Albuquerque Journal

White House delays firing unvaccinat­ed federal workers

Counseling and reprimands suggested during holidays

- BY JOSH WINGROVE

Federal workers who have defied President Joe Biden’s vaccine mandate likely won’t be fired until 2022 at the earliest, with the White House encouragin­g education and counseling as a first step.

Biden’s vaccine requiremen­t for the 3.5 millionstr­ong federal workforce took effect last week. In a letter to agencies on Monday, the Office of Management and Budget “encouraged” managers to stick to education, counseling and, at most, letters of reprimand for unvaccinat­ed employees until Jan. 1, 2022.

OMB said that agencies “may need to act on enforcemen­t sooner for a limited number of employees” but that in general, severe consequenc­es should be delayed until at least January, after the U.S. holiday season.

“We believe this approach is the best one to achieving our goal of getting the federal workforce vaccinated,” the letter said.

ABC News reported the OMB letter earlier Monday.

According to data released by the administra­tion, 92% of federal workers have at least one shot, while another 4.5% have sought or have been granted exemptions. That means that roughly 120,000 workers are not in compliance — a figure that could shrink as people change their minds, or grow if employees skip second doses of vaccines or are denied exemptions.

The White House has long said the vaccinatio­n deadline wouldn’t lead to immediate dismissal.

“To be clear, the goal of vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts is to protect workers, not to punish them. So tonight’s deadline is not an endpoint or a cliff,” Biden’s COVID-19 response coordinato­r, Jeff Zients, said in a press briefing on Nov. 22, the deadline for the rule.

The White House has not said how many federal workers are fully vaccinated.

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