The Columbus Dispatch

Omicron may sideline many under mandate

Testing option for employees would likely find lots of infections

- Paul Davidson

A federal mandate for companies with 100 or more employees to ensure they’re vaccinated or tested weekly could worsen severe worker shortages – if it’s upheld in court – by forcing staffers who test positive to quarantine even if they have no symptoms, employment lawyers say.

Such worker absences could become widespread, particular­ly at workplaces where employees can’t work remotely, such as stores and restaurant­s. That’s because the omicron variant is highly contagious but often results in milder cases or positive tests without symptoms, lawyers say. Within a single week in mid-december, omicron surged in the U.S., from making up just 13% of all coronaviru­s cases to 73%.

“A lot more people will test positive than before,” says James Sullivan, cochair of law firm Cozen O’connor’s Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion-workplace Safety Practice Group. “It will be a testing/quarantini­ng extravagan­za!”

The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear oral arguments on Jan. 7 on whether President Joe Biden’s vaccinatio­n-orbiden’s testing mandate can take effect as scheduled on Feb. 9.

The directive was temporaril­y blocked by a court before another appeals court reinstated it, with the high court set to resolve the conflict next month. Or at least until the broader case is hashed out later this year.

Most of the controvers­y surroundin­g the mandate has focused on whether midsize and large businesses should be forced to order the vaccinatio­n of their employees. But the testing of staffers who refuse to get vaccinated could become an even thornier issue, attorneys say.

Kathryn Bakich, health compliance practice leader at Segal, an employee benefits consulting firm, downplayed the effect of the rule, saying at least some employers already “are moving ahead with vaccine mandates and testing policies regardless of the federal mandate.”

Sullivan, however, says most companies that have imposed vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts – largely banks, law firms and other profession­al service companies – have not provided an option for testing, which can result in administra­tive hassles and higher costs.

And many restaurant­s, stores, factories and other businesses have not required employee vaccinatio­ns because they’re already struggling to fill openings amid dire labor shortages, Sullivan says.

rule, however, would force their hand and apply to more than 80 million workers. Many firms will likely give employees who refuse to get vaccinated the option of weekly testing so they don’t quit, Sullivan says.

“If you’re doing more testing, you’re going to find more cases,” says Brett Coburn, an employment lawyer at Alston & Bird in Atlanta.

The good news is 62% of the U.S. population is fully vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And such workers generally won’t need to be tested, Coburn says.

But that still leaves more than 30% who may refuse vaccinatio­n and could test positive for omicron even if they have no symptoms because the variant is so infectious, Sullivan says. Those workers must quarantine for 10 days or, if they’re asymptomat­ic, five days, followed by five days of maskwearin­g around others, under new CDC guidelines released Monday.

Also, the CDC recommends that fully vaccinated workers who come into close contact with an infected coworker take a coronaviru­s test within five to seven days and quarantine if they test positive, says Gus Sandstrom, an employment lawyer at Blank Rome in Philadelph­ia.

“This is a material concern given the transmissi­bility of the omicron variant,” Sandstrom says.

 ?? RICHARD VOGEL/AP ?? Quarantine-driven worker absences could become widespread as tests show people have the highly contagious omicron variant.
RICHARD VOGEL/AP Quarantine-driven worker absences could become widespread as tests show people have the highly contagious omicron variant.

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