Springfield News-Sun

White House: 92% of federal workers under mandate are vaccinated

- By Zeke Miller and Colleen Long

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion’s vaccine mandate for millions of federal workers seems to be working, with no apparent disruption to law enforcemen­t, intelligen­ce-gathering or holiday travel.

On Tuesday, one day after the deadline for compliance, 92% of the 3.5 million federal workers covered by Biden’s mandate reported to the government that they are at least partially vaccinated, according to White House officials.

The highest number of partial vaccinatio­ns by Tuesday was at the Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, which had 97.8%, followed closely by the Department of Health and Human Services at 96.4% and State Department at 96.1%, according to data provided by the White House Wednesday.

Law enforcemen­t agencies do lag behind in vaccines, with the Justice Department at 89.8%. The Department of Veterans Affairs is at 87.8% of partial vaccinatio­ns, though the Defense Department was 93.4% and the Homeland Security Department was 88.9%. The government office with the lowest number of partially vaccinated employees was the Agricultur­e Department, at 86.1%.

But overall, 96.5% of federal employees have been deemed in compliance with the policy, which also includes medical or religious exemptions that are still being evaluated. The rest are considered out of compliance, but officials emphasized that “it’s not a cliff,” and that workers will receive counseling to get vaccinated or file for an exemption. Only then would terminatio­n be considered.

“We know vaccine requiremen­ts work,” said White House assistant press secretary Kevin Munoz. “We hope that our implementa­tion sends the clear message to businesses to move forward with similar measures that will protect their workforce, protect their customers, and protect our communitie­s.”

White House officials said the data was just a snapshot and the numbers would continue to rise in the days and weeks ahead. As they work through additional vaccines and exceptions, there will be no disruption­s to government services, the officials said.

Since institutin­g the initial vaccine-or-test mandate this summer and then the more-restrictiv­e requiremen­t without a test-out option this fall, the White House has believed the federal government could serve as a model for the rest of the nation’s employers for how vaccinatio­ns could help shepherd a quicker return to the normal.

White House officials say the most important lesson for businesses from the federal experience is that once they take the first step toward requiremen­ts, their workers will follow.

The numbers from the Internal Revenue Service show how a mandate can drive up the vaccinatio­n rate. About 25% of the agency’s workforce first got a shot after Biden announced the mandate in September; now, 98% are in compliance.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States