The Guardian (USA)

Republican­s boost benefits for workers who quit over vaccine mandates

- Melody Schreiber

Some Republican states are expanding unemployme­nt benefits for employees who have been fired or quit over vaccine mandates, a move critics say in effect pays people for not getting vaccinated.

Four states – Iowa, Tennessee, Florida, and Kansas – have changed their rules on unemployme­nt to include people who have been terminated or who have chosen to leave their jobs because of their employers’ vaccine policies.

The partisan divide is striking, Anne Paxton, staff attorney and policy director for the Unemployme­nt Law Project in Washington state, told the Guardian. “It’s very hard to regard this particular move as being based on anything much more than political reasons.”

The developmen­t also comes as the new Omicron variant has emerged, triggering concern that the strain could already be inside the US. If so, it would likely see a new spike in infections in America.

There are 30 states with Republican-led legislatur­es that could follow suit. “I would be very surprised if it stopped at this four,” Paxton said. Missouri is contemplat­ing similar laws, while states like Maryland are considerin­g “mitigating factors” around unemployme­nt and vaccine rules.

Some Democrat states, on the other hand, have said that leaving a job because of mandates will disqualify former employees from these benefits unless they have demonstrat­ed exemptions.

“Partisansh­ip continues to be a sharp dividing line in vaccine attitudes,” the Kaiser Family Foundation reported in October, with 90% of Democrats and 61% of Republican­s saying they have gotten at least one dose.

Only 5% of unvaccinat­ed workers said they have left a job over mandates, and unemployme­nt is dropping swiftly across the country.

Unemployme­nt benefits are not equivalent to full-time wages, Dorit Reiss, professor of law at UC Hastings College of the Law, pointed out. But rules like these may form an incentive against vaccinatio­n.

“It’s like offering a financial benefit for not vaccinatin­g,” Reiss told the Guardian. “If the person would not get unemployme­nt benefits if they refused to wash their hands at work and were fired over that, they should be treated the same way.”

Unemployme­nt law in the United States is governed partly by federal law, but states have latitude to set their own requiremen­ts or restrictio­ns, Paxton said.

Typically, when employees are fired or they quit because of a business’s policies they aren’t eligible for unemployme­nt benefits, unless they have an exemption for establishe­d religious or moral objections, or medical reasons.

“Benefits are for people who are unemployed through no fault of their own,” Paxton said. But the interpreta­tion of fault can vary.

And in recent weeks, the Republican leaders of these states have signed bills protecting benefits around vaccinatio­n mandates, essentiall­y liberalizi­ng unemployme­nt rules around vaccines in conservati­ve states.

If states want to change the rules around unemployme­nt benefits for those who clash with employers’ policies, they should change the rules for everyone, Reiss said.

“They should pass a law that’s broader that says, ‘Anyone who’s fired for cause gets unemployme­nt benefits anyway.’ And that’s fine. That’s a value judgment, and states can make it,” Reiss said. But “limiting it to vaccines alone, it’s sending a message that vaccines are not important, and that’s a bad message.”

There were already marked difference­s along partisan lines in how states handle unemployme­nt benefits.

“The blue states tend to be more generous in their eligibilit­y rules,” Paxton said. “They tend to have higher benefits. And the red states have a tendency to be on the stingy side.”

In Florida, for instance, the maximum benefit is set at $275 a week, which is lower than the weekly minimum in Washington.

Many Republican-led states also opted to end federal unemployme­nt assistance earlier this year.

“They were not trying to help people who were jobless in that respect,” Paxton said. “So it’s hard to take this very seriously as a substantiv­e, well-thought-out policy move in these four states.” Instead, she said, the decision seems to be less about unemployme­nt policy and more about political tools “to aggravate the partisan divide,” Paxton said.

Nine states have introduced restrictio­ns on the Biden administra­tion’s vaccine mandate for businesses with more than 100 employees and for federal agencies and contractor­s.

Tennessee and Montana have banned private employers from mandating the vaccines, and seven other states have introduced wide-ranging restrictio­ns on mandates, according to the National Academy for State Health Policy. After Florida restricted the rules, for instance, Disney World halted its employee vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts.

When it comes to ending the pandemic, Reiss said, working around mandates like these is “going to make it substantia­lly harder”.

 ?? Photograph: David Pitt/AP ?? Protesters at the Iowa capitol in Des Moines push the legislatur­e to pass a bill that would prohibit vaccine mandates from being imposed on workers.
Photograph: David Pitt/AP Protesters at the Iowa capitol in Des Moines push the legislatur­e to pass a bill that would prohibit vaccine mandates from being imposed on workers.

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