Quebec judge refuses injunction against abandoned vaccine mandate for health workers
MONTREAL — A Quebec Superior Court judge on Monday rejected a request for injunction against the province’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate for health-care workers, nearly two weeks after the government suspended the health order.
Justice Michel Yergeau’s 47-page decision denied the request by unvaccinated health network employees, including nurses, doctors and other workers. The applicants weren’t able to demonstrate that the order wasn’t in the interest of the public, and he said it could enter into force even if there isn’t consensus on it.
It is not for the court, Yergeau wrote, “to rule summarily on proposals which oppose individual rights and what the elected officials consider in the public interest and which leaves room for debate.”
Earlier this month, the Quebec government abandoned its Nov. 15 deadline for health-care staff to be vaccinated or suspended without pay, because it worried the order would significantly reduce services in the overburdened system. Instead, it required unvaccinated staff to be tested three times a week and for new hires to be fully vaccinated.


