Toronto Star

Small, medium-sized firms jump on vaccine policies

Smaller companies not waiting on legislatio­n for workers, survey finds

- SALMAAN FAROOQUI

When the fourth wave of COVID-19 started to intensify, Toronto-based tech company Staffy decided it was time to implement a vaccinatio­n mandate.

The company, which provides an on-demand workforce platform for the health-care and hospitalit­y sector, made it mandatory for their 20 corporate staff to be vaccinated. They also made vaccinatio­ns mandatory for their roughly 10,000 external workers, who fill shift requests for healthcare, hospitalit­y and general labour gigs.

“Now that vaccines are readily available, we thought it was time to make that declaratio­n so that we could further continue to ensure the safety of our workers and clients and their patients,” said Peter Faist, founder and CEO of Staffy, who added the only exceptions to their vaccine policy are for religious or medical reasons.

Staffy is among a growing number small and medium sized enterprise­s (SMEs) that are gaining the confidence to implement vaccine mandates, as more government and corporate workplaces move to make COVID-19 vaccinatio­n a work requiremen­t.

A study from the auditing firm KPMG found that of 500 SMEs polled, 62 per cent were either implementi­ng or planned to implement a vaccine mandate.

“SMEs are not necessaril­y waiting until there’s legislatio­n and there may never be legislatio­n for mandatory proof of vaccinatio­n,” said Norm Keith, a partner with KPMG Law LLP who advises businesses on vaccine mandates.

“They’re realizing that as a practical matter, they want to get back to business, they want employees in their retail or office space, but they also want to keep them safe.”

He noted the task of implementi­ng a vaccine mandate is harder for an SME than for a larger corporatio­n.

That’s because smaller businesses have fewer resources, and often don’t have the capacity to mandate vaccines in a way that creates alternate pathways for unvaccinat­ed workers through provisions like remote working or regular COVID-19 testing.

Experts have said those types of exceptions for people who choose not to get the vaccine for personal reasons are key to avoiding lawsuits.

However, Keith said some of his clients, such as constructi­on companies, have moved forward with strict vaccinatio­n policies that only allow exemptions for people with medical exemptions or human-rights arguments.

He said these companies choose to mandate vaccinatio­ns because they also risk facing lawsuits if their work environmen­t isn’t adequately working to prevent a COVID-19 outbreak. “There’s no legal right that an employee has to force an employer to employ them (if ) they refuse to get vaccinated,” said Keith. “An employee has a legal obligation not to put other employees at risk — that’s health and safety law.

“So having a mandatory proof of vaccine policy where workers are working in close proximity or a congregate work setting is a reasonable and defensible position for an employer to take legally.”

Keith said his clients that have implemente­d strict vaccinatio­n policies have not faced complaints from workers yet.

Meanwhile, the Toronto Region Board of Trade agreed that smaller companies have become more comfortabl­e with making their own vaccinatio­n policies, especially as employers like the City of Toronto and Sun Life Financial publicly announced their mandates this week.

But Jan De Silva, president and CEO of the board, said standardiz­ed vaccine passports are more important than ever to ensure companies can enforce their mandates without issue.

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