*2 Before: L IVINGSTON , Chief Judge , K EARSE , and L EE , Circuit Judges .
In these two cases on appeal, fifteen teachers and school administrators challenge the denial of motions to preliminarily enjoin the enforcement of an order issued by the New York City Commissioner of Health and Mental Hygiene mandating that individuals who work in New York City schools be vaccinated against the COVID-19 virus (“Vaccine Mandate”). Plaintiffs-Appellants challenge the Vaccine Mandate on religious-freedom grounds and principally contend (1) that it is facially infirm under the First Amendment; and (2) that the procedures by which their religious accommodation claims were considered are unconstitutional as applied to them. We reject the Plaintiffs-Appellants’ facial challenge but agree that they have established an entitlement to preliminary relief on their as-applied claim. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is VACATED and the case REMANDED for further proceedings. Interim relief *3 ordered by the motions panel pending appeal is continued, with the consent of Defendant-Appellee the City of New York.
F OR P LAINTIFFS -A PPELLANTS : In No. 21-2678: S UJATA S IDHU G IBSON , The
Gibson Law Firm, Ithaca, NY; In No. 21-2711: B ARRY B LACK , Sarah Elizabeth Child, and Jonathan R. Nelson, Nelson Madden Black LLP, New York, NY .
F OR D EFENDANTS -A PPELLEES : S USAN P AULSON , Assistant Corporation
Counsel, Richard Paul Dearing, Assistant Corporation Counsel, and Devin Slack, New York City Law Department, New York, NY.
P ER C URIAM :
These two cases on appeal, which we heard in tandem, concern the denial of preliminary injunctive relief in connection with an order issued by the New York City Commissioner of Health and Mental Hygiene (the “Commissioner”), mandating that individuals who work in New York City schools be vaccinated against the COVID-19 virus (the “Vaccine Mandate” or “Mandate”). Plaintiffs- Appellants (“Plaintiffs”) are fifteen teachers and school administrators who object to receiving the COVID-19 vaccine on religious grounds. Plaintiffs sought, but were denied, religious accommodations. They have sued the City of New York (the “City”), certain officials, and the New York City Department of Education *4 (collectively, the “Defendants”), challenging both the Vaccine Mandate on its face and the process by which their requests for religious accommodations were denied. The United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Caproni, J. ) denied motions for preliminary injunctions in both cases, but a motions panel of this Court, with the consent of the City, thereafter granted Plaintiffs substantial provisional relief pending appeal.
For the reasons set forth herein, we conclude that the Vaccine Mandate does not violate the First Amendment on its face, and we thus agree with the district court to this extent. We nevertheless vacate the district court’s orders of October 12 and 28, 2021, denying preliminary relief, and we concur with and continue the interim relief granted by the motions panel as to these fifteen individuals. For the present, Plaintiffs have established their entitlement to preliminary relief on the narrow ground that the procedures employed to assess their religious accommodation claims were likely constitutionally infirm as applied to them. We remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
BACKGROUND I. Factual Background On August 24, 2021, the Commissioner issued an order requiring generally that Department of Education (“DOE”) and/or City employees or contractors who *5 work in DOE schools or DOE buildings be vaccinated against the COVID-19 virus. The Vaccine Mandate provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
1. No later than September 27, 2021 or prior to beginning employment, all DOE staff must provide proof to the DOE that: a. they have been fully vaccinated; or
b. they have received a single dose vaccine, even if two weeks have not passed since they received the vaccine; or
c. they have received the first dose of a two-dose vaccine, and they must additionally provide proof that they have received the second dose of that vaccine within 45 days after receipt of the first dose.[ [1] ] …
5. For the purposes of this Order:
a. “DOE staff” means (i) full or part-time employees of the DOE, and (ii) DOE interns (including student teachers) and volunteers.
b. “Fully vaccinated” means at least two weeks have passed after a person received a single dose of a one-dose series, or the second dose of a two-dose series, of a COVID-19 vaccine approved or authorized for use by the Food and Drug Administration or World Health Organization.
c. “DOE school setting” includes any indoor location, including but not limited to DOE buildings, where instruction is provided to DOE *6 students in public school kindergarten through grade 12, including residences of pupils receiving home instruction and places where care for children is provided through DOE’s [Living for the Young Family Through Education] program.
d. “Staff of contractors of DOE and the City” means a full or part-time employee, intern or volunteer of a contractor of DOE or another City agency who works in-person in a DOE school setting or other DOE building, and includes individuals working as independent contractors.
e. “Works in-person” means an individual spends any portion of their work time physically present in a DOE school setting or other DOE building. It does not include individuals who enter a DOE school setting or other DOE location only to deliver or pickup items, unless the individual is otherwise subject to this Order. It also does not include individuals present in DOE school settings or DOE buildings to make repairs at times when students are not present in the building, unless the individual is otherwise subject to this Order.
Joint App’x 177–79. [2] DOE serves approximately one million students across the City, and the order was consistent with guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (“CDC”) that school teachers and staff should be vaccinated as soon as possible so as to permit schools to resume normal operations safely.
On September 1, 2021, the United Federation of Teachers (“UFT”) filed a formal objection to the Vaccine Mandate on the ground that it fails to provide any medical or religious accommodations. After failing to resolve their dispute *7 through mediation, the UFT and the City moved to arbitration. On September 10, an independent arbitrator (the “Arbitrator”) issued an award (the “Arbitration Award”) setting forth a process and standards (“Accommodation Standards”) for determining, as relevant to this appeal, religious accommodations to the Vaccine Mandate. [3]
The Accommodation Standards allowed employees to request a religious accommodation by submitting a request that is “documented in writing by a religious official (e.g., clergy).” Joint App’x 197. Requests “shall be denied where the leader of the religious organization has spoken publicly in favor of the vaccine, where the documentation is readily available (e.g., from an online source), or where the objection is personal, political, or philosophical in nature.” Id. [4] *8 The Accommodation Standards further provide that requests “shall be considered for recognized and established religious organizations (e.g., Christian Scientists).” Id.
