The Norwalk Hour

Employers may require workers to get vaccinated for COVID-19

- By Gary Phelan Gary Phelan is an attorney with Mitchell & Sheahan, P.C. in Stratford, where he practices employment law. He is the co-author of Disability Discrimina­tion in the Workplace and teaches Disability Law at Quinnipiac University School of Law.

Get the COVID vaccine or you might be fired.

The federal government has ruled that employers can require their workers to get the vaccine. There are exceptions but the implicatio­ns are considerab­le as are remaining workplace issues.

The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission issued guidance for employers related to COVID-19 vaccinatio­n policies and their intersecti­on with federal workplace discrimina­tion law. The guidance provides a blueprint for employers considerin­g whether or not it should implement a mandatory vaccinatio­n policy.

The EEOC guidance confirms that employers can require COVID vaccinatio­ns as long as it provides a reasonable accommodat­ion, if required, for those with a disability or religious beliefs. If an employee says he or she is unable to receive a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n because of a disability, the employer cannot bar the employee from the workplace — unless the unvaccinat­ed employee would pose a “direct threat” to the workplace.

Under the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act, the employer would be required to show that the unvaccinat­ed employee would pose a “significan­t risk of substantia­l harm to the health or safety of the individual or others that cannot be eliminated or reduced by reasonable accommodat­ion.” However, if the employer determined that the employee would be a “direct threat,” the employer must determine whether a reasonable accommodat­ion would eliminate the perceived risk — before terminatin­g the employee.

An employer also might be required to discuss a possible accommodat­ion with an employee who refuses to take the COVID-19 vaccine due to a sincerely held religious belief. Employers are not required to provide a religious accommodat­ion if it would pose an “undue hardship.” As defined by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, undue hardship means more than a small cost or burden on the employer. Employers should assume that the religious accommodat­ion request is legitimate. However, if the employer has an objective basis to doubt either the religious nature or the sincerity of a particular belief, practice or observance, the employer can request additional supporting informatio­n.

The EEOC also confirmed that a COVID-19 vaccine would not be considered a “medical examinatio­n” under the ADA. A medical exam, according to the EEOC, is “a procedure or test usually given by a health care profession­al or in a medical setting that seeks informatio­n about an individual’s physical or mental impairment or health.” Neverthele­ss, the EEOC urged employers to use caution when asking questions before administer­ing the vaccine. Prescreeni­ng vaccinatio­n questions may trigger ADA protection­s of disability-related informatio­n.

The EEOC elaborated that if employers administer the vaccine (using health profession­als to give the actual shots), it must demonstrat­e that any prescreeni­ng questions are “job-related and consistent with business necessity.”

Employers should keep in mind that federal and state anti-discrimina­tion laws will apply to any vaccine policies regardless of whether the policy is mandatory. For example, requiring only older employees to get vaccines due to concerns that older employers are at higher risk if they contracted COVID-19 would violate the Age Discrimina­tion in Employment Act.

The question of whether to make vaccines mandatory may be the most difficult human resource issue companies will face in 2021. A poll taken last month at a virtual summit by the Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute found that 72 percent of current and former CEOs said they would be open to vaccine mandates

Employers will face other questions related to vaccines besides besides whether to require employees to get a COVID-19 vaccine. For example, they will need to decide whether to use a third party to administer vaccines or whether employees can get their own vaccine and provide proof of vaccinatio­n. And having the option of requiring employees to get a COVID-19 vaccine does not necessaril­y mean it should do so.

Employers will need to consider factors such as the employer’s industry, the size of the company, whether it should require vaccines for only certain positions, and the extent to which employees can work remotely. A critical factor that employers should also consider is how receptive its workforce will be to making vaccines mandatory. According to a Gallup survey from November, only 58 percent of people would be willing to get the COVID-19 vaccine when it is available.

 ?? Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? A nurse fills a syringe with a dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at Stamford Hospital last month.
Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticu­t Media A nurse fills a syringe with a dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at Stamford Hospital last month.

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