随着美国新一轮疫情卷土重来,越来越多的雇主要求员工接种疫苗。不愿意的员工要面临一个共同的选择:要么接种疫苗,要么另谋他就。
仅在过去的六周内,法院就处理了多件与此相关的案件:德克萨斯州休斯顿卫理公会医院的员工发起诉讼,反对该单位的“疫苗接种令”,被该州一名联邦法官驳回;另一边,印第安纳大学也推出强制学生和教职员工接种疫苗的政策,同样遭到反对,但反对声同样被该州法院驳回。与此同时,越来越多的用人单位、无论公共部门还是私企,都要求员工必须接种疫苗或接受强制性核酸检测——周一,加州和纽约也都做出此类决定。
如果不愿意,另一种选择就是像150 多名休斯顿医院的员工那样——6 月底,他们因拒绝接种疫苗而被解雇、或主动辞职。
“为工作场所制定规矩是有历史依据的,”加州大学黑斯廷斯法学院研究疫苗政策的教授多丽特•赖斯 (Dorit Reiss) 说。“为工作场所创造一个安全的环境不仅对用人单位很重要,对员工和消费者也很重要。”
随着企业和政府让员工恢复线下坐班——也是应对全国性的劳动力短缺——管理人员正在制定更严格的疫苗接种政策。美国接种速度放缓,就使得未接种疫苗的居民容易感染传染性更高的德尔塔变种;新增的病例数、住院人数和死亡人数再次出现上升趋势。
纽约市长比尔•德布拉西奥(Bill de Blasio)也敦促私人雇主要求员工注射疫苗,旧金山地区的卫生官员也提出了类似的建议。周一,美国医学会在一份声明中呼吁——该声明由 50 多个护理、药学、外科、儿科和其他团体共同签署——要强制所有员工“应打尽打”,以保护“少数”出于健康原因而不能接种疫苗的人。
这家总部位于芝加哥的医疗组织写道:“接种疫苗是减少疫情影响、并避免恢复严格的防疫措施的主要方式。”“这对于保护弱势群体尤其必要,包括未接种疫苗的儿童和免疫功能低下的人群。”
截至7月26日,美国有53%的人口接种了新冠疫苗,落后于中国大陆、德国、法国、英国、西班牙和加拿大等国家。根据美国疾控中心的数据,截至7月22日,美国在7天内的平均注射剂量为291,565剂,比前一周下降35.2%。4月份,美国每天的注射量超过300万剂。
复杂的规则
由于公私部门都在强制员工接种新冠疫苗,人们也想从联邦和各州的法律法规中找到相关依据。5月,美国平等就业机会委员会发布了指导意见,指出“用人单位要求所有进入工作场所的员工接种疫苗并不违背联邦法律”,只要该政策不与民权法和残疾法中的相关条例抵触。
不过,也有一些州在与疫情相关的问题上支持员工。5 月,蒙大拿州州长、共和党人格雷格•吉安福特 (Greg Gianforte) 签署了一项法案,禁止用人单位强迫员工披露自己的疫苗接种情况。夏威夷和俄勒冈州也限制了“密接者追踪技术”的使用,这些技术会向雇主透露员工的行踪。佐治亚州州长、共和党人布赖恩•坎普 (Brian Kemp) 也于5月签署了一项行政命令,禁止该州雇主根据员工的疫苗接种情况,对他们设置不同的规定。
与此同时,很多私营企业都为了自身的安全,不约而同地选择推行“强制接种令”。
美联航预计,随着旅游业的复苏,该航司将在第三季度恢复盈利,而它是要求新入职的员工提供疫苗接种证明的公司之一。五月的百老汇舞台剧《汉密尔顿》也宣布,所有演员和工作人员都必须接种疫苗,但它对观众没有这样的要求。据《高等教育纪事报》报道,至少有 600 所公立和私立大学要求其教职工和学生提供疫苗接种证明。
医院带头
总部位于芝加哥的美国医院协会(一个代表近5,000家医疗企业的贸易组织)称,全国至少有433家医院已出台和“疫苗接种”相关的规定。周一,美国退伍军人事务部成为第一个强制要求员工接种疫苗的联邦机构。在老兵疗养院工作或出入这些机构的医生、牙医、足病医生、验光师、护士、脊椎按摩师和其他人员将有八周的时间进行接种。