The Arbitration Award establishes a two-step process for resolving a request for a religious accommodation. First, the DOE renders an “initial determination of eligibility for an exemption or accommodation.” [5] Joint App’x 197; Defendants Br. 7. Then, if the employee’s request is denied, the employee can appeal the DOE’s determination to a panel of arbitrators selected by the Arbitrator. The Arbitration Award states that its procedures are to operate “[a]s instead be required to produce documentation such as, for example, a letter from a religious official the employee knows personally. While the text of this provision is ambiguous in our view, we adopt the district court’s interpretation for purposes of this opinion. The parties are free to argue for a different interpretation before the district court on remand.
[5] At times, the parties appear to use the terms “exemption” and “accommodation”
interchangeably. As we use those terms, however, exemptions are different from
accommodations. The Vaccine Mandate includes
exemptions
for certain objectively
defined categories of people, like delivery workers. Those who are exempted from the
Mandate are not subject to its terms. By contrast, employees who
are
subject to the
Mandate can request accommodations under Title VII and analogous state and city law.
See infra
at 43–44 (discussing Title VII’s requirement to provide reasonable
accommodations);
see also We The Patriots USA, Inc. v. Hochul
,
an alternative to any statutory reasonable accommodation process.” [6] Joint App’x 194–95. Employees who are granted an accommodation
shall be permitted the opportunity to remain on payroll, but in no event required/permitted to enter a school building while unvaccinated, as long as the vaccine mandate is in effect. Such employees may be assigned to work outside of a school building (e.g., at DOE administrative offices) to perform academic or administrative functions as determined by the DOE while the exemption and/or accommodation is in place.
Id. at 200.
In addition to setting forth a process for granting religious accommodations, the Arbitration Award scheduled a series of deadlines for employees to comply with the Vaccine Mandate. First, it provided that as to any unvaccinated employee denied an accommodation, the DOE could place the employee on “leave without pay effective September 28, 2021, or upon denial of appeal, whichever [was] later, through November 30, 2021.” Joint App’x 201. “During such leave *10 without pay,” employees “shall continue to be eligible for health insurance” but “are prohibited from engaging in gainful employment.” Id. at 202.
From September 28 through October 29, any employee who was on leave without pay “due to vaccination status” could opt to separate from the DOE. Id. at 204. Employees who elected to separate were eligible for certain benefits but were required to file “a waiver of [their] rights to challenge [their] involuntary resignation, including, but not limited to, through a contractual or statutory disciplinary process.” Id. Then, from November 1 through November 30, any employee on leave without pay due to vaccination status could “alternately opt to extend the leave through September 5, 2022,” during which time they would remain eligible for health insurance. Id. at 205. To extend their leave, however, the employees were required to execute “a waiver of [their] rights to challenge [their] voluntary resignation, including, but not limited to, through a contractual or statutory disciplinary process.” Id. “Employees who have not returned by September 5, 2022, shall be deemed to have voluntarily resigned.” Id. “Beginning December 1, 2021, the DOE shall seek to unilaterally separate employees who have not opted into separation . . . .” Id.
On September 15, the Vaccine Mandate was amended to provide: “Nothing in this Order shall be construed to prohibit any reasonable accommodations otherwise required by law.” [7] Joint App’x 184. The amended Vaccine Mandate also requires “all visitors to a DOE school building” to show proof that they have received at least the first dose of a two-dose vaccine prior to entering any DOE building. Id. at 183. The amended Mandate excludes certain groups from the definition of a “visitor,” including students, parents (in certain circumstances), deliverymen, repairmen, emergency responders, “[i]ndividuals entering for the purpose of COVID-19 vaccination,” “[i]ndividuals who are not eligible to receive a COVID-19 vaccine because of their age,” voters, and certain election-related personnel. Id. at 184.
II. Procedural History
On September 21 and October 27, 2021, Plaintiffs, fifteen DOE teachers or school administrators who sought and were denied religious accommodations *12 pursuant to the process outlined herein, filed these two lawsuits, Kane , 21-cv-7863, and Keil , 21-cv-8773. Plaintiffs allege, inter alia , the violation of their First Amendment rights. On October 12, the district court denied the Kane Plaintiffs’ request for a preliminary injunction, ruling principally that Plaintiffs were unlikely to prevail on their claim that the Vaccine Mandate was unconstitutional on its face. [8] On October 28, the district court denied a similar request for a preliminary injunction by the Plaintiffs in Keil “[f]or the same reasons discussed in” Kane on the ground that the two cases “raise[] many of the same claims . . . .” Joint App’x 8.
On October 25 and 28, 2021, Plaintiffs appealed the district court’s denial of their requests for a preliminary injunction and requested an emergency injunction pending appeal. A motions panel heard oral argument on November 10, during which the City conceded that the Accommodation Standards are “constitutionally suspect.” The panel then solicited supplemental letter briefing. Each party *13 attached to its letter brief a proposed order for relief pending appeal. ECF No. 53 in No. 21-2678, at 5–6; ECF No. 65 in No. 21-2711, at 10–13.
