson Adkins/US Navy</i><br/>
USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78)
Seaman Jackson Adkins/US Navy

By Ellie Kaufman, CNN

The US Navy can no longer separate service members who are unvaccinated and have sought a religious exemption from getting a Covid-19 vaccine, a federal judge in Texas ruled on Monday.

A group of Navy SEALs brought the original suit against the US government last fall after the US military implemented a Covid-19 vaccine mandate. The group of SEALs asked that they not be reprimanded or denied deployments because they had requested a religious exemption to not be inoculated against the coronavirus, and it had not been granted yet.

In January, the lawyers representing the Navy SEALs filed a class action request, asking that all US Navy service members who have requested religious exemptions, over 4,000 of them, not be reprimanded or separated from service for requesting a religious exemption.

The federal judge from the Northern District of Texas, Reed O’Connor, granted the class action request in a court filing on Monday.

The Supreme Court last week agreed to temporarily freeze part of the lower Northern District of Texas court’s opinion requiring the Navy to deploy the Navy SEALs in the case, even though they remained unvaccinated per their religious exemption request. In O’Connor’s filing granting the class action, he issued an order in line with that Supreme Court move and said that the Navy could still take into account the service members’ vaccination status in deployment decisions.

While the Navy can no longer separate service members for requesting a religious exemption to remain unvaccinated, the Navy is not required to deploy unvaccinated service members, per the Supreme Court’s ruling.

The Navy released updated guidance to comply with the district court order granting the class action request on March 30. In accordance with the court order, the Navy will not impart any “adverse administrative consequences” on service members who have requested religious exemption from the Covid-19 vaccine.

According to a news release from the Navy, 4,282 active-duty US Navy service members and 3,267 US Navy Ready Reserve service members remain unvaccinated as of March 30, and as of March 24, the Navy has separated 732 members from the service for “refusing the COVID-19 vaccine.”

There have been 4,187 religious accommodation requests from active-duty US Navy service members and US Navy reserve members, the release said. There have been zero religious exemptions granted for active-duty or reserve Navy service members.

The deadline for active-duty US Navy service members to be fully vaccinated against Covid-19 had been November 28, 2021 and for reserve members, it was December 28, 2021.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a WarnerMedia Company. All rights reserved.

CNN’s Tierney Sneed contributed to this report.

Article Topic Follows: CNN - Politics

Jump to comments ↓

CNN Newsource

BE PART OF THE CONVERSATION

KION 46 is committed to providing a forum for civil and constructive conversation.

Please keep your comments respectful and relevant. You can review our Community Guidelines by clicking here

If you would like to share a story idea, please submit it here.

Skip to content