The Independent

Can employers insist that their staff are vaccinated?

- SEAN O'GRADY

With an insoucianc­e remarkable even for this government, the prime minister’s official spokespers­on overturned any number of convention­s about employment law with a casual observatio­n that any policy of “no jab, no job” in the workplace is a matter for individual companies. Even if it applied only to new recruits and not existing staff, it would still be a radical departure from

most previous practice and, indeed, the prime minister’s official policy line set out as recently as April, when the spokespers­on stated: “Taking a vaccine is not mandatory and it would be discrimina­tory to force somebody to take one.”

Being as helpful as ever, ministers previously inclined to reject the notion as “discrimina­tory” now sound more enthusiast­ic. The foreign secretary, Dominic Raab, declares it “smart policy”, and the transport secretary, Grant Shapps, reckons it a “good idea”. Some months ago the justice secretary, Robert Buckland, was the very model of judicial caution, suggesting it would all have to be tested in court. Now he says it’s lawful, for freshly engaged staff.

MPs and peers of all parties, and the rest of us, must wonder how such a radical reform of public health procedures, employment law, and even human rights can be enacted without a parliament­ary debate, let alone a proper bill, research and judicial review. It is, surely, taking the crown prerogativ­e too far.

The policy, however smart it might sound is, though, problemati­c. One obvious problem presents itself almost immediatel­y – what to do about those prospectiv­e employees with a valid medical reason that exempts them from vaccinatio­n? They would still present a potentiall­y infective health risk to a company’s clients, but would the employer be entitled not to take them on, or to confine them to non-public facing roles? More widely, would companies be required or allowed to declare that, say, their staff were 100 per cent vaccinated, even if that then put them at an advantage over a competitor, because that competitor employed someone who couldn’t be vaccinated?

As the months go on and booster doses of new vaccines for new variants become necessary, what would an employer do if a worker refused to take the new jab? The whole basis of the policy would then be undermined.

Then, of course, there are the discrimina­tion and human rights implicatio­ns. Insisting on vaccinatio­n is not, legally, direct unfair discrimina­tion against people with a protected characteri­stic, such as race or disability. However, because of the disparity in the uptake of vaccines and the incidence of Covid among different ethnic groups, and their overrepres­entation in jobs that may insist on vaccinatio­n (such as care homes), it amounts to indirect discrimina­tion, which is unlawful.

The most obvious drawback to a voluntary policy affecting only new recruits is that it might take so long to become effective through staff turnover that it makes little real difference, especially given relatively high take-up rates. New variants may emerge that are more vaccine-resistant, and it could become the case that it would be the patients, clients and customers of various companies that represente­d the health threat to staff in a fresh pandemic rather than the other way around.

A voluntary, partial, legally dubious policy of “sometimes no jab, no job” would be so patchy as to be fairly useless given the resentment and disruption it might engender. The case for

How can such a radical reform of public health procedures, employment law, and even human rights be enacted without a parliament­ary debate?

coercion is weaker in a society with a relatively healthy uptake and minimal anti-vax sentiment than in a more hesitant one further away from herd immunity. A more fruitful route might be to move the focus from workers to their offspring, and to find a safe way to give the jab to the very many willing and public spirited teenagers who want it. It would reduce transmissi­on in schools, key infection hubs and prevent case numbers creeping up again when the classes reassemble in September. But there seems to be surprising­ly little discussion of that easy “win”.

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 ?? (PA) ?? Insisting on vaccinatio­n is not, legally, direct unfair discrimina­tion against people with a protected characteri­stic, such as race or disability
(PA) Insisting on vaccinatio­n is not, legally, direct unfair discrimina­tion against people with a protected characteri­stic, such as race or disability

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