Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Biden pushes perks in bid to vaccinate

Law’s employer tax credits intended to encourage shots

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Wednesday announced new employer tax credits and other steps to encourage Americans to get vaccinated against the coronaviru­s as his administra­tion tries to overcome diminishin­g demand for the shots.

The initiative marks a shift from months of long waiting lists and limited opportunit­ies for Americans to get vaccinated. Biden also announced Wednesday that the United States will hit his latest goal of administer­ing 200 million coronaviru­s vaccine doses in his first 100 days in office.

“I’m calling on every employer large and small in every state to give employees the time off they need, with pay, to get vaccinated,” Biden said. “No working American should lose a single dollar from their paycheck because they chose to fulfill their patriotic duty of getting vaccinated.”

Repeatedly declaring the country had entered a “new phase” in which all Americans ages 16 and older can get vaccinated, Biden warned that “the broad swath of American adults still remain largely unvaccinat­ed,” and lamented that “too many younger Americans may still think they don’t need to get vaccinated.”

“To put it simply, if you’re waiting for your turn, wait no longer,” he said.

Biden made his pitch as there are both hopeful and concerning signs in the nationwide effort to vaccinate people as quickly as possible. After weeks of accelerati­ng daily inoculatio­ns, the average daily number of reported shots in arms slowed significan­tly over the past week, with an 11% drop in daily shots administer­ed nationally, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

More than 40% of the U.S. population has received at least one dose of a vaccine. At the same time, most Americans who haven’t been immunized say they’re

unlikely to get the shots, a recent poll showed. Meanwhile, a pause in the use of Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine has complicate­d efforts to swiftly administer shots.

Biden called on all companies to provide employees with paid time off to get shots and to rest if they feel unwell afterward.

The president highlighte­d a tax credit in his $1.9 trillion pandemic relief law, which will reimburse businesses and nonprofits with fewer than 500 employees for up to $511 per day of paid vaccinatio­n leave offered between April 1 and Sept. 30, to a maximum of 10 workdays.

“Every employee should get paid leave to get a shot, and businesses should know that they can provide it without a hit to their bottom line,” Biden said. “There’s no excuse for not getting it done.”

At least 133 million people in the United States have received one or both doses of a vaccine, according to Washington Post data. More than 86 million people are fully vaccinated, the data shows. Biden said 80% of American senior citizens will have had at least one shot today.

The new tax credit is part of the government’s quest to buttress efforts in the private sector aimed at encouragin­g vaccinatio­n. Large employers from American Airlines to Target have unveiled incentives for employees to get vaccinated, from an extra day off next year to free rides to vaccinatio­n sites.

The success of those initiative­s could help determine how businesses approach requiring vaccinatio­ns for their employees — a debate that the administra­tion has sought to leave to the private sector.

Short of mandates, however, Biden administra­tion officials said they had examined research showing employers have outsize influence in reaching the remaining unvaccinat­ed population. The tax credit, they said, would provide the financial support necessary to allow small businesses to make vaccinatio­n convenient for their employees.

“I think it’s a very smart move,” said Dorit Rubinstein Reiss, a professor at the University of California Hastings College of the Law. An even more immediate way to support small businesses in guaranteei­ng paid time off, she said, would be to provide direct payments to employers who show that they’re providing this benefit.

Nirav Shah, director of the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention and president of the Associatio­n of State and Territoria­l Health Officials, welcomed the announceme­nt, saying it was vital for government to help remove various “social determinan­ts” blocking access to vaccinatio­n, from work to transporta­tion to child care.

As Biden approaches his 100th day in office, he is eager to highlight the progress he has made in combating the pandemic. The president has made fighting the coronaviru­s the dominant focus of the early part of his presidency. He campaigned aggressive­ly on the issue last year and signed the relief bill into law earlier this year.

Biden pledged in a news conference in late March that the U.S. would administer 200 million coronaviru­s vaccine shots by the end of April — doubling a previous goal of 100 million shots in his first 100 days in office. On Wednesday, he called hitting that milestone ahead of that deadline an “incredible achievemen­t for the nation.”

The president delivered his Wednesday address just days after residents 16 and older became eligible for vaccinatio­n, a dynamic Biden promoted this week in a video.

“We have enough of it, you need to be protected, and you need in turn to protect your neighbors and your family. So please, get the vaccine,” Biden says in the video.

STATES ADAPTING

As the demand for vaccinatio­ns has dropped, some states have altered their programs.

In Iowa, nearly half of the counties are not accepting new doses of vaccines from the state’s allotment because demand has fallen off.

In Florida, Palm Beach County plans to close mass vaccinatio­n clinics at the end of May with thousands of available vaccine slots unclaimed.

In rural West Virginia, a vaccinatio­n clinic at a casino/ race track parking garage is opening shots to out-of-state residents to address lagging demand. The hope is that people from the District of Columbia will make the hour’s drive to get vaccinated.

In Arizona, a plan collapsed that would have opened a federally run vaccinatio­n site in Tucson; demand is slipping and county officials preferred more targeted, mobile locations.

In Louisiana, where 40% of the adult population has had one shot even though all adults have been eligible since March, officials are delivering doses to commercial fishermen near the docks and running pop-up clinics at a Buddhist temple, homeless shelters and truck stops. Civic groups are conducting door-to-door visits, akin to a get-out-the-vote effort, in neighborho­ods with low vaccinatio­n rates.

In Alabama, Dr. Scott Harris, the state health officer, is trying to reach rural white residents, who are mistrustfu­l of politician­s and the news media. Harris is asking doctors to record cellphone videos, with a plea: “Please email them to your patients, saying, ‘This is why I think you ought to take the vaccine.’”

Asked about the dip in vaccinatio­ns, Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said “fluctuatio­n is not uncommon” and that “what we want to do is continue to encourage Americans to continue to get vaccinated.”

“The pace of vaccinatio­n isn’t linear,” Becerra said, adding that “we are on a pretty good pace.”

Through its partnershi­p with more than 40,000 retail pharmacies, the White House says more than 90% of Americans now live within 5 miles of a vaccinatio­n site. The administra­tion is encouragin­g state and local efforts to take shots directly to people, whether through initiative­s reaching the homebound or clinics at large employment sites.

Many states also have begun to open up vaccinatio­n sites to walk-in appointmen­ts, reducing reliance on often-cumbersome reservatio­n systems.

HOPE FOR NORMALCY

Maximizing the number of Americans vaccinated in the coming months is critical for the White House, which is aiming to restore a semblance of normalcy around the July Fourth holiday and even more so by the beginning of the next school year.

Administra­tion officials have been careful to avoid predicting when the country will have vaccinated enough people to reach herd immunity — when enough people become immune to a disease to make its spread unlikely. The U.S. is on track to have enough vaccine supply for every adult by the end of May and for every American by July, but administer­ing the shots will be another matter.

Biden said Wednesday that he hoped the U.S. could help provide other countries with vaccines to address the pandemic, but that domestic supply had not yet reached a high enough level to do that in earnest.

Biden said he talked with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for about 30 minutes on Wednesday. “We helped a little bit there, we’re going to try to help some more,” Biden said, referring to his decision last month to provide about 1.5 million doses of the AstraZenec­a vaccine to Canada. “But there’s other countries as well that I’m confident we can help, including in Central America. But it’s in process.”

He added. “We don’t have enough to be confident to send it abroad now. But I expect we’re going to be able to do that.”

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Sean Sullivan and Isaac Stanley-Becker of The Washington Post; by Zeke Miller, Matthew Perrone and Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar of The Associated Press; and by Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Annie Karni of The New York Times.

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