The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Biden pushing federal workers to get vaccinated

- By Alexandra Jaffe and Ricardo AlonsoZald­ivar

WASHINGTON >> President Joe Biden is announcing strict new testing, masking and distancing requiremen­ts for federal employees who can’t or won’t show they have been vaccinated against the coronaviru­s, aiming to boost sluggish vaccine rates among the millions of Americans who draw federal paychecks, and to set an example for employers around the country.

Biden’s move for the federal government, by far the nation’s largest employer, comes in the face of surging coronaviru­s rates driven by pockets of vaccine resistance and the more infectious delta variant. A number of major corporatio­ns and some local government­s are ordering new requiremen­ts on their own, but the administra­tion feels much more is needed.

However, pushback is certain. The action puts Biden squarely in the center of the fierce political debate surroundin­g the government’s ability to compel Americans to follow publicheal­th guidelines.

In their effort to mitigate opposition, officials have been careful to emphasize that the move does not amount to a vaccine mandate, but rather imposes stricter masking, testing, social-distancing and travel restrictio­ns on federal employees, to encourage them to get vaccinated.

It could work, because evidence shows workers would rather get the vaccine than deal with burdens they consider onerous at work, said Lawrence Gostin, professor of globalheal­th law at Georgetown University Law School.

“People would much rather roll up their sleeves and get a jab, than undergo weekly testing and universal masking,” he said. “In many ways, this is really not a mandate, it’s giving workers a choice.”

Short of goal

About 60% of American adults have been fully vaccinated. Biden had set a July 4 goal to get at least one shot in 70% of adults, and is not quite there. The latest figure is 69.3%.

According to the Office of Personnel Management, the executive branch employed more than 2.7 million civilians in 2020, with some of the most significan­t numbers in Republican-led Southern states including Texas and Florida, where substantia­l vaccine resistance remains.

But Thursday’s move is not just about federal workers.

The administra­tion hopes it will nudge private companies push their workers harder to get vaccines that, while widely recognized as safe and effective, have yet to receive full approval from the Food and Drug Administra­tion.

“I think we’ve reached this tipping point, and Biden’s announceme­nt will provide a lot of air cover for companies and boards of directors who have difficult decisions facing them,” said Jeff Hyman, a Chicago-based business author and recruiter for startup companies.

Employers want to get their workers vaccinated but have been holding back, said Andrew Challenger, senior vice president of Challenger, Gray & Christmas, a major workforce consulting firm.

“It is a large risk over the head of every employer if there is an outbreak at the office,” he said. “But so far we have seen very few employers using a stick instead of carrots.”

‘Not working’

Gostin agreed, saying, “We’ve begged, pleaded, cajoled people to be vaccinated; we’ve offered them incentives, and it’s clear that that is not working.”

Some of the nation’s biggest corporatio­ns have moved to require vaccinatio­ns for their workers. Tech giants Facebook and Google announced this week their employees would have to show proof they have been fully vaccinated before returning to work.

Delta and United airlines are requiring new employees to show proof of vaccinatio­n. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are requiring workers to disclose their vaccinatio­n status, though not requiring them to be vaccinated.

But fewer than 10% of employers have said they intend to require all employees to be vaccinated, based on periodic surveys by the research firm Gartner.

The Biden administra­tion hopes its federalwor­ker guidance will help change that, by providing a model for state and local government­s and private businesses to follow, as workers prepare to return to offices this fall.

Many companies, particular­ly smaller ones concerned about legal ramificati­ons, could take the guidance as “justificat­ion for implementi­ng similar policies,” said Alexander Bick, associate professor of economics at the W.P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University.

Questions about the new policy’s scope remain.

The guidance is not expected to cover the military, but it is unclear if it will cover federal contractor­s. The White House hopes that releasing the new guidelines now will give agencies enough time to craft their own plans for implementa­tion before workers return fully to offices.

The opposition

State lawmakers across the U.S. have introduced more than 100 bills aiming to prohibit employers from requiring vaccinatio­n as a condition of employment, according to the National Academy for State Health Policy. At least six states have approved such bills.

The Justice Department and the federal Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission have both said no federal laws prevent businesses from requiring vaccinatio­ns as a condition of employment, and the federal policy would take precedent. But the “medical freedom” bills underscore the resistance such guidance may encounter at the state level.

Government actions in New York City and California have already faced resistance from local unions. And prior to Biden’s announceme­nt, some national unions were speaking out against it.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? President Joe Biden wants federal workers vaccinated, or to submit to testing, masking and distancing requiremen­ts. There is plenty of resistance to such requiremen­ts.
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE President Joe Biden wants federal workers vaccinated, or to submit to testing, masking and distancing requiremen­ts. There is plenty of resistance to such requiremen­ts.

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