The Navy has discharged 240 sailors for refusal to abide by the military’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate, the military branch said on Feb. 9.
Of the discharged, all but one were active-duty.
Twenty-two were discharged during their initial training periods, or within their first 180 days of active duty.
The Navy mandated active-duty sailors be fully vaccinated for COVID-19 by Nov. 28, 2021. Reserve troops had until Dec. 28, 2021. The Navy started discharging sailors in January.
Some sailors have been waiting on decisions on exemption requests from the mandate on religious or medical grounds.
The Navy has received 3,348 religious exemption applications from active-duty troops alone but still has not granted a single religious exemption. Officials have granted 10 permanent medical exemptions, 250 temporary medical exemptions, and 50 administrative exemptions.
Approximately 8,329 sailors remain unvaccinated as of Feb. 9, or about 2.4 percent of the force.
“The Navy provides a religious accommodation process, but by all accounts, it is theater. The Navy has not granted a religious exemption to any vaccine in recent memory. It merely rubber stamps each denial,” U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor, a George W. Bush nominee, wrote in his ruling.
Military officials argue judges shouldn’t have jurisdiction over the military’s health and readiness policies and that plaintiffs didn’t exhaust all of their efforts, assertions O'Connor and at least one other judge have rejected.
U.S. health officials say everybody 12 or older should get a booster when they’re eligible to maximize protection against the virus, which causes COVID-19.