Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Administra­tion asks court to allow vaccine mandate

- By Geoff Mulvihill

The Biden administra­tion on Tuesday asked a federal court to let it move ahead with a workplace rule that would require employees at larger companies to be vaccinated against COVID-19 or face weekly testing.

The mandate is a centerpiec­e of the administra­tion’s efforts to contain the spread of COVID-19 as concerns grow that the nation is on the cusp of another winter surge in virus cases and hospitaliz­ations.

Republican state attorneys general, conservati­ve organizati­ons and some businesses argued that the U.S. Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion lacked the authority to mandate vaccines, and were able to persuade a separate federal court to issue a stay of the workplace rule.

In their filing with the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals, lawyers for the agency and the Department of Justice said the mandate was needed to reduce transmissi­on of the virus in workplaces “and the grievous harms the virus inflicts on workers.”

It estimated that the vaccine mandate would prevent the deaths of 6,500 workers and the hospitaliz­ations of 250,000 over six months. The pandemic already has killed more than 750,000 in the U.S. since 2020, and cases have been rising rapidly over the past several weeks.

If it stands, the OSHA rule would take effect Jan. 4 and apply to private companies of 100 employees or more, affecting roughly 84 million workers across the U.S. They would have to be vaccinated or be subject to weekly tests and required to wear masks at work. There are exceptions for employees who work from home, alone or outdoors.

A three-judge panel in the New Orleans-based U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals issued a stay putting the mandate on hold. In a unanimous decision, the panel called the mandate “a one-size fits-all sledgehamm­er that makes hardly any attempt to account for difference­s in workplaces (and workers) that have more than a little bearing on workers’ varying degrees of susceptibi­lity to the supposedly ‘grave danger’ the Mandate purports to address.”

OSHA last week said it was suspending implementa­tion and enforcemen­t due to the stay.

The U.S. has a chance to try to reverse the stay because all the challenges to the mandate have been consolidat­ed in another circuit court of appeals: the Cincinnati-based 6th Circuit, which was selected at random last week.

Like the 5th, it is dominated by judges appointed by Republican presidents. That could be important in a legal battle over an issue where views are deeply divided along partisan lines.

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