Petition opposing Yukon's COVID-19 vaccine mandate triggers applause, disruptions in legislative assembly
CBC
Business in the Yukon legislative assembly had barely gotten underway Monday afternoon when deputy speaker Annie Blake called a recess after a man in the gallery stood up and began yelling in the direction of elected officials.
His stand came shortly after three people walked out, one sprinkling expletives as he went, following Blake's reminder that masks were mandatory for members of the public in the gallery — a gallery, for the first time since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, that was packed with dozens of people.
The majority were there to support a petition organized by former federal Conservative candidate Jonas Smith, opposing the Yukon government's COVID-19 vaccine mandate set to come into effect at the end of the month.
"I'm hoping to demonstrate to the government that their vaccine mandate is going to negatively affect thousands of Yukoners ... There has to be a better way to both protect our most vulnerable as well as respect people's own personal health choices," Smith told CBC News during a rally outside the legislative assembly building earlier in the day.
"... I don't believe in living in a two-tiered society. I believe that the world needs less discrimination and not more."
Smith added that he believed measures like staying home when sick, physical distancing and enforcing capacity limits in public spaces were already effective at keeping COVID-19 at bay.
Starting Nov. 30, all public servants and front-line healthcare workers except those with medical exemptions, must be fully vaccinated against COVID-19. As of Nov. 1, the government had not clarified what would happen to employees who don't have both shots, though Premier Sandy Silver said during a media availability that details would be coming shortly.
The opposition Yukon Party has come out against the mandate, with leader Currie Dixon saying that while he believed COVID-19 vaccines are safe and effective, he didn't believe they should be mandatory.
The Yukon Employees' Union, which represents about 6,000 workers, has also expressed concerns, stating on its website that while "a vaccinated workforce [is] our best recourse for increased occupational health and safety," it "does not support options that lead to loss of pay, disciplinary action or that fail to consider all reasonable alternatives."
The union has since filed a grievance challenging the "arbitrary nature" of the government's announcement.
Smith's petition, signed by more than 2,300 people and tabled in the legislative assembly by Watson Lake MLA Patti McLeod, urges the Yukon government to "immediately rescind any and all requirements for mandatory COVID-19 vaccination."
The tabling was met with a round of applause from people in the gallery, triggering another reminder from Blake that visitor participation was not permitted.
It came after clerk Dan Cable spent the majority of the recess going back-and-forth with people in the gallery, explaining that while public attendance was encouraged, visitors still had to follow rules to ensure house business could keep moving.
A handful of visitors, between rounds of applause and cheering, questioned Cable on why people in the gallery had to be masked when the politicians seated a few metres away didn't.