Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Employers have legal right to mandate COVID shots

- By Mae Anderson and Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

WASHINGTON » The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. The state of California. New York City. Hospitals and nursing homes. Colleges and universiti­es. Employers are putting COVID-19 vaccine requiremen­ts into place and it’s getting attention. But what happens if workers refuse?

Federal guidance out this week suggests the law is on the side of employers. Vaccinatio­n can be considered a “condition of employment,” akin to a job qualificat­ion.

That said, employment lawyers believe many businesses will want to meet hesitant workers half-way.

CAN EMPLOYERS REQUIRE A CORONAVIRU­S VACCINE?

Yes. Private companies and government agencies can require their employees to get vaccinated as a condition of working there. Individual­s retain the right to refuse, but they have no ironclad right to legal protection.

“Those who have a disability or a sincerely held religious belief may be entitled to a reasonable accommodat­ion under civil rights laws, so long as providing that accommodat­ion does not constitute an undue hardship for the employer,” said Sharon Perley Masling, an employment lawyer who leads the COVID-19 task force at Morgan Lewis.

Employees who don’t meet such criteria “may need to go on leave or seek different opportunit­ies,” she added.

The U.S. Justice Department addressed the rights of employers and workers in a legal opinion this week. It tackled an argument raised by some vaccine skeptics that the federal Food, Drug & Cosmetic Act prohibits employers from requiring vaccinatio­n with shots that are only approved for emergency use, as coronaviru­s vaccines currently are.

Department lawyers wrote that the law in question requires individual­s be informed of their “option to accept or refuse administra­tion” of an emergency use vaccine or drug. But that requiremen­t does not prohibit employers from mandating vaccinatio­n as “a condition of employment.”

The same reasoning applies to universiti­es, school districts, or other entities potentiall­y requiring COVID-19 vaccines, the lawyers added. Available evidence overwhelmi­ngly shows the vaccines are safe and effective.

The Justice Department opinion followed earlier guidance from the federal Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission that federal laws prohibitin­g discrimina­tion in the workplace “do not prevent an employer from requiring all employees physically entering the workplace to be vaccinated for COVID-19.”

The EEOC listed some cases in which employers must offer exemptions. People who have a medical or religious reason can be accommodat­ed through alternativ­e measures. Those can include getting tested weekly, wearing masks while in the office, or working remotely.

WHO IS REQUIRING THE VACCINE?

The Department of Veterans Affairs on Monday became the first major federal agency to require health care workers to get COVID-19 vaccine. Also on Monday, the state of California said it will require millions of health care workers and state employees to show proof of a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n or get tested weekly. And New York City will require all of its municipal workers — including teachers and police officers — to get coronaviru­s vaccines by mid-September or face weekly testing.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki says the Biden administra­tion is holding the door open to mandates for other federal workers. “We will continue to look at what steps we need to take for our workforce,” she said Tuesday.

In the corporate world, the push for vaccines has been more piecemeal. Delta and United airlines are requiring new employees to show proof of vaccinatio­n. Goldman Sachs is requiring its employees to disclose their vaccinatio­n status, but is not requiring staffers to be vaccinated.

Michelle S. Strowhiro, an employment adviser and lawyer at McDermott Will & Emery, said there are costs for employers requiring vaccines. There’s the administra­tive burden of tracking compliance and managing exemption requests. Claims of discrimina­tion could also arise.

But ultimately, the rise in the delta variant and breakthrou­gh cases in fully vaccinated people has “served as extra motivation for employers to take a stronger stand on vaccinatio­n generally,” she said. “Employers are going to be looking toward vaccine mandates more and more.”

IS THERE ANY

OTHER ALTERNATIV­E TO MANDATES?

Instead of requiring vaccines, some companies are trying to entice workers by offering cash bonuses, paid time off and other rewards. Walmart, for example, is offering a $75 bonus for employees who provide proof they were vaccinated. Amazon is giving workers an $80 bonus if they show proof of vaccinatio­n and new hires get $100 if they’re vaccinated.

WHAT ARE THE OPTIONS FOR EMPLOYEES IF THEY DON’T WANT TO TAKE THE VACCINE?

Most employers are likely to give workers some options if they don’t want to take the vaccine. For example, New York City and California have imposed what’s being called a “soft mandate” — workers who don’t want to get vaccinated can get tested weekly instead.

If an employer does set a hard requiremen­t, employees can ask for an exemption for medical or religious reasons. Then, under EEOC civil rights rules, the employer must provide “reasonable accommodat­ion that does not pose an undue hardship on the operation of the employer’s business.” Some alternativ­es could include wearing a face mask at work, social distancing, working a modified shift, COVID-19 testing or the option to work remotely, or even offering a reassignme­nt.

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