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Even with a months-long easing in the coronavirus pandemic, vaccine mandates remain controversial in some quarters. Rob Astorino, a Republican candidate for governor of New York, accused the woman he wants to oust, Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul, of firing some 34,000 health care workers for not complying with vaccine mandates. In a tweet posted Jan. 20, Astorino said of Hochul that none of your mandates have helped beat ‘this surge.’ Among other criticisms, Astorino’s tweet blamed Hochul for firing 34K HC workers. None of your mandates have helped beat this surge. They only beat people down & 400K have beat a path to the exits. Your record? ❌ Most active COVID cases in 🇺🇸 ❌ Masking 2-yr olds ❌ Firing 34K HC workers ❌ Prioritizing C19 meds by race My plan: https://t.co/5XDP4omFAy https://t.co/Z1g4Y3owj2 — Rob Astorino (@RobAstorino) January 20, 2022 A closer look shows that Astorino has exaggerated this figure. Under Hochul’s predecessor as governor, Democrat Andrew Cuomo, New York State health care workers were placed under a vaccine mandate. The mandate required health care workers to be vaccinated by Sept. 27, 2021. On Oct. 5. Hochul — who had been elevated to governor following Cuomo’s resignation — extended the mandate to apply to workers in mental health and disability services. Under the new mandate , health care workers in these facilities had until Nov. 1 to get at least one vaccination. The Astorino campaign said its tweet was based on New York State Health Department data showing that 33,982 health care workers were inactive because of the vaccine mandate. We believe Rob's claims are completely accurate, Phil Oliva, a spokesperson for the Astorio campaign, told us in an email. However, the Astorino campaign’s reading of the numbers was faulty. The New York State Health Department told PolitiFact New York that approximately 3% of health workers were furloughed, terminated, or opted to resign or retire. Data released by Hochul’s office on Oct. 13 showed that the number of health care workers who had left their jobs was 33,982, but that the number who had specifically been fired was 10,555. That’s less than one-third of the total loss in health care workers. In public comments on Oct. 13, 2021, Hochul reiterated that the number of lost jobs were greater than just those who were fired. It includes people who were terminated, resignations, people deciding to retire, and people who are on furlough waiting to see the outcome of litigation against the mandate. In addition, it was up to employers, rather than the governor, to determine what happened to employees who did not comply, said Erin Silk, a spokesperson for the New York State Health Department. Those plans could include termination, but that was not required, Silk said. Our ruling Astorino said Hochul’s record included firing 34,000 health care workers. About 34,000 health care workers in New York state did leave their job after the vaccine mandate was enacted. However, less than a third of those could be described as being due to firing. About two-thirds of the lost jobs stemmed from resignations, retirements, or furloughs by employees waiting to see how litigation against the mandate played out. We rate the statement Half True.
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