ABC News March 16, 2021

More than 800 Massachusetts State Police employees decline COVID-19 vaccine

WATCH: Why are people hesitant to trust a COVID-19 vaccine?

More than 800 Massachusetts State Police employees declined to receive the COVID-19 vaccine despite being in the first stage of priority for the doses, police sources said.

A total of 845 members of the MSP, including sworn personnel and civilian officers, declined to receive the vaccine at state police clinics. That's about 30% of the force's sworn and civilian officers.

Meanwhile, 2,002 department members, both sworn and civilian officers, received at least one dose of the coronavirus vaccine at department clinics, MSP officials told ABC News.

Scott Eisen/Getty Images, FILE
A police officer receives his COVID-19 vaccination at Gillette Stadium's vaccination site on Jan. 15, 2021 in Foxborough, Mass.

According to the Boston Globe, vaccine hesitancy is an issue in the state. A report last week from the state's Department of Corrections showed that more than half of its staffers had refused the state's offer to get the vaccine at work. State prison officials told the paper last month that the number of people refusing the vaccine includes workers who received the shot at off-site facilities.

Nancy Sterling, a spokeswoman for the State Police Association of Massachusetts, which represents the department's 2,200 troopers and sergeants, said she hasn't seen any fear or hesitancy among members in receiving the vaccine.

"We have not seen it, but again there's no official mechanism for anyone to share that with us," Sterling told ABC News. "If members asked, we suggested that they talk to their health care professional."

Officials also stressed that the gap in vaccinations isn't necessarily due to a lack of trust in the vaccines.

John Tlumacki/Boston Globe via Getty Images, FILE
The entrance to the Massachusetts State Police Headquarters in Framingham, Mass. is pictured on March 20, 2018.

"That members did not get a vaccine at the MSP clinics does not mean they refused a vaccine, it means they did not get a vaccine during the MSP clinics," MSP Director of Media Communications Dave Procopio told ABC News.

Sterling said that many officers received the vaccine at other sites, rather than police-designated ones. The union has not mandated that officers receive the vaccine and claimed it would be an invasion of privacy to ask members if they've received a vaccine dosage.

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In Massachusetts, first responders were prioritized to receive a vaccine starting Jan. 11, and the state created three vaccination sites for state troopers and other first responders.

As of Monday, nearly 1 million people were fully vaccinated in Massachusetts, per the Department of Public Health's latest COVID-19 vaccine data report.