Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

No employee uprising

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Remember those vaccine mandates? They might be working after all. North Carolina’s major health care systems were some of the first employers in the state to announce a covid vaccine mandate. Now, they’re finding that the vast majority of workers are willing to comply.

The deadline for UNC Health’s roughly 29,000 employees to get vaccinated was Tuesday. Nearly 95 percent of those workers are in compliance with the mandate, health system officials said, and just 60 have resigned.

Delta Air Lines has seen a boost in its employee vaccinatio­n rate since announcing that unvaccinat­ed employees would be penalized, with no increase in resignatio­ns, the airline said. Tyson Foods, which announced a vaccine requiremen­t in August, cut the number of unvaccinat­ed workers in half in less than a month.

For a while, many worried that vaccine mandates would result in a widespread quitting spree among those who weren’t willing to comply. Initial data in December 2020 from the Society for Human Resource Management suggested that 28 percent of workers would be willing to lose their job over the vaccine. But the mass resignatio­ns that many swore were coming haven’t materializ­ed—more recent data indicates that the actual number of employees who have resigned over covid policies is somewhere around 2 percent.

Surveys have shown broad public support for vaccine mandates, especially when handed down as a condition of employment. Still, support is split along party lines. After President Biden announced sweeping vaccine mandates that will affect some 100 million U.S. workers, Republican­s called for public uprising and “mass civil disobedien­ce,” with South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster vowing to fight Biden and other Democrats “to the gates of hell.”

Of course, there’s a difference between hypothetic­als and real life. By all indication­s, those willing to put up a fight are a small—albeit loud—minority. We’ve seen remarkably little fury from employees; most are quietly choosing their paycheck and, we hope, the reality that the vaccines are safe and effective against the spread of covid-19.

Yes, there are some who will never agree to get the vaccine. A mandate won’t change their mind; it was never going to. But we shouldn’t indulge their wishes simply because they’re the loudest, and we shouldn’t let the few risk the health of the many, or give the virus further opportunit­ies to mutate.

Much of the noise surroundin­g vaccine mandates is just that: noise. Employers should take the leap in requiring vaccinatio­ns for their workers—after all, it’s not much of a leap anymore.

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