On November 15, 2021, the motions panel issued an order (“Motions Panel Order”) largely tracking the City’s proposed order and referring the matter to this merits panel. [9] The Motions Panel Order provides: “Pending further order by the merits panel . . . Plaintiffs shall receive fresh consideration of their requests for a religious accommodation.” Motions Panel Order ¶ 1. The Order sets forth a process pursuant to which Plaintiffs’ requests will be promptly adjudicated “by a central citywide panel,” which will adhere to the standards of, inter alia , Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, rather than “the challenged criteria set forth in . . . the arbitration award . . . .” Id. ¶ 2. The Motions Panel Order also stays the deadline for Plaintiffs to opt into the extended leave program with any required waiver. Id. ¶ 4. It also provides that if a plaintiff’s request for religious accommodation is granted by the citywide panel, the plaintiff will receive backpay running from the date the plaintiff was placed on leave without pay. Id. ¶ 5.
We heard oral argument on November 22, 2021 and now vacate the district court’s decision denying Plaintiffs preliminary injunctive relief. We leave in *14 place all interim relief ordered by the Motions Panel, thus enjoining the City from terminating Plaintiffs or requiring them to opt into the extended leave program while they are afforded the opportunity to have their religious accommodation requests reconsidered. We remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
DISCUSSION
“When a preliminary injunction will affect government action taken in the
public interest pursuant to a statute or regulatory scheme, the moving party must
demonstrate (1) irreparable harm absent injunctive relief, (2) a likelihood of
success on the merits, and (3) public interest weighing in favor of granting the
injunction.”
Agudath Isr. of Am. v. Cuomo
,
The “purpose” of a preliminary injunction “is not to award the movant the
ultimate relief sought in the suit but is only to preserve the status quo by
preventing during the pendency of the suit the occurrence of that irreparable sort
of harm which the movant fears will occur.”
New York v. Nuclear Regulatory
Comm’n
, 550 F.2d 745, 754 (2d Cir. 1977);
see also
11A C HARLES A LAN W RIGHT , A RTHUR R. M ILLER & M ARY K AY K ANE , F EDERAL P RACTICE AND P ROCEDURE , § 2947
(3d ed. Apr. 2021 update) (“[A] preliminary injunction is an injunction that is
issued to protect plaintiff from irreparable injury and to preserve the court’s power
to render a meaningful decision after a trial on the merits.”). “Crafting a
preliminary injunction is an exercise of discretion and judgment, often dependent
as much on the equities of a given case as the substance of the legal issues it
presents.”
Trump v. Int’l Refugee Assistance Project
,
I. Likelihood of Success on the Merits
The Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment provides that “Congress
shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof . . . .” U.S. C ONST ., amend. I;
see Cantwell v. Connecticut
, 310 U.S.
296, 303 (1940) (incorporating the Free Exercise Clause against the states). “The
free exercise of religion means, first and foremost, the right to believe and profess
whatever religious doctrine one desires.”
Employment Div., Dept. of Human
Resources of Oregon v. Smith
,
This protection, however, “does not relieve an individual of the obligation
to comply with a valid and neutral law of general applicability.”
Smith
, 494 U.S.
at 879. Neutral and generally applicable laws are subject only to rational-basis
review.
Cent. Rabbinical Cong.
,
Here, Plaintiffs make two principal claims: (1) that the Vaccine Mandate is facially unconstitutional; and (2) that even assuming that the Vaccine Mandate is not facially unconstitutional, their First Amendment rights were violated by virtue of the procedures set forth in the Arbitration Award, which were used in the evaluation of their accommodation requests. We conclude that Plaintiffs have not shown a likelihood of success on their facial challenge to the Vaccine Mandate. At this juncture, however, they have demonstrated a likelihood of success on their as-applied challenge to the proceedings used in assessing their accommodation requests.
A. Vaccine Mandate
1. Neutrality The Vaccine Mandate, in all its iterations, is neutral and generally applicable. To determine neutrality, we begin by examining the Mandate’s text, “for the minimum requirement of neutrality is that a law not discriminate on its *18 face.” Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of Hialeah , 508 U.S. 520, 533 (1993). Facial neutrality alone, however, is not enough. A law that is facially neutral will still run afoul of the neutrality principle if it “targets religious conduct for distinctive treatment.” Id. at 534, 546. We thus also consider whether there are “subtle departures” from religious neutrality, as well as “the historical background of the decision under challenge, the specific series of events leading to the enactment or official policy in question, and the legislative or administrative history, including contemporaneous statements made by members of the decision- making body.” Id. at 534, 540.
The Vaccine Mandate is neutral on its face. It applies to “all DOE staff,” as well as City employees and contractors of DOE and the City who work in DOE school settings. Thus, the Mandate does not single out employees who decline vaccination on religious grounds. Its restrictions apply equally to those who choose to remain unvaccinated for any reason. [12]
*19
Nor do New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s statements to the media render
the Vaccine Mandate non-neutral. Plaintiffs seize on statements the Mayor made
at a press conference suggesting that religious adherents should be vaccinated
because the Pope supports vaccination and that accommodations to the Mandate
will only be afforded to religions with long-standing objections to vaccination.
But these statements reflect nothing more than the Mayor’s personal belief that
religious accommodations will be rare, as well as “general support for religious
principles that [he] believes guide community members to care for one another by
receiving the COVID-19 vaccine.”
We The Patriots
,
2. General Applicability
The Vaccine Mandate is also generally applicable. A law may not be
generally applicable under
Smith
for either of two reasons: first, “if it invites the
government to consider the particular reasons for a person’s conduct by providing
a mechanism for individualized exemptions”; or, second, “if it prohibits religious
conduct while permitting secular conduct that undermines the government’s
asserted interests in a similar way.”
