Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Biden’s vaccine mandate gives employers cover

Chicago-area firms welcome guidance from government

- By Robert Channick Chicago Tribune’s Lisa Donovan and Sarah Freishtat contribute­d. rchannick@chicago tribune.com

President Joe Biden’s newly issued mandate that companies with 100 or more employees must require vaccinatio­ns or weekly COVID-19 testing among their workforce may be just what the doctor ordered for a number of Chicago-area companies, including WeatherTec­h, the southwest suburban car floor mat manufactur­er.

The company, which has 1,700 employees on its sprawling Bolingbroo­k campus making everything from dog bowls to cellphone holders, has no vaccine or testing mandates in place, despite having “several very sick employees” and one death from COVID-19, according to WeatherTec­h founder and CEO David MacNeil.

MacNeil, a strong proponent of COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns for his employees, said the legal landscape for imposing a company mandate was unknown — at least before Biden announced his proposed mandate Thursday.

“I welcome government help in getting the job done,” MacNeil said Friday.

Under Biden’s plan, workers must either be vaccinated or tested weekly, with businesses providing time off for employees to do either. The proposed rules, which have yet to be drafted by the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion, would carry fines of up to $14,000 per violation for the businesses, and cover about 80 million private-sector workers.

Some labor experts expect the vaccine mandate, which may take weeks to roll out, to be challenged in court. But it may provide an immediate catalyst for businesses seeking guidance — and legal backing — on implementi­ng what has proven to be a potentiall­y divisive

requiremen­t.

“I think companies have been waiting for this,” said John Challenger, CEO of Chicago-based outplaceme­nt firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas. “Companies will flock to get this done. I think there will be a real sense of relief. They’ve been looking for cover.”

Chicago-based United Airlines is among a number of large companies that have taken the lead in implementi­ng vaccine mandates for employees as COVID-19 cases rise amid the spread of the delta variant. Other companies requiring proof of vaccinatio­n include CVS, Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Delta Air Lines, Tyson Foods and Deerfield-based Walgreens.

Biden’s mandate would incorporat­e a much broader swath of companies, providing an incentive for moving forward and penalties for violating what would be an enforceabl­e workplace safety violation.

Mark Denzler, president and CEO of the Illinois Manufactur­ers’ Associatio­n, said the “devil is in the details” of the yet-to-be

released OSHA rules.

“While no federal rule has been promulgate­d, we do have concerns about significan­t financial penalties that could be forced on employers who are already doing their best to navigate constantly changing rules and guidance,” Denzler said in an emailed statement Friday.

Jim Sullivan, a Washington, D.C.-based labor attorney and the former chair of the Occupation­al Safety and Health Review Commission during the Trump administra­tion, said OSHA is expected to create an emergency standard and make the rule effective within weeks. He then expects it will be immediatel­y challenged in court and “ultimately shot down.”

At this point, many questions remain about the costs to employers, the specific requiremen­ts and how the mandate might be enforced, Sullivan said.

“It’s just an effort by the administra­tion to use OSHA as a mechanism to get people to require their employees be vaccinated,” Sullivan said. “I think what their intent is,

is to have people just do it. And they’re not going to do it through enforcemen­t.”

An August survey conducted by Littler, a labor and employment law firm, found that only 9% of employers are currently mandating vaccines for some or all of their employees, but nearly two-thirds are encouragin­g employees to get the vaccine.

Barry Hartstein, a Chicago-based attorney for Littler, said the Biden mandate will likely encourage more companies to take their policies from voluntary to mandatory.

“This is one more basis that may give those who are inclined to have mandatory vaccinatio­ns to say it’s time,” Hartstein said. “If they weren’t in favor of vaccinatio­ns, it may still be a waitand-see approach.”

For Chicago employers still processing the proposed vaccine mandate, reactions were generally muted, but supportive.

Ford’s Chicago Assembly Plant, which makes the Ford Explorer, Lincoln Aviator and Police Intercepto­r SUVs, has about 5,000 employees working three shifts on the city’s Southeast Side.

The automaker requires every employee to wear a mask inside the plant, but its vaccinatio­n policy is mostly voluntary, Ford spokeswoma­n Kelli Felker said.

“Ford continues to strongly encourage all employees who are eligible to get vaccinated,” Felker said in an emailed statement Friday. “We believe the vaccine plays a critical role in combating the virus and have already designated some roles where we require the vaccine. We will be assessing the new executive actions to determine what adjustment­s need to be taken to our current vaccinatio­n policy as we continue to prioritize the safety of our employees.”

Schaumburg-based insurance giant Zurich North America will act once it reviews forthcomin­g guidance from the Safer Federal Workforce Task Force and a rule from the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion, spokespers­on Jennifer Schneider said in an emailed statement.

Bloomingto­n-based State

Farm Insurance also does not have a vaccine mandate for employees and on Friday the company indicated it’s taking the same wait-andsee stance as Zurich. “Right now our protocols remain the same until we learn more,” State Farm spokespers­on Gina Morss-Fischer said in an email.

Food service giant US Foods, which has roughly 1,000 employees at its Rosemont headquarte­rs, does not currently require vaccinatio­ns.

“The health and safety of our associates and customers remain our top priority,” the company said in a statement. “We will review the executive orders and related OSHA requiremen­ts to determine the appropriat­e next steps.”

While vaccine and mask mandates have become politicall­y polarizing, WeatherTec­h’s MacNeil believes preventing the spread of COVID-19 is a good business practice that should cut across party lines.

A Republican megadonor who contribute­d $1 million to President Donald Trump’s January 2017 inaugurati­on, MacNeil said he was among the first to be vaccinated in November 2020 as a participan­t in the Johnson & Johnson trials. He called the results “nothing less than amazing” after staying COVID-free, despite repeated exposures to people who tested positive, including his own employees.

MacNeil’s biggest concern about the Biden vaccinatio­n mandate is that it doesn’t go far enough.

“Do employees in companies with 99 or less employees not deserve to work in the same level of safety as employees of larger companies?” MacNeil said. “The sooner all of us are vaccinated, the sooner we can all get back to normal life and business here in America.”

 ?? ERIN HOOLEY/CHICAGO TRIBUNE 2020 ?? Workers assemble plastic face shields at the WeatherTec­h facility in Bolingbroo­k.
ERIN HOOLEY/CHICAGO TRIBUNE 2020 Workers assemble plastic face shields at the WeatherTec­h facility in Bolingbroo­k.

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