The Pak Banker

To encourage vaccinatio­ns, more US firms turn to incentives and threats

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In the wake of full US approval for the Pfizer/BioNTech anti-Covid vaccine this week, more and more American companies are looking at mandatory vaccinatio­ns for employeesa­nd customers.

CVS Health, Chevron, Disney and Goldman Sachs are among the firms who have since told some or all of their workers that inoculatio­ns will no longer be optional, requiring proof of shots within a certain time period.

On social media, some of those firms are coming under attack from users who say requiring vaccinatio­ns is a violation of personal freedoms, a value near and dear to most Americans.

One Republican state lawmaker from Florida, Anthony Sabatini, even filed a proposal that would prevent the state's surgeon general from requiring any vaccinatio­ns, ever.

But at least so far, amid a surge in coronaviru­s infections and hospitaliz­ations fueled by the highly transmissi­ble Delta variant, no public figure is specifical­ly hitting out at corporate America-at least not yet.

For Mark Hass, a professor who specialize­s in marketing at Arizona State University, even though the crisis is both medical and political it is impossible for companies to thread the needle between liberals and conservati­ves on the issue.

"The right way to think about this is what's the right thing for our employees, rather than worrying about the safety of our reputation," Hass told AFP.

"Almost every company is going with some sort of mandate or requiremen­t or incentive," he said.

"I think the lack of criticism of corporatio­ns is because most of them have acted responsibl­y in dealing with the pandemic," Hass added, noting the rise of telework. Since June, when banking giant Morgan Stanley and asset manager BlackRock said employees wishing to come into the office would have to provide proof of vaccinatio­n, other major companies had made the leap to requiring shots.

Google, Facebook and Uber all joined the vaccinatio­n mandate bandwagon.

But the Food and Drug Administra­tion's full approval of the two-dose Pfizer vaccine regimen opened the floodgates, and seemed to cancel out the argument made by some skeptics that full authorizat­ion was needed.

"Do what I did last month: Require your employees to get vaccinated or face strict requiremen­ts," President Joe Biden said Monday. In late July, he had offered federal employees a choice: show proof of vaccinatio­n or submit to regular testing. Neverthele­ss, some major groups have yet to budge.

American Airlines is "strongly encouragin­g" its employees to get injections, but is not requiring them so far. For those who do bite the bullet, the airline is offering an extra day off and $50.

On Tuesday, rival Delta Air Lines said it would charge unvaccinat­ed workers an additional $200 a month for health insurance "to address the financial risk" created for the company by "the decision to not vaccinate," according to CEO Ed Bastian.

Among the employers the

in

largest country,

Amazon, Home Depot, FedEx, UPS and Target have not yet mandated vaccinatio­ns against Covid-19. Walmart has so far only asked headquarte­rs employees to get shots, not workers in stores or warehouses.

Experts generally agree that companies face limited legal liability for imposing vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts, even if failure to comply leads to an employee being fired.

In May, the US Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission, a federal agency tasked with enforcing laws against workplace discrimina­tion, said an employer's request to show proof of vaccinatio­n did not violate American labor law.

Then in June, a federal judge in Houston dismissed a suit brought by employees of Houston Methodist Hospital who were contesting the institutio­n's right to demand that they be vaccinated-a decision seen as one setting a precedent.

And in August US Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett refused to block a plan by Indiana University to require students and employees to get vaccinated.

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