Fulton
,
“[A]n exemption is not individualized simply because it contains express
exceptions for objectively defined categories of persons.”
We The Patriots
, 2021
WL 5121983, at *14 (quoting
303 Creative LLC v. Elenis
,
Nor do these exemptions treat secular conduct more favorably than
comparable religious conduct. “[G]overnment regulations are not neutral and
generally applicable . . . whenever they treat any comparable secular activity more
favorably than religious exercise.”
Tandon v. Newsom
,
Plaintiffs finally argue that the Vaccine Mandate is not generally applicable because it applies only to DOE employees and contractors. But neither the Supreme Court, our court, nor any other court of which we are aware has ever hinted that a law must apply to all people, everywhere, at all times, to be “generally applicable.” As counsel conceded at oral argument, a law can be generally applicable when, as here, it applies to an entire class of people. Plaintiffs have not explained why DOE employees and other comparable *23 employees are not such a class, so we reject their arguments that the law is not generally applicable.
3. Rational Basis Review
Because Plaintiffs have not established, at this stage, that they are likely to
succeed in showing that the Vaccine Mandate is not neutral or generally applicable
on its face, rational basis review applies.
Cent. Rabbinical Cong.
,
The Vaccine Mandate plainly satisfies this standard. Attempting to safely
reopen schools amid a pandemic that has hit New York City particularly hard, the
City decided, in accordance with CDC guidance, to require vaccination for all DOE
staff as an emergency measure. This was a reasonable exercise of the State’s
power to act to protect the public health.
See We The Patriots
,
B. Arbitration Award and Accommodation Standards Plaintiffs also contend that the Vaccine Mandate is unconstitutional as applied to them through the Arbitration Award. The City concedes that the Arbitration Award, as applied to Plaintiffs, “may” have been “constitutionally suspect,” Defendants Br. 37–38, and its defense of that process is half-hearted at *25 best. Indeed, it offers no real defense of the Accommodation Standards at all. The City has also consented to the relief ordered by the Motions Panel, under which the Arbitration Award and its results will be set aside and Plaintiffs will receive de novo consideration of their accommodation requests.
We confirm the City’s “susp[icion]” that the Arbitration Award procedures likely violated the First Amendment as applied to these Plaintiffs. We emphasize, however, that this determination is exceedingly narrow – simply that Plaintiffs, at this juncture, have sufficiently established a likelihood of success so as to meet this prong of the preliminary injunction standard. Given the City’s concessions, and in the interest of providing timely guidance to the parties, we need not and do not address any other constitutional objection to the Arbitration Award that Plaintiffs raise. [15]
1. Neutrality
We conclude, first, that the procedures specified in the Arbitration Award
and applied to Plaintiffs are not neutral. The Supreme Court has explained that
“the government, if it is to respect the Constitution’s guarantee of free exercise,
cannot impose regulations that are hostile to the religious beliefs of affected
citizens and cannot act in a manner that passes judgment upon or presupposes the
illegitimacy of religious beliefs and practices.”
Masterpiece Cakeshop, Ltd. v. Colo.
Civil Rights Comm’n
,
We have grave doubts about whether the Accommodation Standards are consistent with this bedrock First Amendment principle. They provide that “[e]xemption requests shall be considered for recognized and established religious organizations” and that “requests shall be denied where the leader of the religious organization has spoken publicly in favor of the vaccine, where the documentation 35. Defendants, however, failed to raise this argument below and fail to explain why the unions would be necessary parties in their brief in this Court.
Given both the City’s consent to the interim relief afforded here and the failure to
develop these arguments before this Court, we decline to affirm on either ground.
See
United States v. Morton
,
Denying an individual a religious accommodation based on someone else’s
publicly expressed religious views — even the leader of her faith —runs afoul of
the Supreme Court’s teaching that “[i]t is not within the judicial ken to question
the centrality of particular beliefs or practices to a faith,
or the validity of particular
*28
litigants' interpretations of those creeds
.”
Hernandez v. Commissioner
,
2. General Applicability
Nor does it appear that such procedures were generally applicable to all
those seeking religious accommodation. In
Smith
, the Supreme Court held that
an unemployment compensation system with discretionary, individualized
exemptions “lent itself to individualized government assessment of the reasons
for the relevant conduct” and was thus not generally applicable.
Plaintiffs have offered evidence that the arbitrators reviewing their requests for religious accommodations had substantial discretion over whether to grant *29 those requests. Sometimes, arbitrators strictly adhered to the Accommodation Standards. Other times, arbitrators apparently ignored them, such as by granting an exemption to an applicant who identified as a Roman Catholic, even though the Pope has expressed support for vaccination. Cf. We The Patriots , 2021 WL 5121983, at *14 (denying a motion for a preliminary injunction where medical exemptions were granted exclusively in accordance with a uniform certification process). In our view, and based on the record to date, Plaintiffs have thus shown that they are likely to succeed on their claim that the Arbitration Award procedures as applied to them were not generally applicable.
3. Strict Scrutiny
Because the accommodation procedures here were neither neutral nor
generally applicable, as applied, we apply strict scrutiny at this stage of the
proceeding. Under such scrutiny, these procedures are constitutional as applied
only if “‘narrowly tailored’ to serve a ‘compelling’ state interest.”
Roman Cath.
Diocese
,
The question is thus whether the Arbitration Award’s procedures, as
implemented and applied to Plaintiffs, were narrowly tailored to serve the
government’s interest.
Narrow tailoring requires the government to
demonstrate that a policy is the “least restrictive means” of achieving its objective.
