The U.S. Navy announced on Thursday it will begin halting reenlistments and transfer orders for sailors currently refusing the COVID-19 vaccines and active-duty sailors will have up until November 14 to either have an approved or pending vaccine exemption request or their second COVID-19 vaccine dose or they will face being discharged from the service. Sailors in the Navy Reserves have until December 14 to receive their second vaccine dose.
(Article by Ryan Morgan republished from
AmericanMilitaryNews.com)
In a
press release, the Navy said after those final vaccination dates pass, it will start processing discharges for sailors who have to that point refused vaccination and don't have a pending or approved exemption.
The Navy said it set up a system specifically for handling sailors who refuse the vaccine, the COVID Consolidated Disposition Authority (CCDA). Adm. William Lescher, Vice Chief of Naval Operations said the CCDA will "ensure a fair and consistent process" for separation determinations.
The Navy said, effective as of the publication of its message, Navy commands will halt any reenlistment or execute orders, except for separations from the Navy, for any sailor who is refusing the vaccine, until the CCDA has handled their case.
The Navy said, "For officers and enlisted serving in Navy leadership roles refusing the vaccine, they will be notified immediately in writing that they have five days to either begin a vaccination series or request an exemption before being relieved and have detachment for cause initiated."
The Navy said those sailors separated only for vaccine refusal will receive no lower than a general discharge under honorable conditions. Such a discharge status could result in the loss of some veterans' benefits.
CCDAs will also have the authority to strip unvaccinated sailors of their warfare qualifications, additional qualification designations (AQD), Navy Enlisted Classifications (NEC), or sub-specialties, "except in cases where removal authority is otherwise authorized by law or Executive Order." CCDA's may also make sailors who refused the vaccine repay the Navy for applicable bonuses, special and incentive pays, and the costs for their training and education.
The press release also said the first flag officers in any Navy chain of command are authorized to temporarily reassign Navy service members who refuse the COVID-19 vaccine, regardless of whether they have a vaccine exemption.
Sailors who are already on terminal leave from the Navy or who begin their terminal leave by the "applicable deadlines are administratively exempted from vaccine requirements."
The Navy's announcement comes nearly two months after the FDA granted full approval to the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine. President Joe Biden and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin then moved to
require COVID-19 vaccines for the entire military. Following their orders, the Department of the Navy announced at the end of August that active-duty sailors and Marines would have 90 days to receive the vaccination and reserve components would have 120 days, or else they could face disciplinary actions.
While the timeline the Navy set November 28 and December 28 as the dates active and reserve sailors must be fully vaccinated, the Navy said sailors aren't considered fully vaccinated until they've completed 14-day waiting period following their second of two vaccine doses. That is why November 14 and December 14 are considered the last days for active and reserve sailors to receive their second vaccine doses.
The Navy said about 98 percent of active-duty have completed or started the two-dose COVID-19 vaccination series.
According to data reviewed by the Washington Post, vaccination rates increased rapidly in the wake of Biden's mandate, but
hundreds of thousands of service members across the various military branches are still unvaccinated.
A provision in the House version of the 2022 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) seeks to guarantee any service member separated only for refusing the vaccine will only receive an honorable discharge, which would preserve their veteran's benefits.
Biden has come out in opposition to the provision, saying it would "limit a commander's options for enforcing good order and discipline" against service members who refuse the vaccine.
Some point out that the FDA's approval specifies only Pfizer's "
COMIRNATY" vaccine, and not the unnamed Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine that has been available for nearly a year and remains under emergency use authorization. The existing Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is identical to the COMIRNATY vaccine, however – the only difference is the legal name and the packaging. The two are considered interchangeable due to the exact same formulation, according to the FDA.
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