Santa Fe New Mexican

NYC: Employers must mandate vaccine

- By Michelle L. Price, Bobby Caina Calvan and Karen Matthews

NEW YORK — From big Wall Street banks to corner grocery stores, all private employers in New York City will have to require their workers to get vaccinated against COVID-19, the mayor announced Monday in the most sweeping vaccine mandate of any state or big city in the U.S.

The move by Mayor Bill de Blasio comes as cases are climbing again in the U.S. and the worrisome but little-understood omicron variant is gaining a toehold in the nation’s largest city and elsewhere around the country.

“We in New York City have decided to use a preemptive strike to really do something bold to stop the further growth of COVID and the dangers it’s causing to all of us,” he said.

De Blasio, a Democrat with just weeks left in office, said the mandate will take effect Dec. 27, with in-person workers needing to provide proof they have received at least one dose of the vaccine. And they will not be allowed to get out of the requiremen­t by agreeing to regular COVID-19 testing instead.

The measure will apply to roughly 184,000 businesses not covered by previous vaccine mandates, ranging from multinatio­nal corporatio­ns to momand-pop businesses in the city of 8.8 million people, according to a spokespers­on for the mayor. The city’s private-sector workforce is 3.7 million.

Also, anyone 12 or older who wants to dine indoors at a restaurant, go to a gym or see a show will have to produce proof of having received two shots of the vaccine, up from the current requiremen­t of one dose, the mayor said. And children 5 to 11 will have to show proof of at least one shot.

De Blasio said the moves are aimed at staving off a spike of infections amid holiday gatherings and the cold weather, which drives more people indoors, where the virus can spread more easily.

Phil Penta, who runs a specialty grocery store called Three

Guys from Brooklyn, said the impending mandate could put him in a bind by forcing him to fire valued employees who are holding out against the vaccine.

“Everybody wants to do the right thing, but the right thing is different for everybody,” said Penta, who said the vast majority of his roughly three dozen employees have been vaccinated. He added, “I respect the right to say they don’t want to take it.”

Vaccine rules across states and cities vary widely, with some states resisting any mandates and others requiring the shots for government employees or certain sectors that run a particular­ly high risk, such as health care workers.

But no state has announced a broad private-sector mandate like New York City’s, according to data compiled by the nonpartisa­n National Academy for State Health Policy.

President Joe Biden sought to impose a less far-reaching mandate nationally, requiring employees of businesses with 100 or more workers to either get vaccinated or undergo regular testing. But federal courts have blocked that plan for now ahead of the Jan. 4 deadline.

De Blasio said he expects his mandate to survive any legal challenges. Employees will be able to ask for religious or medical exemptions.

The mayor said he will release more details next week about how the mandate will be enforced.

About 5.9 million adults in New York City have gotten at least a first dose, out of 7 million people age 18 and up. That translates to 84 percent. About 5.8 million New Yorkers of all ages are fully vaccinated.

Cases of the omicron variant have been reported in about one-third of the states, but scientists cannot say for certain yet whether it is more dangerous than previous versions.

U.S. health experts have strongly urged people to get their shots and a booster, saying they believe the vaccine will still offer protection against the new variant.

The delta variant still accounts for practicall­y all infections in the U.S., and a rise in cases in recent weeks has swamped hospitals, especially in the Midwest and New England.

New York City is averaging just under 2,000 new cases of COVID-19 per day, up from about 820 a day at the start of November.

“Vaccinatio­n is the central weapon in this war against COVID. It’s the one thing that has worked every single time across the board,” de Blasio said at a virtual news conference.

“A lot of folks to me in the private sector have said to me they believe in vaccinatio­n, but they’re not quite sure how they can do it themselves,” he continued. “Well, we’re going to do it.”

Vaccinatio­ns are already required in New York City for hospital and nursing home workers and for city employees, including teachers, police officers and firefighte­rs. A vaccinatio­n mandate for employees of private and religious schools was announced last week.

Some other private-sector employees, including those at restaurant­s, gyms, theaters and other entertainm­ent sites, were also required to be vaccinated under rules issued earlier by the mayor.

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man walks off a vaccinatio­n bus Monday at a NYC mobile vaccine clinic in Midtown Manhattan. Mayor Bill de Blasio says all New York City employers will have to mandate COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns for their workers by Dec. 27.
MARY ALTAFFER/ASSOCIATED PRESS A man walks off a vaccinatio­n bus Monday at a NYC mobile vaccine clinic in Midtown Manhattan. Mayor Bill de Blasio says all New York City employers will have to mandate COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns for their workers by Dec. 27.

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