Thomas
,
These procedures cannot survive strict scrutiny because denying religious accommodations based on the criteria outlined in the Accommodation Standards, such as whether an applicant can produce a letter from a religious official, is not narrowly tailored to serve the government’s interest in preventing the spread of COVID-19. The City offers no meaningful argument otherwise.
II. Irreparable Harm
A. Motions Panel Order Plaintiffs have also shown that they would suffer irreparable harm absent the relief ordered by the Motions Panel. They have demonstrated that they were denied religious accommodations — pursuant to what the City has conceded was a “constitutionally suspect” process — and were consequently threatened with imminent termination if they did not waive their right to sue. This is sufficient *31 to show irreparable harm. See Am. Postal Workers Union v. United States Postal Serv. , 766 F.2d 715, 722 (2d Cir. 1985) (noting that “the threat of permanent discharge” can cause irreparable harm in the First Amendment context). [18]
B. Plaintiffs’ Request for Broader Relief
Plaintiffs contend that this interim relief does not go far enough. They argue that they are entitled to an injunction immediately reinstating them and *32 granting them backpay pending de novo consideration of their requests for religious accommodations. Because Plaintiffs have not shown that they would suffer irreparable harm absent this broader relief, we are not persuaded.
At the outset, we clarify what is at stake at this point in the litigation. The City has committed to providing “fresh consideration” and prompt resolution of Plaintiffs’ requests for religious accommodation. Motions Panel Order ¶ 1. Under the Motions Panel Order, the City must adjudicate these requests within two weeks of Plaintiffs’ submission of any documents they are permitted (but not required) to submit in support of their accommodation requests. Id. ¶ 3. The City may not terminate Plaintiffs or require them to opt-in to the extended leave program (and thereby waive their right to sue) while their requests are pending. Id. ¶ 4. The City has also affirmed that Plaintiffs who receive accommodations will be reinstated and receive all back pay and other benefits to which they are entitled. The question before us is thus whether additional preliminary relief is required until the City can decide Plaintiffs’ renewed requests for a religious accommodation over the next few weeks.
We conclude that no such relief is required. Plaintiffs contend that they
will be irreparably harmed if we do not reinstate them during this period. We
*33
disagree. Though Plaintiffs will continue to be on leave without pay while the
City reconsiders their requests for religious accommodations, they have not
shown that this amounts to an
irreparable
harm in the circumstances here. “In
government personnel cases,” like this one, “we ‘apply a particularly stringent
standard for irreparable injury’ and pay special attention to whether the interim
relief will remedy any irreparable harm that is found.”
Mullins v. City of N.Y.
, 307
F. App’x 585, 587–88 (2d Cir. 2009) (quoting
Moore
, 409 F.3d at 512 n.6, in turn
quoting
Am. Postal
,
Applying these principles here, Plaintiffs are not entitled to reinstatement
while the City reconsiders their requests for religious accommodations. In
Savage
, we held that even an “interim discharge” is insufficient to show irreparable
harm in the government employment context.
In support of their argument that they are entitled to broader relief, Plaintiffs
contend that “[t]he loss of First Amendment freedoms, for even minimal periods
of time, unquestionably constitutes irreparable injury.”
Elrod v. Burns
, 427 U.S.
347, 373 (1976) (plurality opinion).
But cf. Does 1-6
, 16 F.4th at 37 (“Even if,
arguendo, these claims [including a First Amendment claim] presumptively cause
irreparable harm, we think the state has overcome any such presumption.”);
Bronx
Household of Faith v. Bd. of Educ.
,
We do not gainsay the principle that those who are unable to exercise their
First Amendment rights are irreparably injured
per se
. But this principle is not
applicable to the present case. The City is not threatening to vaccinate Plaintiffs
*35
against their will and despite their religious beliefs, which would unquestionably
constitute irreparable harm. Plaintiffs instead face economic harms, principally
a loss of income, while the City reconsiders their request for religious
accommodations. “It is well settled, however, that adverse employment
consequences,” like the loss of income accompanying a suspension without pay,
“are not the type of harm that usually warrants injunctive relief because economic
harm resulting from employment actions is typically compensable with money
damages.”
We The Patriots
,
For that reason, this case is different from other pandemic-era cases that
have found irreparable harm based on First Amendment violations.
See, e.g.
,
Roman Cath. Diocese
,
Not so here. Plaintiffs are not required to perform or abstain from any action that violates their religious beliefs. Because Plaintiffs have refused to get vaccinated, they are on leave without pay. The resulting loss of income undoubtedly harms Plaintiffs, but that harm is not irreparable. See Sampson , 415 U.S. at 91, 92 n.68 (“[L]oss of income[,] . . . an insufficiency of savings or difficulties in immediately obtaining other employment . . . will not [ordinarily] support a finding of irreparable injury, however severely they may affect a particular individual.”). [20]
III. Public Interest
We briefly address the remaining preliminary injunction factor, the public
interest. The public interest weighs in favor of the relief granted by the Motions
Panel. To the extent Plaintiffs were denied religious accommodations pursuant
to a concededly “constitutionally suspect” process, the public interest favors
affording them an opportunity for reconsideration.
See Agudath
,
injunctions are appropriate only to prevent prospective harm until the trial court can decide the case on the merits. Plaintiffs’ request for backpay is (as the term backpay suggests) entirely retrospective. We would thus deny Plaintiffs’ request for backpay at this stage even if Plaintiffs had shown that their economic harms were irreparable.
