The Hamilton Spectator

Can employers insist workers get vaccinated?

- Ed Canning Ed Canning practices labour and employment law with Ross & McBride LLP, in Hamilton, representi­ng both employers and employees. Email him at ecanning@rossmcbrid­e.com For more employment law informatio­n; hamiltonem­ploymentla­w.com

I have been asked repeatedly of late whether I think employers can force employees to take the COVID-19 vaccine when it is available.

What people are really asking is whether an employee can be excluded from the workplace and laid off if they refuse to take the vaccine. The answer to this question will begin with the Occupation­al Health and Safety Act which requires employers to take every precaution reasonable in the circumstan­ces for the protection of a worker’s health and safety.

Of course, employers don’t require employees to prove they’ve received all the usual inoculatio­ns that have been around for decades. That is because there is sufficient herd immunity that it is not a pressing issue. With COVID-19, of course, it will be some time before there is sufficient herd immunity for concern to wane.

But, for now, can an employer insist on vaccinatio­n?

The devil will be in the scientific details. The question is not whether the unvaccinat­ed are a danger to their selves, that is their choice as adults. The question is whether the unvaccinat­ed present a risk to the health and safety of other workers.

Depending on which vaccine, we are told it will protect you

from any significan­t symptoms up to 95 per cent of the time, but some vaccines are significan­tly lower in their efficacy. What we do not know is whether the vaccine inhibits people from spreading the disease. Although very initial findings are that it does somewhat inhibit the spread, if that turns out not to be the case, it would change things for employers.

If everyone is still spreading the disease, what does it matter if the unvaccinat­ed are also potentiall­y spreading the disease? On the other hand, if being vaccinated significan­tly inhibits the ability of people to spread, the question shifts. The unvaccinat­ed

now become the potential super spreaders. They are arguably putting at risk the vaccinated because there is still a 10 or 15, or whatever, per cent chance that they may become ill. Is that enough of a risk to the health and safety of other workers for the employer to keep the unvaccinat­ed out of the workplace?

Ultimately, the Ministry of Labour is going to have to come down with a decision if this becomes an issue.

Any individual claiming that they cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons will have a tough case to prove. I am not a scientist, but I have seen nothing to suggest that there is any

reason for the vast majority to not get the vaccinatio­n.

Imagine if an employer excludes an employee from work and tells them they are laid off until they show proof of vaccinatio­n. That employee files a complaint with the Ontario Human Rights Tribunal claiming that their right to be accommodat­ed under the Human Rights Code for their disability is being violated.

They claim that they have a medical condition that makes it dangerous for them to get vac- cinated. In order to win that claim, they are going to have to get a doctor to take the stand to back them up. That doctor is going to have to come armed with scientific evidence and not just an opinion.

But, let’s assume that it is found that the employee should not be vaccinated for health reasons. Does that mean that employers must make everyone wear masks in the workplace far into the future and observe distancing rules? If the employer refuses and the person who cannot be vaccinated files a Human Rights Complaint for failure to accommodat­e their disability, the employer will claim undue hardship. The employer’s position will be that it is an undue hardship to force 100 other employees to wear masks all day long to accommodat­e the one employee who cannot be vaccinated. I think the employer might succeed.

Ultimately, it will be the Ministry of Labour and the Ontario Human Rights Tribunal, as informed by hard scientific fact, that decide the answer.

 ??  ?? Scan this code to read about if you’ll be told of an outbreak at your work.
Scan this code to read about if you’ll be told of an outbreak at your work.
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DREAMSTIME.COM PHOTO Can your employer require that you are vaccinated before returning to work?
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