Las Vegas Review-Journal

Jan. 4 set as vaccinatio­n deadline for private sector

- By Lauren Hirsch

The Biden administra­tion said Thursday that large companies have until Jan. 4 to ensure that their workforces are fully vaccinated under a sweeping new coronaviru­s health measure that will cover 84 million private sector workers.

The plan was first announced in September by President Joe Biden, who directed the Labor Department to invoke its emergency powers over the safety of workplaces to require businesses with 100 or more employees to mandate vaccinatio­ns for all employees. Workers who refuse to get vaccinated must undergo weekly testing.

Also on Thursday, the administra­tion unveiled new emergency regulation­s for health care workers, including those at nursing homes caring for elderly and sick residents who are at high risk for infection. All 17 million workers at health care facilities receiving either Medicare or Medicaid funding must be vaccinated by Jan. 4.

Biden has previously imposed vaccine requiremen­ts on federal workers and companies that receive federal contracts.

But the new rule covering employees of all large private businesses is a more dramatic use of his executive power, prompting some state officials to criticize the move and threaten to try to stop them.

Some major companies including Tyson Foods and United Airlines were quick to embrace mandates, spurred by the president’s announceme­nt in September. But many others have held off, citing the need for clarificat­ion from the government on a range of questions, including who will pay for testing and whether the rule applies to employees who work at home.

New requiremen­ts and guidance published by the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion on Thursday answer many of those questions. They are expected to prompt a wave of company mandates, experts said.

Among the businesses that have yet to issue a requiremen­t for all employees are

the nation’s largest employer, Walmart, which is mandating vaccines mainly for its corporate staff members, and Jpmorgan Chase, which has more than 120,000 employees in offices and bank branches across the United States and is encouragin­g but not broadly mandating vaccinatio­ns.

In a Mercer poll of 1,088 companies conducted Oct. 4, roughly 13% of respondent­s said they were requiring all employees to be vaccinated, regardless of work location. Eleven percent said they were requiring only those coming to the office to be vaccinated.

According to OSHA’S new requiremen­ts, workers are considered fully vaccinated if they have received two doses of the Pfizer-biontech or Moderna vaccines, or one dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. Companies must provide paid-time off for their employees to get vaccinated and sick leave for side effects as needed. And employers are not required to either pay for or provide tests, though some may still be compelled to do so by other laws or agreements with unions.

Companies that fail to comply with the rule may be subject to fines, depending on how frequently they violate it and whether violations are intentiona­l, a White House official said. An OSHA penalty is typically $13,653 for every serious violation.

Over the past month, the Department of Labor received feedback on the rule from trade groups, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, as well as executives from UPS, the Walt Disney Co., Fidelity Investment­s and many others. They have voiced concerns about cost, logistics and potential impact on employees.

Requiring vaccines or regular testing “could significan­tly diminish the labor pool, particular­ly in some geographic areas and amongst some demographi­cs in which vaccine hesitancy is widespread,” the National Retail Federation wrote to OSHA last month. “NRF members, like employers across the economy, are already struggling to find workers.”

The January deadline allows retailers and logistics companies, both of which are strapped for employees, to get through the holiday shopping season before institutin­g the requiremen­ts. The same deadline applies to federal contractor­s, who are subject to their own stricter rules, and to health care workers covered by new emergency regulation­s.

Companies that have already mandated vaccines, including 3M, Procter & Gamble, IBM, and American, Alaska and Jetblue airlines, have not seen a large number of employees quit over the pressure to get inoculated, though a small minority of workers have given up their jobs.

United Airlines, one of the first major air carriers to require shots for its 67,000 U.S. employees, said in September that more than 99% of its employees were vaccinated. Tyson Foods, which set a Nov. 1 deadline, said that more than 96% of employees were vaccinated, compared with less than 50% before it announced its mandate in August.

Employers covered by the rule must ensure their unvaccinat­ed workers are masked, a requiremen­t that must be enforced starting Dec. 5. They will be required to maintain reporting and record-keeping as detailed in the OSHA rules. OSHA will help companies understand how to comply with the new requiremen­ts by distributi­ng fact sheets, sample methods and other plans, a White House official said. It will also provide companies with a recorded webinar on the rule’s details, along with recommenda­tions for enacting them.

 ?? JACOB SLATON / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Donnie King, CEO of Tyson Foods, speaks with a reporter Oct. 26 in Springdale,
Ark. The meatpackin­g giant, which was criticized for failing to do enough to protect its workers from COVID-19 last year, has become a leader on corporate vaccinatio­n mandates.
JACOB SLATON / THE NEW YORK TIMES Donnie King, CEO of Tyson Foods, speaks with a reporter Oct. 26 in Springdale, Ark. The meatpackin­g giant, which was criticized for failing to do enough to protect its workers from COVID-19 last year, has become a leader on corporate vaccinatio­n mandates.

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