IV. Plaintiffs’ Remaining Arguments A. “Similarly Situated” Individuals
Plaintiffs also argue that we should order sweeping injunctive relief that extends to thousands of supposedly “similarly situated” nonparties to this litigation. We disagree. To start, the City has represented that it “is making an opportunity for fresh consideration available more broadly to Department of Education employees who unsuccessfully sought religious [accommodations] pursuant to the arbitration award’s appeal process.” Defendants Br. 27. “Those employees will be granted the same opportunity” as Plaintiffs “to have their religious accommodation requests considered by the central citywide panel.” Id. at 27–28. The City also represents that “[w]hile their appeals are pending, these employees will remain on leave-without-pay status and will have seven days after their new appeals are resolved to apply for an extension of this status.” Id. at 18– 19. The City will therefore afford substantially the same relief to these nonparties as has already been ordered by the Motions Panel as regards Plaintiffs.
In any event, we would not grant Plaintiffs’ request for sweeping injunctive
relief even if this were not the case because as a “general rule, . . . injunctive relief
should be no more burdensome to the defendant than necessary to provide
complete relief to the plaintiffs.”
Madsen v. Women’s Health Ctr.
,
Plaintiffs repeatedly emphasize that they have raised “facial” challenges as
if that permits them to obtain class wide relief without obtaining class certification.
But we have rejected Plaintiffs’ facial challenge to the Vaccine Mandate. We also
*40
reject Plaintiffs’ attempt to transform their garden-variety “as applied” claims into
what are effectively claims on behalf of a class simply by styling them as “facial”
challenges. Indeed, Plaintiffs’ challenge is an end run around the rules governing
class certification. Why, after all, would plaintiffs go to the trouble of
demonstrating “numerosity, commonality, typicality, and adequa[cy]” if they can
obtain classwide relief as Plaintiffs now propose?
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes
,
Relatedly, we do not reject Plaintiffs’ theory because they failed to use the words “class action” in the title of their complaint. Rather, Plaintiffs never moved for class certification , so no class has been certified. And the rule that injunctive relief should be narrowly tailored to prevent harm to the parties before the court “applies with special force where,” as here, “there is no class certification.” California v. Azar , 911 F.3d 558, 582–83 (9th Cir. 2018); see id. (“Injunctive relief generally should be limited to apply only to named plaintiffs where there is no class certification.”) ; see also Sharpe v. Cureton , 319 F.3d 259, 273 (6th Cir. 2003) (“While district courts are not categorically prohibited from granting injunctive relief benefitting an entire class in an individual suit , such broad relief is rarely justified because injunctive relief should be no more burdensome to the defendant *41 than necessary to provide complete relief to the plaintiffs.” (citing Yamasaki , 442 U.S. at 702)); Meyer v. CUNA Mut. Ins. Soc’y , 648 F.3d 154, 171 (3d Cir. 2011) (collecting cases in which courts have “found injunctions to be overbroad where their relief amounted to class-wide relief and no class was certified”).
Moreover, “[f]acial challenges are disfavored.”
Wash. State Grange v. Wash.
State Republican Party
, 552 U.S. 442, 450 (2008). The Supreme Court has
“strong[ly] admon[ished] that a court should adjudicate the merits of an as-
applied challenge before reaching a facial challenge to the same statute.”
Commodity Trend Serv. v. CFTC
,
B. Conflict of Interest and Title VII
Plaintiffs finally contend that the interim relief afforded by the Motions Panel is inadequate for two additional reasons. Neither is persuasive.
First, Plaintiffs contend that including lawyers from the Office of the
Corporation Counsel on the citywide panel is improper because the Corporation
Counsel has a conflict of interest due to its participation in this litigation. We
reject this argument. The attorneys are advocates, not parties-in-interest.
See,
e.g.
,
MFS Sec. Corp. v. SEC
,
Second, the Keil Plaintiffs object to the Motions Panel Order’s statement that consideration by the citywide panel must comport with Title VII and other applicable state and City law. They argue that the citywide panel must follow the First Amendment. It is, of course, true that the citywide panel must abide by the First Amendment. By ordering the citywide panel’s proceedings to abide by other applicable law, the Motions Panel Order does not (and could not) suggest that the First Amendment is somehow inapplicable to those proceedings.
We conclude by noting that while the Keil Plaintiffs do not invoke Title VII in their lawsuit, that statute will be highly relevant to their renewed requests for religious accommodations. Under the Supreme Court’s decision in Smith , the First Amendment likely does not require any religious accommodations whatsoever to neutral and generally applicable laws. See Shrum v. City of Coweta , 449 F.3d 1132, 1143 (10th Cir. 2006) (McConnell, J. ) (“[T]he mere failure of a government employer to accommodate the religious needs of an employee, where the need for accommodation arises from a conflict with a neutral and generally *44 applicable employment requirement, does not violate the Free Exercise Clause, as that Clause was interpreted in Smith .”).
In contrast, Title VII requires employers to offer reasonable religious
accommodations in certain circumstances.
See We The Patriots
,
require covered entities to provide the accommodation that [an employee] prefer[s]—in this case, a blanket religious exemption allowing them to continue working at their current positions unvaccinated. To avoid Title VII liability for religious discrimination, . . . an employer must offer a reasonable accommodation that does not cause the employer an undue hardship. Once any reasonable accommodation is provided, the statutory inquiry ends.
We The Patriots , 2021 WL 5121983, at *17. In providing religious accommodations, a government employer must abide by the First Amendment.
As we have explained, and based only on the record developed to date, Plaintiffs have demonstrated a likelihood of success on their claim that as applied to them, the City’s process for implementing the Vaccine Mandate via the Arbitration Award offended the First Amendment. But we do not suggest that *45 Plaintiffs are in fact entitled to their preferred religious accommodations — or any religious accommodation, for that matter — under Title VII (or the First Amendment). Our decision is narrow. We conclude only that the interim relief put in place by the Motions Panel should continue so that Plaintiffs, with the consent of the City, are afforded an opportunity to have their accommodation requests promptly reconsidered.
