USA TODAY International Edition

Vaccine deadline affects millions more US workers

Mandate applies to larger companies

- Maureen Groppe

Nearly 90% of adults have received at least one dose of the COVID- 19 vaccine, and about 70% of adults are fully vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

WASHINGTON – Workers at larger businesses will have to get vaccinated against COVID- 19 by Jan. 4 or face regular testing under new federal rules released Thursday.

Workers who choose the testing option may have to bear the cost. They also will be required to wear a face mask on the job beginning Dec. 5.

The rules fill in the details for the vaccinatio­n requiremen­t President Joe Biden announced in September for businesses with 100 or more employees.

The Labor Department is taking feedback over the next month on whether smaller workplaces should be included.

“COVID- 19 continues to hold back our workforce and our economy – and it will continue to do so until more Americans are vaccinated,” Labor Secretary Marty Walsh and Jeff Zients, the White House COVID- 19 response coordinato­r, wrote in an opinion piece for USA TODAY.

The Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion requiremen­t also applies to state and local government workers in 26 states, including teachers and school staff.

Twenty- one of those states have the option of writing their own workplace rules for public and private sector workers. But those rules can’t be weaker than what the federal government is requiring – and must be adopted in 30 days.

Three states, Arizona, South Carolina and Utah, already have missed the deadline for adopting an emergency rule OSHA issued in June for health care workers.

The latest federal rules, which cover an estimated 84 million employees, are expected to be immediatel­y challenged by Republican- led states, some of which already have moved to ban vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts.

“This is an overreach of the government’s role in serving and protecting Hoosiers,” Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb said Thursday in announcing the state was preparing a lawsuit against what he called an unpreceden­ted action.

Republican­s have also denounced the workplace requiremen­t as a threat to individual liberty that will result in massive disruption­s in the labor market.

“Your plan is disastrous and counterpro­ductive,” the attorneys general of 24 states warned Biden in September.

Major business groups like the U. S. Chamber of Commerce and the Business Roundtable have not come out against a requiremen­t, though they’ve pressed for more informatio­n about how new rules would be implemente­d.

But some organizati­ons, including the National Retail Federation and the American Trucking Associatio­n, had urged that the requiremen­ts not take effect until after the busy holiday season to avoid disruption­s if workers quit.

The new rules do that. In addition, the previously announced Dec. 8 deadline for federal contractor­s to get fully vaccinated is being extended until Jan. 4. That’s also the vaccinatio­n deadline for workers at health care facilities that treat Medicare or Medicaid patients.

The deadlines were aligned to make compliance easier across the labor market, according to a senior administra­tion official who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity.

The rules for federal contractor­s and health care workers are tougher, however, and do not include a testing option.

But Walsh, the labor secretary, emphasized that the OSHA requiremen­ts for other businesses are a “floor for safety – not a ceiling.” Many businesses already have imposed full vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts, Walsh noted in his opinion piece with Zients.

Biden has said he reluctantl­y agreed to vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts after educationa­l efforts and various incentives failed to persuade enough Americans to protect themselves and others against COVID- 19.

“I’m calling on employers to act,” the president said in a statement Thursday. “Businesses have more power than ever before to accelerate our path out of this pandemic, save lives, and protect our economic recovery.”

Requiremen­ts have boosted vaccinatio­n rates at companies and institutio­ns by at least 20%, according to the administra­tion.

Nearly 90% of adults have received at least one dose of the COVID- 19 vaccine, and about 70% of adults are fully vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Combined, the rules for larger businesses, federal contractor­s and health care workers are estimated by Goldman Sachs to cover 80% of the nation’s workforce.

Though some employees will leave a job rather than get vaccinated, the financial firm projected that the reduced spread of the virus from higher vaccinatio­n rates will have a larger – and positive – effect on the economy.

The requiremen­ts announced Thursday by the Labor Department use an emergency procedure that sidesteps OSHA’s usual lengthy rule- making process.

To withstand a court challenge, the agency will have to prove the rules are necessary to protect workers from a grave danger.

The administra­tion estimates the requiremen­ts will save thousands of lives and prevent more than 250,000 hospitaliz­ations in the six months after implementa­tion.

Sidney Shapiro, a Wake Forest law professor who has worked as an OSHA consultant, told a congressio­nal panel last week that the emergency standard has been met.

“It is true that the situation is improving, but not everywhere, not for certain,” Shapiro testified. “And COVID, unfortunat­ely, is not going to go away.”

Scott Hecker, the workplace safety lawyer whom Republican­s invited to testify, said OSHA has to explain why, if COVID- 19 is such a grave danger, the agency didn’t include a vaccinatio­n requiremen­t when it announced new rules four months ago.

In addition to hitting larger businesses, the vaccinatio­n rules apply to state and local government workers in more than half the states.

Five states – Connecticu­t, Illinois, Maine, New Jersey and New York – have OSHA- approved plans specifically for public employees.

Twenty- one states handle their own workplace enforcemen­t. They are: Alaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington and Wyoming.

As a condition of not using OSHA’s rules, those states’ workplace rules have to apply to public employees as well as the private sector. In addition, their rules have to be “at least as effective.”

If states don’t comply, the Labor Department can take away some of a state’s workplace enforcemen­t authority, a senior administra­tion official confirmed.

And the administra­tion stressed that the federal regulation­s preempt any state or local prohibitio­n against vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts or mask mandates.

Labor Department officials said they expect the “vast majority” of workplaces to comply, as they do with other rules. And as with other requiremen­ts, OSHA will rely both on worker complaints and spot checks for enforcemen­t.

Even before Biden announced the forthcomin­g standard in September, a quarter of private employers had vaccine requiremen­ts, according to Doron Dorfman, a Syracuse University law professor.

Five percent of unvaccinat­ed adults surveyed in October say they have left a job because of a COVID- 19 vaccinatio­n requiremen­t, according to the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation.

If faced with a requiremen­t, more unvaccinat­ed workers ( 46%) said they would most likely choose weekly testing than leave their job ( 37%) or get vaccinated ( 11%). If weekly testing is not an option, 17% said they would get vacci

nated and 72% said they would quit.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO/ AP ?? The latest federal rules, covering an estimated 84 million workers, are expected to face swift challenges by Republican- led states.
JOHN MINCHILLO/ AP The latest federal rules, covering an estimated 84 million workers, are expected to face swift challenges by Republican- led states.

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