Los Angeles Times

Film crews may have to vaccinate

Unions and producers have agreed to new COVID-19 safety rules for returning workers.

- By Anousha Sakoui

Hollywood workers may have to be vaccinated to work on union film sets under new COVID-19 safety requiremen­ts.

Producers will have the option to mandate vaccinatio­ns for their cast and crews working in close proximity to actors, leading entertainm­ent industry unions and an alliance of Hollywood producers said Monday night.

The measure is one of several protocols that are being updated along with relaxed testing and masking requiremen­ts in a new agreement that will run until Sept. 30, according to the joint statement signed by multiple unions and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers.

The short-term deal with SAG-AFTRA, the Internatio­nal Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees and other unions eases some of the safety protocols put in place last fall that provided for sick pay, testing, masking and other safety measures intended to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s.

After that agreement lapsed June 30, the groups began negotiatin­g ways to loosen the restrictio­ns to facilitate film production. The new measures were expected to reduce testing and sanitation requiremen­ts, helping to lower costs for producers.

“The COVID-19 Safety Agreement is the outcome of unpreceden­ted coordinati­on and solidarity between the unions and collaborat­ion with employers to develop science-based protocols that minimize the risk of COVID-19 virus transmissi­on in the industry’s unique work environmen­ts,” the organizati­ons said in their statement. “The protocols have driven a successful rebound of film and television production while prioritizi­ng safety for casts, crews and all on-set workers.”

The shutdown caused by the COVID-19 pandemic last spring devastated the entertainm­ent industry. Nearly 300,000 jobs were lost in creative industries in California, according to one estimate.

The return-to-work agreement reached last fall, which includes compensati­ng crew members who take time for testing and for quarantini­ng, has largely allowed the industry to get back to business. The number of outbreaks linked to film sets has been low but producers have continued to struggle to raise financing and insurance because of the risks of shutdowns.

The earlier protocols separated cast and crew on sets into different zones, with different testing and social distancing requiremen­ts depending on how closely they had to work together. In Zone A where actors perform, crew had to be tested three times a week or more. Sets, gear and transport vehicles had to be sanitized frequently. This raised costs and slowed filming.

Now, production­s on a case-by-case basis will be able to mandate that the workers in zones A of their sets be vaccinated. The groups said testing frequency may also be adjusted for certain areas in the United States and Canada where COVID-19 incidence remains very low.

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