To the extent Plaintiffs raise other objections to the process by which their requests for accommodations will be adjudicated by the citywide panel, those objections are best addressed by the district court on remand. Plaintiffs are free to renew their First Amendment (and other) objections before the district court.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we VACATE the district court’s order denying preliminary injunctive relief. Further, we ENJOIN Defendants consistent with the terms of the Motions Panel Order. This injunction will remain in place during reconsideration of Plaintiffs’ renewed requests for religious accommodations. Within two weeks of the conclusion of Plaintiffs’ proceedings before the citywide panel, the parties shall inform the district court (rather than this merits panel) of the result of those proceedings and advise of any further relief being sought. *46 Finally, we REMAND the case to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion, making clear that the district court may alter the terms of the preliminary relief we have ordered or set them aside, as circumstances and further development of the record may require.
APPENDIX
United States Court of Appeals
FOR THE
SECOND CIRCUIT At a stated term of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, held at the Thurgood Marshall United States Courthouse, 40 Foley Square, in the City of New York, on the 14th day of November, two thousand twenty-one.
Before: Pierre N. Leval,
José A. Cabranes,
Denny Chin,
Circuit Judges . Michael Kane, William Castro, Margaret Chu,
Heather Clark, Stephanie Di Capua, Robert Gladding,
Nwakaego Nwaifejokwu, Ingrid Romero, Trinidad
Smith, Amaryllis Ruiz-Toro,
Plaintiffs-Appellants , ORDER v. 21-2678-cv Bill de Blasio, in his official capacity as Mayor of
the City of New York, David Chokshi, in his
official capacity of Health Commissioner of the
City of New York, New York City Department of
Education,
Defendants-Appellees . Matthew Keil, John De Luca, Sasha Delgado,
Dennis Strk, Sarah Buzaglo,
Plaintiffs-Appellants , v. 21-2711-cv The City of New York, Board of Education of the
City School District of New York, David Chokshi, in
his Official Capacity of Health Commissioner of the
City of New York, Meisha Porter, in her Official
Capacity as Chancellor of the New York City
Department of Education,
Defendants-Appellees . The motions of Plaintiffs-Appellants (“Plaintiffs”) for an injunction pending appeal having been heard at oral argument on November 10, 2021, and Defendants-Appellees (“Defendants”) having represented to this Court that “the City is working toward making an opportunity for reconsideration available more broadly to DOE employee[s] who unsuccessfully sought religious exemptions pursuant to the arbitration award’s appeal process,” it is hereby
ORDERED that this appeal is expedited and will be heard by a merits panel sitting on November 22, 2021 (the “merits panel”). Pending further order by the merits panel,
1. Plaintiffs shall receive fresh consideration of their requests for a religious accommodation by a central citywide panel consisting of representatives of the Department of Citywide Administrative Services, the City Commission on Human Rights, and the Office of the Corporation Counsel.
2. Such consideration shall adhere to the standards established by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the New York State Human Rights Law, and the New York City Human Rights Law. Such consideration shall not be governed by the challenged criteria set forth in Section IC of the arbitration award for United Federation of Teachers members. Accommodations will be considered for all sincerely held religious observances, practices, and beliefs.
3. Plaintiffs shall submit to the citywide panel any materials or information they wish to be considered within two weeks of entry of this order. The citywide panel shall issue a determination on each request no later than two weeks after a plaintiff has submitted such information and materials. Within two business days of the entry of this order, Defendants shall inform plaintiffs’ counsel how such information and materials should be transmitted to the citywide panel.
4. The deadline to opt-in to the extended leave program and execute any accompanying waiver shall be stayed for Plaintiffs, and no steps will be taken to terminate the plaintiff’s employment for noncompliance with the vaccination requirement.
5. If a plaintiff’s request is granted by the citywide panel, the plaintiff will receive backpay running from the date they were placed on leave without pay.
6. This order is intended only to provide for temporary interim relief until the matter is considered by the merits panel of this court, which panel may entirely supersede these provisions for interim relief, and the parties are at liberty to advocate to the merits panel for alteration of these provisions. Unless the merits panel has previously entered a superseding order, within two weeks of the conclusion of Plaintiffs’ proceedings before the citywide panel, the parties shall inform the merits panel of the result of those proceedings and advise of any further relief being sought.
FOR THE COURT: Catherine O’Hagan Wolfe, Clerk
[1] The Vaccine Mandate applies the same requirements to “City employees who work in-person in a DOE school setting or DOE building,” “[a]ll staff of contractors of DOE and the City who work in-person in a DOE school setting or DOE building, including individuals who provide services to DOE students,” and “[a]ll employees of any school serving students up to grade 12 and any [Universal Pre-Kindergarten-3 or -4] program that is located in a DOE building who work in-person, and all contractors hired by such schools or programs to work in-person in a DOE building.”
Notes
[2] The “Joint App’x” is the joint appendix filed by the parties in No. 21-2711.
[3] The Arbitration Award also provides standards for determining medical accommodations to the Vaccine Mandate. Although Plaintiffs challenged these standards below as well, they did not appeal on these issues. On September 15, the Arbitrator issued a materially identical award resolving a dispute between the City and the Council of Supervisors and Administrators, a labor union for school administrative personnel. Joint App’x 209.
