Chattanooga Times Free Press

Chattanoog­a employers seek to boost vaccinatio­n rates

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

Many of Chattanoog­a’s biggest employers are banding together in a new Healthy Chattanoog­a Coalition to help boost vaccinatio­n levels in the region up to at least 60% by December.

A coalition of 26 major employers announced Tuesday they will encourage, incentiviz­e and, in some instances, mandate employees to be vaccinated for the COVID-19 virus to help vaccinate more people to help reverse the recent rise in infections that recently made Tennessee the No. 1 state for COVID-19 infections.

Despite recent increases in the number of people being vaccinated each day, the Tennessee Department of Health reports only 47.4% of Hamilton County’s population is fully vaccinated against the coronaviru­s more than seven months after vaccines first became available. Chattanoog­a continues to lag the nation in the share of people who are vaccinated for the COVID-19 virus.

“We must get to a higher vaccinatio­n level and we’re really excited about what we can do in this community to achieve that,” said Mary Lambert, the newly appointed director of community health for the city of Chattanoog­a.

Chattanoog­a Mayor Tim Kelly thanked the Chattanoog­a Area Chamber of Commerce for organizing the coalition and “stepping up to help keep our community safe.

“Getting Chattanoog­a vaccinated is essential to our city’s economic recovery and that’s exactly what the Healthy Chattanoog­a Coalition is organized to encourage,” Kelly said.

Five local companies, including CHI Memorial Hospital and McCallie School, are requiring all of their workers to get vaccinated by November. CHI Memorial President Janelle Reilly said the vaccine “is the most effective tool to prevent the spread of the virus and its effects.”

“It’s also important for our whole community to be increasing the vaccine rate,” said Reilly, who announced Aug. 12 a vaccine mandate or testing mandate for Memorial Hospital employees by Nov. 1. “It helps us to accomplish population or herd immunity and that is the most important way to stop this virus. It’s about each of us doing our part to protect our family, our friends and our neighbors.”

But most of the employers are offering incentives, rather than requiring their workers to get the vaccine. Eric Fuller, president of U.S. Xpress Enterprise­s, said he is eager to boost the vaccinatio­n rate but currently the trucking industry is struggling to get and maintain enough drivers and a vaccine mandate is not yet feasible.

“We would like to have a vaccine mandate and we considered that, but if you look at our workforce, we have a lot of drivers who unfortunat­ely are in a demographi­c and location that does not have a high level of vaccinatio­n so we determined that mandating vaccines was probably not the answer for us,” Fuller said during a podcast Tuesday about the new Health Chattanoog­a Coalition. “There are a lot of ways to incentiviz­e people and encourage them to get vaccinated.”

Fuller said many employers are giving bonuses, time off of work or restrictin­g special events for only vaccinated workers.

President Joe Biden has proposed mandating all employers with more than 100 workers require their workers to either be vaccinated or tested for the COVID-19 virus every week and he has directed the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion to draft rules for such a mandate. Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee has sharply criticized such a government mandate, claiming it is unconstitu­tional.

While OSHA drafts new regulation­s — and the courts potentiall­y decide on their legality — Chattanoog­a Chamber President Christy Gillenwate­r said city business leaders decided to launch a community effort to encourage vaccines in whatever way is best for each company.

Barry Ruffalo, president and CEO of Astec Industries Inc., said he believes his business “has a responsibi­lity to mitigate the risk to our employees by ensuring a safe work environmen­t.

“Vaccinatio­ns and masks are the best tools we have in the fight against COVID–19,” he said.

Thomas Ozburn, president and CEO of Parkridge Health System, said the doctors and other clinical care workers taking care of COVID-19 patients “strongly support the vaccine.

“They have studied the science behind it and it is safe and effective,” Ozburn said. “The likelihood of getting seriously ill, becoming hospitaliz­ed or even dying as a result of COVID-19 is greatly diminished for those who are fully vaccinated.”

The coalition attracted businesses from nearly every sector, including such major employers as BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, Unum, Volkswagen, Lodge Manufactur­ing, First Horizon Bank and Elder’s Ace Hardware, among others

But the initial coalition is still only a small share of the 1,700 business members of the Chattanoog­a Chamber of Commerce and does not include Chattanoog­a’s biggest hospital, Erlanger Health System.

The coalition will work within three tiers of choice to encourage employees to get vaccinated against COVID-19.

More informatio­n about the coalition is available at chattanoog­achamber.com/hcc.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON ?? Nurse Holly Monroe vaccinates Chattanoog­a resident James Porter at East Lake Park in in Chattanoog­a in July. A coalition of Chattanoog­a businesses organized by the Chattanoog­a Area Chamber of Commerce and backed by the city of Chattanoog­a is trying to encourage more people to get the COVID-19 vaccine.
STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON Nurse Holly Monroe vaccinates Chattanoog­a resident James Porter at East Lake Park in in Chattanoog­a in July. A coalition of Chattanoog­a businesses organized by the Chattanoog­a Area Chamber of Commerce and backed by the city of Chattanoog­a is trying to encourage more people to get the COVID-19 vaccine.

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