Yuma Sun

Does my employer have to say if a coworker has the virus?

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Does my employer have to say if a coworker has the virus?

Employers are generally not required to tell workers when someone in the workplace has tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that companies monitor employees for symptoms and alert those who may have been in contact with an infected person. Some states may order businesses to follow such guidance.

Employers have the right to take employees’ temperatur­e and ask about symptoms or if they have been exposed to or diagnosed with the virus. If an employee doesn’t respond to those questions, they can be barred from the workplace.

Businesses are required to provide a safe working environmen­t. They also have to keep track of infections contracted on the job and report any hospitaliz­ations or deaths related to the disease to the U.S. Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion.

Some workers are unsettled by the lack of informatio­n. Amazon, for example, alerted warehouse workers when someone tested positive for the virus, but didn’t disclose a tally of how many workers tested positive. So workers began trying to keep track on their own.

There are also pending lawsuits against employers filed by workers who were exposed to or diagnosed with the coronaviru­s. In general, there’s a high legal bar for finding an employer at fault for endangerin­g employees and most claims are resolved via worker’s compensati­on settlement­s. There has also been some debate over whether Congress should grant businesses liability protection­s during the pandemic.

 ?? AP ILLUSTRATI­ON BY PETER HAMLIN ??
AP ILLUSTRATI­ON BY PETER HAMLIN

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