[4] The meaning of the second clause—“where the documentation is readily available (e.g., from an online source)”—is obscure. The parties do not address its meaning in their briefs. The district court and the Keil Defendants seem to have interpreted it as a restriction on an employee’s ability to meet the Arbitration Award’s requirement that a request be “documented in writing by a religious official (e.g., clergy).” See Joint App’x 60–61. Under this interpretation, it would be inadequate for an employee to produce “readily available” documentation from a religious official corroborating that employee’s religious objections to vaccination. The employee would
[6] Elsewhere, it asserts: The process set forth, herein, shall constitute the exclusive and complete administrative process for the review and determination of requests for religious and medical exemptions to the mandatory vaccination policy and accommodation requests where the requested accommodation is the employee not appear at school. Joint App’x 201.
[7] We observe that this additional language is superfluous as a legal matter, at least as to religious accommodation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, et seq. The Commissioner, a City official, could not override Title VII, a federal law requiring employers to offer reasonable accommodations that do not result in undue hardship on the employer. See U.S. C ONST . art. VI, cl. 2 (Supremacy Clause). Thus, even under the original Vaccine Mandate, DOE employees were legally entitled to request accommodations.
[8] A district court in this Circuit denied a preliminary injunction in a different case
in which different plaintiffs challenged the same Vaccine Mandate on substantive due
process and equal protection grounds.
See Maniscalco v. New York City Dep't of Educ.
,
[9] The Motions Panel Order is set forth in an Appendix to this Opinion.
[10] Unless otherwise indicated, in quoting cases, all internal quotation marks, alterations, emphases, footnotes, and citations are omitted.
[11] The parties dispute the applicable legal standard. Defendants argue that
Plaintiffs seek “to modify the status quo by virtue of a
mandatory
preliminary injunction
(as opposed to seeking a
prohibitory
preliminary injunction to maintain the status quo).”
A.H. v. French
,
[12] The Vaccine Mandate permits both medical and religious accommodations. In
that respect, this case is factually different from recent challenges to other vaccine
mandates.
See, e.g.
,
We The Patriots
,
[13] While Mayor de Blasio said that only Christian Scientists and Jehovah’s Witnesses could receive religious accommodations, the City has granted accommodations to members of many other faiths. See Defendants Br. 12 (noting that “over 100 religious exemptions [have] been granted to employees of more than 20 different faiths[] . . . and individuals whose specific religion is not identifiable” (citing Joint App’x in No. 21-2678, at 758–59)).
[14] Plaintiffs raise a potpourri of other constitutional challenges against the Vaccine
Mandate. None is persuasive. The
Kane
Plaintiffs argue that the Mandate violates the
Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause. “When a free exercise challenge
fails, any equal protection claims brought on the same grounds are subject only to
rational-basis review.”
Does 1-6
,
[15] Nor do we address certain arguments made by Defendants. In a single
sentence in their brief, Defendants suggest that Plaintiffs do not “have standing to launch
a direct attack on the terms of awards arising out of arbitrations initiated by their own
unions without first alleging a breach of the duty of fair representation.” Defendants
Br. 35 (citing
14 Penn Plaza LLC v. Pyett
,
[16] As noted above, we find the second clause ambiguous but have adopted the district court’s interpretation for purposes of this opinion. See supra note 4.
[17] Plaintiffs offered substantial evidence that arbitrators referenced the Accommodation Standards in their hearings. For example, during another hearing, an arbitrator declared that, because a DOE employee’s congregation was not opposed to the vaccine, the employee’s objection was “personal and not religion-based.” Joint App’x 338. The City notes that hearings were not recorded and that given the need to render determinations expeditiously, such determinations were issued without full written opinions to explain them. It cautions that “the record casts serious doubt on plaintiffs’ contentions that the challenged criteria in the arbitration awards were controlling in the administrative appeals.” Defendants Br. 11. To be clear, it may be that after further factual development, some or even all of Plaintiffs’ Free Exercise Clause claims fail on the merits. But at this stage, based on the terms of the Arbitration Award and the numerous affidavits submitted by these fifteen individuals in support of their claims, we conclude that Plaintiffs have established a sufficient likelihood of success on the merits.
[18] We do not cast doubt on the well-established principle that “loss of employment
‘does not
usually
constitute irreparable injury.’”
Does 1-6
, 16 F.4th at 36 (emphasis
added) (quoting
Sampson v. Murray
,
[19] This case does not require us to address whether an employer’s decision to place its employees on leave without pay for an extended period — i.e. , longer than the few weeks required by the Motions Panel Order — could inflict irreparable harm.
[20] Plaintiffs’ request for backpay fails for an additional reason. Preliminary
[21] Cf. Dep’t of Homeland Sec. v. New York , 140 S. Ct. 599, 600 (2020) (Gorsuch, J. , concurring in the grant of stay) (“Equitable remedies, like remedies in general, are meant to redress the injuries sustained by a particular plaintiff in a particular lawsuit. When a district court orders the government not to enforce a rule against the plaintiffs in the case before it, the court redresses the injury that gives rise to its jurisdiction in the first place. But when a court goes further than that, ordering the government to take (or not take) some action with respect to those who are strangers to the suit, it is hard to see how the court could still be acting in the judicial role of resolving cases and controversies.”); Gill v. Whitford , 138 S. Ct. 1916, 1934 (2018) (“[S]tanding is not dispensed in gross: A plaintiff’s remedy must be tailored to redress the plaintiff’s particular injury.”).
[22] The Kane Plaintiffs have filed an amended class action complaint in the district court, and the Keil Plaintiffs have requested permission to file such a complaint. Without expressing a view as to these amended complaints, we note that remand will permit the district court to consider these complaints in the first instance.
