Post-Tribune

Corps of informers wanted

Whistleblo­wers are being sought to help enforce Biden’s COVID-19 mandate on the job

- By Paul Wiseman

WASHINGTON — To enforce President Joe Biden’s forthcomin­g COVID-19 mandate, the U.S. Labor Department is going to need a lot of help. Its Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion doesn’t have nearly enough workplace safety inspectors to do the job.

So the government will rely upon a corps of informers to identify violations of the order: Employees who will presumably be concerned enough to turn in their own employers if their co-workers go unvaccinat­ed or fail to undergo weekly tests to show they’re virus-free.

What’s not known is just how many employees will be willing to accept some risk to themselves — or their job security — for blowing the whistle on their own employers. Without them, though, experts say the government would find it harder to achieve its goal of requiring tens of millions of workers at companies with 100 or more employees to be fully vaccinated by Jan. 4 or be tested weekly and wear a mask on the job.

“There is no army of OSHA inspectors that is going to be knocking on employers door or even calling them,” said Debbie Berkowitz, a former OSHA chief of staff who is a fellow at Georgetown University’s Kalmanovit­z Initiative for Labor and the Working Poor. “They’re going to rely on workers and their union representa­tives to file complaints where the company is totally flouting the law.”

Critics warn that whistleblo­wers have often faced retaliatio­n from their employers and that OSHA has offered little protection when they do.

The new mandate, which Biden announced last week, is the administra­tion’s most far-reaching step yet to prod more Americans to get a vaccine that has been widely available since early spring. The mandate will cover an estimated 84 million employees.

The president called the move necessary to combat an outbreak that has killed 750,000 Americans and that continues to spread. Companies that fail to comply will face fines of nearly $14,000 per “serious” violation. Employers found to be “willful” or repeat violators would be subject to fines of up to ten times that amount.

The mandate has run into furious opposition, though, from leaders of mainly Republican-led states who have condemned the plan as an unlawful case of federal overreach and who immediatel­y challenged the vaccine-or-test requiremen­ts in court. On Saturday, a federal appeals court in New Orleans temporaril­y halted the mandate, saying it posed “grave statutory and constituti­onal issues.”

Should the mandate survive its legal challenges, though, the task of enforcing it would fall on OSHA, the small Labor Department agency that was establishe­d 50 years ago to police workplace safety.OSHA has jurisdicti­on in 29 states.

Other states, including California and Michigan, have their own federally approved workplace safety agencies. These states will have an additional month — until early February — to adopt their own version of the COVID-19 mandate, equal to or tougher than OSHA’s.

For a task as enormous as enforcing the new vaccine mandate, OSHA and its state “partners” are stretched thin. Just 1,850 inspectors will oversee 130 million workers at 8 million job sites.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP ?? A sign at a grocery store in Monument, Colo. Millions of U.S. workers have a Jan. 4 deadline to get a COVID-19 vaccine.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP A sign at a grocery store in Monument, Colo. Millions of U.S. workers have a Jan. 4 deadline to get a COVID-19 vaccine.

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