The Mercury News

Whistleblo­wers are key to enforcing vaccine mandate

- By Paul Wiseman AP Business Writer Tom Krisher in Detroit contribute­d to this report.

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.”

Jim Frederick, the acting chief of OSHA, told reporters that this agency will focus on job sites “where workers need assistance to have a safe and healthy workplace.”

“That typically comes through in the form of a complaint,” Frederick added.

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, the Biden administra­tion endured a setback when 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 and protect workers from such dangers as toxic chemicals, rickety ladders and cave-ins at constructi­on sites.

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 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. So the agencies must rely on whistleblo­wers.

OSHA urges workers to first bring unsafe or unhealthy working conditions to the attention of their employers “if possible.” Employees could also file a confidenti­al safety complaint with OSHA or have a case filed by a representa­tive, such as a lawyer, a union representa­tive or a member of the clergy. But they have no right to sue their employer in court for federal safety violations.

Typically, 20% to 25% of OSHA inspection­s originate with a complaint.

“You fill out a form or somebody fills out a form for you,” said Berkowitz, the former OSHA chief of staff. “And that’s all workers have. If OSHA decides not to inspect, that’s it. Or if OSHA inspects but decides not to cite the employer, that’s it . ... So it’s a pretty weak law.”

Only OSHA can bring cases over violations of the Occupation­al Safety and Health Act of 1970, the law that is meant to provide safe workplaces. Going outside OSHA to sue employers for negligence is all but impossible, say Berkowitz and other worker advocates.

State worker compensati­on programs — which reimburse injured workers for medical costs and lost wages and provide death benefits to survivors of those killed — include nofault provisions that block most lawsuits.

Even sounding the alarm can be risky.

“Technicall­y,” Berkowitz said, “the law says that companies can’t retaliate against a worker for raising a health and safety issue or filing an OSHA complaint or even reporting an injury. But retaliatio­n is rampant.”

OSHA can pursue employers who punish workers for speaking out against unsafe working conditions. Last month, for example, the agency sued a luxury car dealer in Austin, Texas, that it said fired an employee who had warned co-workers about potential coronaviru­s hazards in the workplace.

But in a report co-written by Berkowitz, the National Employment Law Project, which advocates for worker rights, found that OSHA dismissed — without investigat­ing — more than half the COVID-related complaints of retaliatio­n it received from whistleblo­wers. Just 2% of complaints were resolved in the five-month period last year that the law project studied. Workers have just 30 days to file an OSHA complaint over retaliatio­n.

“OSHA needs to improve its handling of whistleblo­wer complaints,” the Labor Department’s Inspector General, its internal watchdog, concluded last year. “When OSHA fails to respond in a timely manner, it could leave workers to suffer emotionall­y and financiall­y, and may also lead to the erosion of key evidence and witnesses.”

Still, most companies are considered likely to comply with the COVID mandate, as they mostly do with other OSHA rules. Some employers were likely relieved: They may have wanted to require inoculatio­ns on their own but worried that they’d alienate anti-vax workers and possibly lose them to employers that didn’t require vaccinatio­ns.

“Most employers — they’re law abiding,” says David Michaels, a former OSHA chief who is an epidemiolo­gist and professor of public health at George Washington University. “They’re trying to make sure that they meet the requiremen­ts of every law and regulation .. Now OSHA will follow up. They’ll respond to complaints. They’ll do spot checks. They’ll issue citations and fines, and they’ll make a big deal of those” to discourage other potential violators.

 ?? NAM Y. HUH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? The federal government requires vaccines for workers at companies with more than 100 employees and at facilities that treat Medicare and Medicaid patients.
NAM Y. HUH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES The federal government requires vaccines for workers at companies with more than 100 employees and at facilities that treat Medicare and Medicaid patients.

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