Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Discuss employee vaccine mandates

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The courts seem to be holding that employers can require workers to be vaccinated against COVID-19 as a condition of employment, but things get more complicate­d when there is a labor union involved. Rather than avoid the issue, employers and unions should be talking about how to make a vaccine-for-all protocol work.

Allegheny County, for example, is requiring vaccinatio­ns of new employees only, while the largely unionized county workforce will not be subject to the same mandate. Current employees who are not vaccinated will be required to wear a mask and undergo regular testing.

Allegheny County Executive Rich Fitzgerald acknowledg­ed that requiring a vaccine for all employees would involve a labor negotiatio­n. “It becomes more complicate­d when it comes to collective bargaining and some other things along those lines,” he told reporters.

The right direction is discussion between labor and management. In reasonable workplaces, all employees — union and management alike — should be able to reach a consensus on a public health issue. It’s certain no employer wants to be the test case as to whether a collective bargaining agreement can be amended to include a required COVID-19 vaccinatio­n. But the approach should not be adversaria­l but collaborat­ive. It’s for the benefit of all.

Evan as there are increasing calls for mandatory vaccinatio­ns — with exceptions for religious and health reasons —as terms of employment, there is a lot of reluctance among employers to engage with their union leaders on the matter. This reluctance should be pushed aside in light of the rising number of COVID-19 cases linked to the delta variant.

This is especially pertinent in the health care sector, where doctors, nurses and other health care profession­als have a higher risk of coming in contact with COVID-positive patients, as well as in public schools where the delta variant could spread quickly in crowded classrooms among unvaccinat­ed children.

Some unions have voiced opposition to mandated vaccines, but others seem willing to consider the matter. The president of the American Federation of Teachers, the second-largest teachers union in the country, said recently that the union, which was opposed to mandatory vaccinatio­ns, should now work with employers on the issue. Randi Weingarten’s public comments on the matter came Aug. 8.

Working together: This is the right approach to a health crisis that both employers and unions are trying to navigate. The bottom line is that everyone involved wants the same outcome: a safe environmen­t for everyone.

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