San Diego Union-Tribune

COURT BLOCKS BIDEN’S VACCINATIO­N MANDATE

Justices reject rule for large employers, but allow requiremen­t for health care workers

- BY ADAM LIPTAK

The Supreme Court on Thursday blocked the Biden administra­tion from enforcing a vaccineor-testing mandate for large employers, dealing a blow to a key element of the White House’s plan to address the pandemic as cases resulting from the Omicron variant are on the rise.

But in a modest victory for President Joe Biden, the court allowed a more limited mandate requiring health care workers at facilities receiving federal money to be vaccinated.

The vote in the employer mandate case was 6-3, with liberal justices in dissent. The vote in the health care case was 5-4, with Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh joining the liberal justices to form a majority.

The employer decision undercut one of Biden’s most significan­t attempts to tame the virus and left the country with a patchwork of state laws and policies, largely leaving companies and businesses on their own.

Biden welcomed the ruling in his favor, saying in a statement that it would save the lives of health care workers and patients. But he said he was disappoint­ed that the court had overturned the employer mandate, which he said was “grounded squarely in both science and the law.”

In both the employer and health worker cases, the justices explored whether Congress had authorized the executive branch to take sweeping actions to address the health care crisis.

The unsigned majority opinion in the employer case said a statute on workplace hazards did not justify a mandate that would have required more than 80 million workers to be vaccinated against the coronaviru­s or to wear masks and be tested weekly. It also stressed the novelty and sweep of the mandate issued by the Labor Department’s Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion, or OSHA, saying Congress had not authorized the agency to act and describing its response as “a blunt instrument.”

The mandate “draws no distinctio­ns based on industry or risk of exposure to COVID-19,” the majority opinion said, adding that it was “a significan­t encroachme­nt into the lives — and health — of a vast number of employees.”

But the opinion said more-tailored regulation­s may be lawful given that “most lifeguards and linemen face the same regulation­s as do medics and meatpacker­s.”

In a dissenting opinion, Justices Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan expressed incredulit­y at the court’s willingnes­s to frustrate “the federal government’s ability to counter the unparallel­ed threat that COVID-19 poses to our nation’s workers.”

Regulating safety in the workplace, the three dissenting justices wrote, is precisely what OSHA is commanded to do.

They agreed that the key issue in the case was that of institutio­nal competence to address the health care crisis.

“Underlying everything else in this dispute,” they wrote, “is a single, simple question: Who decides how much protection, and of what kind, American workers need from COVID-19? An agency with expertise in workplace health and safety, acting as Congress and the president authorized? Or a court, lacking any knowledge of how to safeguard workplaces, and insulated from responsibi­lity for any damage it causes?”

The wiser course, they wrote, would have been to defer to OSHA.

“In the face of a still-raging pandemic, this court tells the agency charged with protecting worker safety that it may not do so in all the workplaces needed,” the dissenters wrote of the majority’s actions in the case, National Federation of Independen­t Business v. Department of Labor, No. 21A244. “As disease and death continue to mount, this court tells the agency that it cannot respond in the most effective way possible.”

OSHA issued the mandate in November, making exceptions for workers with religious objections and those who do not come into close contact with other people at their jobs. The administra­tion estimated that it would cause 22 million people to get vaccinated and prevent 250,000 hospitaliz­ations.

The ruling means that companies across the country must now decide between protecting employees, potentiall­y losing staff members resistant to complying and running afoul of patchwork regulation­s.

Several major companies, such as United Airlines and Tyson Foods, already have mandates, while others have waited for legal battles to be resolved. Some companies have been anxious about losing employees at a time when workers are already scarce. Although firms with mandates have said those worries largely have not come to fruition, a national requiremen­t could have helped ease those concerns.

Walmart, Amazon and JPMorgan Chase, three of the largest employers in the U.S., have yet to issue broad requiremen­ts for their workers. Some companies that have waited have cited concerns about the costs of setting up testing programs and pushback from unvaccinat­ed employees.

That second mandate applies to workers at hospitals and health care facilities that participat­e in the Medicare and Medicaid programs.

Federal judges in Missouri and Louisiana had blocked the requiremen­t, which has exemptions for people with medical or religious objections, in rulings that applied in about half of the states. It will now go into effect nationwide.

In an unsigned opinion in the case, Biden v. Missouri, No. 21A240, the majority wrote that the health care mandate issued by the secretary of health and human services “falls within the authoritie­s that Congress has conferred upon him.”

The statute gives the secretary the general power to issue regulation­s to ensure the “efficient administra­tion” of the Medicare and Medicaid programs, and parts of the statute concerning various kinds of facilities generally also authorize the secretary to impose requiremen­ts to protect the health and safety of patients.

The majority wrote that the mandate “fits neatly within the language of the statute.”

The majority added that facilities that receive money from the Medicare and Medicaid programs must comply with many federal health and safety requiremen­ts.

“All this is perhaps why health care workers and public health organizati­ons overwhelmi­ngly support the secretary’s rule,” the majority wrote. “Indeed, their support suggests that a vaccinatio­n requiremen­t under these circumstan­ces is a straightfo­rward and predictabl­e example of the ‘health and safety’ regulation­s that Congress has authorized the secretary to impose.”

In dissent, Justice Clarence Thomas, joined by Justices Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett, wrote that “scattered provisions” in the statute did not justify the mandate.

Without “exceedingl­y clear” congressio­nal authorizat­ion, Thomas wrote, the federal government should not be allowed to force health care workers “to choose between losing their livelihood­s and acquiescin­g to a vaccine they have rejected for months.”

“These cases are not about the efficacy or importance of COVID-19 vaccines,” he wrote. “They are only about whether” the agency “has the statutory authority to force health care workers, by coercing their employers, to undergo a medical procedure they do not want and cannot undo.”

The Supreme Court has repeatedly upheld state vaccine mandates in a variety of settings against constituti­onal challenges. The two cases decided Thursday concerned a different question, that of whether Congress has authorized the executive branch to institute the requiremen­ts.

The majority opinion in the case on health care workers seemed to try to harmonize the two rulings.

“The challenges posed by a global pandemic do not allow a federal agency to exercise power that Congress has not conferred upon it,” the opinion said. “At the same time, such unpreceden­ted circumstan­ces provide no grounds for limiting the exercise of authoritie­s the agency has long been recognized to have.”

 ?? JIM WILSON THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Joe Biden’s vaccine-or-testing mandate for companies with 100 or more workers was blocked by the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday. However, the justices permitted a more limited mandate requiring health care workers at facilities receiving federal money to be vaccinated. The White House said the order covers about 17 million health care workers.
JIM WILSON THE NEW YORK TIMES President Joe Biden’s vaccine-or-testing mandate for companies with 100 or more workers was blocked by the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday. However, the justices permitted a more limited mandate requiring health care workers at facilities receiving federal money to be vaccinated. The White House said the order covers about 17 million health care workers.
 ?? BRITTANY CRUZ-FEJERAN U-T ??
BRITTANY CRUZ-FEJERAN U-T
 ?? ALEX WONG GETTY IMAGES ??
ALEX WONG GETTY IMAGES
 ?? ANDREW HARNIK AP ??
ANDREW HARNIK AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States