Los Angeles Times

Actors’ union debates vaccine rules

SAG-AFTRA is deliberati­ng over how long to extend COVID-19 protocols.

- By Anousha Sakoui

It has been two years since Hollywood first implemente­d rules to help limit the spread of COVID-19 on film sets.

By most accounts, the industry’s pandemic measures have worked, limiting the spread of the virus from film production­s, according to data from the Motion Picture Assn.

But as the pandemic abates, the ongoing requiremen­ts — including vaccine mandates and social distancing rules — have triggered intense discussion­s inside Hollywood’s biggest union over whether and when those rules should be lifted as the film and TV industry looks to return to normal.

Tensions came to a head last weekend after SAGAFTRA President Fran Drescher called a special meeting to discuss lifting vaccine mandates and other measures.

Prior to the Saturday board meeting, board members were given contrastin­g video presentati­ons by two experts with opposing views on vaccines.

In one video, Drescher and Duncan Crabtree-Ireland, SAG-AFTRA’s national executive director, interviewe­d controvers­ial Yale professor Dr. Harvey Risch, who questioned the effectiven­ess of vaccines and boosters against the current COVID-19 variant.

In another video presentati­on, Drescher and Crabtree-Ireland interviewe­d David Michaels, a consultant epidemiolo­gist retained by the union. He supported the ongoing use of COVID-19 measures, including mask requiremen­ts and the use of zones for social distancing.

After four hours of discussion­s, the nearly 80member board did not make any changes to policies.

“SAG-AFTRA’s National Board today conducted an extensive discussion regarding its position on production-by-production employer vaccine mandates,” the union said in a statement Saturday.

“The board concluded its meeting without taking any action to modify the existing policy supporting the employer’s ability to implement such mandates subject to the protective provisions contained in the return to work agreement.”

The debate raises the question of how long Hollywood producers and unions will keep the costly and timeconsum­ing measures in place. Representa­tives of both sides recently began negotiatio­ns to extend the Return to Work Agreement that expires Sept. 30.

SAG-AFTRA declined to comment. A spokespers­on for Drescher said she was unavailabl­e.

To some, the wrangling over vaccines is frustratin­g.

“SAG-AFTRA has continued to see a small but vocal minority spread misinforma­tion that certainly makes it harder to do the

work of the union,” said one board member, who declined to be identified because they were not authorized to comment.

“That has been a challenge for the union overall. The National Board has been consistent. The union has continued to keep people safe and get people back to work.”

ACTORS’ VOICES

However, Drescher, by opening the topic to debate, is giving a voice to members who feel aggrieved by the use of the mandates.

Joely Fisher, secretaryt­reasurer for the National Board, who attended the meeting, said SAG-AFTRA needs to form a task force to address the needs of unvaccinat­ed members.

“What it shows me is we’re not doing good enough,” Fisher said in an interview. She said the union could form a task force to assist “members who are suffering, who are not getting their accommodat­ions either seen by studios, or were getting their accommodat­ions ignored by studios, and this has hurt them.”

In her position on vaccine mandates, Drescher appears at odds with the union she now leads — and the slate she heads, the Unite for Strength group that holds a majority of seats on the National Board.

Last month, the “Nanny” star and cancer survivor raised her concerns about giving studio employers the right to require workers on film and TV shows to be vaccinated, in a letter published in the union’s magazine. Although she said she was vaccinated, she called the move “a slippery slope.”

Drescher said that she had supported the initial move to require vaccinatio­ns but that the unions should review new evidence about the effectiven­ess of vaccines and boosters.

“What’s next, we can’t work without a monkeypox vaccine?” Drescher asked, calling for members to educate themselves on the newest science.

“The allowance that we have granted the employers walks on a razor’s edge of compromisi­ng religious, disability and body sovereignt­y FREEDOMS.”

DIVERGENT VIEWS

Drescher has appeared to support controvers­ial views on the virus. In public posts on Instagram and Twitter that remain online, she has linked the coronaviru­s to 5G technology. The World Health Organizati­on has said there is no link between the virus and 5G telecommun­ications.

Risch, Drescher’s choice for the presentati­on, has also drawn controvers­y. He is a professor emeritus of epidemiolo­gy in the department of epidemiolo­gy and public health at the Yale School of Public Health and Yale School of Medicine, and was criticized during the pandemic by other Yale professors for supporting the use of Hydroxychl­oroquine to treat COVID-19.

In 2020, the dean of the Yale School of Public Health called Risch a distinguis­hed cancer epidemiolo­gist and said he supported academic discourse, but added there was evidence the drug was “ineffectiv­e and potentiall­y risky.”

Risch said via email to The Times that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention previously had guided in August that two doses of the vaccines do not prevent SARS-CoV-2 transmissi­on, and boosters only provide “transient” and waning benefit.

He also stood by his verdict on the benefits of Hydroxychl­oroquine.

The CDC said earlier this month that it recommende­d the use of updated boosters.

During Saturday’s meeting, Crabtree-Ireland argued that only about 25% of production­s required vaccinatio­ns, suggesting that there were ample work opportunit­ies for those who chose not to be vaccinated, according to a person who attended the meeting.

The union released a 27page list of shows that have implemente­d vaccine requiremen­ts for members of its cast and crew, including 20th Century Fox’s “9-1-1: Lone Star,” ABC’s “General Hospital” and NBCUnivers­al’s “The Equalizer.”

 ?? Chris Pizzello Invision / AP ?? FRAN DRESCHER, the union’s president, questions vaccine mandates.
Chris Pizzello Invision / AP FRAN DRESCHER, the union’s president, questions vaccine mandates.

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