Marin Independent Journal

State failing to test its unvaccinat­ed workers

- By Melody Gutierrez

Three months after Gov. Gavin Newsom required state workers to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 or undergo weekly testing, his pledge that California government would lead by example has not been fulfilled: Many public agencies face low vaccinatio­n rates, and most staterun workplaces have failed to test unvaccinat­ed employees.

At the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, for example, fewer than a third of employees have provided proof they are fully vaccinated, while 6,700 employees are either not vaccinated or have declined to provide their status. Cal Fire said it is testing just 75 employees.

The Department of Motor Vehicles, where 59% of employees are fully vaccinated, has about 3,600 unvaccinat­ed staffers working in offices across the state who are required to be tested weekly. But only 411 of them are being tested, a DMV spokeswoma­n said.

Some department­s have failed to report vaccinatio­n rates or testing informatio­n altogether, but the California Department of Human Resources said the data it has received show that roughly half of 59,000 unvaccinat­ed state employees were tested as required during the first week of October.

“If we don’t have the warning system of testing, then we need to reconsider what we are doing,” said Dorit Reiss, a law professor who specialize­s in vaccine policies at the UC Hastings College of the Law. “Testing is not a great substitute for vaccinatin­g, but it’s a great backup and better than nothing.”

The state’s struggle to implement Newsom’s mandate comes as workplaces across the nation are imposing deadlines for workers to provide proof of vaccinatio­n or risk losing their jobs.

Last week, enforcemen­t of Washington Gov. Jay Inslee’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate resulted in 3% of state workers — about 1,900 employees — resigning or being fired. The Biden administra­tion has also announced stringentn­ew requiremen­ts, including pending labor regulation­s that would require businesses across the country with 100 or more employees to ensure that workers are fully vaccinated or undergo weekly testing.

Newsom’s Aug. 2 deadline for California government workers, however, was largely ignored without consequenc­e. Overall, 66% of the state’s employees provided proof they are vaccinated, according to data from the state Department of Human Resources. Statewide, 74% of residents 18 and older are fully inoculated.

“This is problemati­c,” said Dr. Monica Gandhi, an infectious-disease expert and professor of medicine at UC San Francisco. “The entire point of Gov. Newsom being the first governor to say state employees should be vaccinated is because these employees are public interfacin­g, and the vaccine protects them and the public they serve. Then, if the testing component isn’t being universall­y applied, you are defeating the point.”

Under the state’s mandate, employees who work remotely full time are not required to provide vaccinatio­n proof — although many have — and do not have to undergo weekly testing. A little more than half the state’s 10,000 California Highway Patrol employees have provided proof they are vaccinated, a spokeswoma­n for the department said. Some testing sites have been opened, including at CHP’s headquarte­rs, but not all.

“Since we started testing, we have completed 2,088 tests with two confirmed positive results,” CHP spokeswoma­n Fran Clader said in a statement.

The department did not

respond to a request for details on how many employees are being tested weekly.

At Cal Fire, testing is available at the department’s headquarte­rs, where 75 employees are being tested weekly, said spokesman Nick Schuler. Plans are underway to add testing at six additional sites in early November.

“Demands of wildfire response in July, August and September slowed our progress implementi­ng testing, but we now expect to have several of the testing centers up and running within weeks,” Schuler said.

The rate of positive results for department­s that are testing has remained low. A DMV spokeswoma­n said there were four positive tests among 2,070 given to date. And among all department­s reporting results to the state’s human resources agency, there were 155 positive tests out of 31,534 completed during the week of Oct. 4.

Public health officials, however, have warned that cases can climb again if residents are not vigilant in protecting against transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s. New infections and COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations have been steadily falling

for weeks, but daily death counts have remained relatively high, Times data show. Over the last week, the state has averaged 5,203 new cases and 105 deaths per day. To date, COVID-19 has killed more than 70,000 California­ns.

Dr. Mark Ghaly, secretary of the California Health and Human Services Agency, urged hesitant state workers to get vaccinated in a letter last month, writing that he had a wake-up call when reading about “another tragic, preventabl­e loss of a member of our state family to COVID-19, leaving a wife and two young children behind.”

“I realized that I haven’t done enough,” Ghaly said. “I should say, we haven’t done enough.”

Newsom announced the vaccine mandate for state workers at the same time he implemente­d one for healthcare workers.

“As the state’s largest employer, we are leading by example and requiring all state and healthcare workers to show proof of vaccinatio­n or be tested regularly, and we are encouragin­g local government­s and businesses to do the same,” the governor said in July.

So far, the push to vaccinate

millions of healthcare workers appears to have been more successful, a likely result of the mandate not allowing for those employees to opt for weekly testing in lieu of vaccinatio­n unless they had an exemption. Healthcare workers were allowed medical and religious exemptions, which have been granted subjective­ly in different parts of the state, according to Times reporting. Many hospitals said the state mandate boosted vaccinatio­n rates, with a hospital system in Kern County reporting that its rates jumped to about 90% from about 60%.

The vaccinatio­n rate for state workers has seen a much smaller increase of just 2 percentage points to 66% over the course of one week, the state’s Human Resources department said. However, not all department­s are reporting data for their staff regularly — or in some cases, at all.

Nearly one-third of all state agencies reported employee vaccinatio­n rates lower than 74%, the statewide rate among adults for inoculatio­n. At the state’s Human Resources department, which is tasked with monitoring compliance with the mandate, 62% of the agency’s workforce is vaccinated.

“That didn’t surprise me,” said Eraina Ortega, director of the department. “The vast majority of our employees are in the Sacramento region, and that number seems in line with the region.”

Ortega said many state employees are still telecommut­ing and do not feel the urgency to provide their vaccinatio­n status if they won’t be required to undergo regular testing.

“Not all employees want to provide the vaccine verificati­on before the testing is set up,” Ortega said. “In my own department, I heard from people early on that they have to get the vaccine informatio­n in, but they are teleworkin­g and so they haven’t done it yet.”

Ortega said that testing thousands of unvaccinat­ed state workers is a massive undertakin­g and that the effort has been slowed by supply shortages. She said there is no hard deadline for when department­s have to begin testing unvaccinat­ed employees. So far, she said, 48 out of 152 state department­s have testing up and running at some or all of their locations.

“The scaling we anticipate­d is happening,” Ortega said. “I feel we have done a pretty good job of doing this entirely with state staff.”

Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, Newsom has championed some of the nation’s strongest coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, but he’s also faced criticism that his vaccine orders have been inconsiste­nt. The governor fought attempts to require correction­s employees to be vaccinated against COVID-19, despite recommenda­tions from a federal court-appointed receiver overseeing medical care inside prisons who argued that a strict mandate is necessary to prevent major outbreaks and deaths. Currently, all prison staff who work in healthcare settings are required to be vaccinated.

 ?? BRITTANY MURRAY — PRESS-TELEGRAM ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom displays his vaccinatio­n card in Baldwin Hills on April 1 after receiving a Johnson & Johnson dose from Dr. Mark Ghaly, the state health secretary.
BRITTANY MURRAY — PRESS-TELEGRAM Gov. Gavin Newsom displays his vaccinatio­n card in Baldwin Hills on April 1 after receiving a Johnson & Johnson dose from Dr. Mark Ghaly, the state health secretary.

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