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Vail: Threats Against Health Officers Common

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Ingham County health officer Linda Vail speaks with reporters via Zoom on Tuesday.

Ingham County health officer Linda Vail responded to a report that her colleague in Kent County was nearly forced off the road after issuing a mask mandate.

Ingham County’s top health official says she's not surprised by a threat recently reported against the director of a West Michigan health department.

According to a report from Michigan Advance, Kent County Health Department Director Adam London sent an email to Kent County Commissioners last month asking for help after his car was nearly forced off the road. The incident happened shortly after issuing a mask mandate for schoolchildren.

Ingham County health officer Linda Vail said most health department leaders in the state have received threats.

Vail says she notifies her board chair when there’s a threat that she finds unsettling.

“If they rattled me enough to think that I needed more protection or needed to engage law enforcement,” Vail stated, “then I would be engaging the prosecutor’s office, the sheriff’s department, whatever I needed to do.”

Vail added that she had a security system installed at her house, something she thinks most of her colleagues have done.

“Some have had to go further than that and get some protection for a period of time,” she concluded. “I know that the Ottawa County health officer had some security protection for a while in the face of the immediate threats that come over. They tend to get very escalated at the beginning and then kind of settle in a little bit.”

Vail says in her case, the Ingham County Sheriff’s Department once asked local police to watch her house after she’d received a threat.

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Scott Pohl is a general assignment news reporter and produces news features and interviews. He is also an alternate local host on NPR's "Morning Edition."