周一,加州副州长加文•纽瑟姆(Gavin Newsom)表示,作为美国人口最多的州,从8月份起,加州将要求所有政府职员提供疫苗接种证明或在办公室戴口罩,并且至少每周接受一次核酸检测。根据该市人力资源部门下发的一份备忘录,旧金山公职人员必须在周四之前汇报他们的接种状况,如果伪造,将被处以罚款。
在纽约,德布拉西奥也在对该市30万名市政工作者采取类似行动:拒绝的员工将被解雇,而且没有薪酬补偿。这个美国人口最多的城市在7月24日报告,7天内的新增病例数平均为837例,是7月11日那一周平均值的两倍多。
从9月13日开始,每一位政府职员都有两种选择:接种#新冠疫苗,或每周接受一次核酸检测。
这就是我们保护这座城市的安全并抗击德尔塔变种的方式。
— 纽约市 (@nycgov),2021 年 7 月 26 日
纽约州州长、民主党人安德鲁•库莫 (Andrew Cuomo) 也表示,尽管该州无权下令要求其1,600多个城市的人全部接种疫苗,但警告说,现在不是采取“毛毛雨一般的措施和渐进行动”的时候了。
“那样的方式无法减缓病毒传播,”库莫说。“我们吸取了教训——过去我们已经尝试过了。”(财富中文网)
编译:陈聪聪
随着美国新一轮疫情卷土重来,越来越多的雇主要求员工接种疫苗。不愿意的员工要面临一个共同的选择:要么接种疫苗,要么另谋他就。
仅在过去的六周内,法院就处理了多件与此相关的案件:德克萨斯州休斯顿卫理公会医院的员工发起诉讼,反对该单位的“疫苗接种令”,被该州一名联邦法官驳回;另一边,印第安纳大学也推出强制学生和教职员工接种疫苗的政策,同样遭到反对,但反对声同样被该州法院驳回。与此同时,越来越多的用人单位、无论公共部门还是私企,都要求员工必须接种疫苗或接受强制性核酸检测——周一,加州和纽约也都做出此类决定。
如果不愿意,另一种选择就是像150 多名休斯顿医院的员工那样——6 月底,他们因拒绝接种疫苗而被解雇、或主动辞职。
“为工作场所制定规矩是有历史依据的,”加州大学黑斯廷斯法学院研究疫苗政策的教授多丽特•赖斯 (Dorit Reiss) 说。“为工作场所创造一个安全的环境不仅对用人单位很重要,对员工和消费者也很重要。”
随着企业和政府让员工恢复线下坐班——也是应对全国性的劳动力短缺——管理人员正在制定更严格的疫苗接种政策。美国接种速度放缓,就使得未接种疫苗的居民容易感染传染性更高的德尔塔变种;新增的病例数、住院人数和死亡人数再次出现上升趋势。
纽约市长比尔•德布拉西奥(Bill de Blasio)也敦促私人雇主要求员工注射疫苗,旧金山地区的卫生官员也提出了类似的建议。周一,美国医学会在一份声明中呼吁——该声明由 50 多个护理、药学、外科、儿科和其他团体共同签署——要强制所有员工“应打尽打”,以保护“少数”出于健康原因而不能接种疫苗的人。
这家总部位于芝加哥的医疗组织写道:“接种疫苗是减少疫情影响、并避免恢复严格的防疫措施的主要方式。”“这对于保护弱势群体尤其必要,包括未接种疫苗的儿童和免疫功能低下的人群。”
截至7月26日,美国有53%的人口接种了新冠疫苗,落后于中国大陆、德国、法国、英国、西班牙和加拿大等国家。根据美国疾控中心的数据,截至7月22日,美国在7天内的平均注射剂量为291,565剂,比前一周下降35.2%。4月份,美国每天的注射量超过300万剂。
复杂的规则
由于公私部门都在强制员工接种新冠疫苗,人们也想从联邦和各州的法律法规中找到相关依据。5月,美国平等就业机会委员会发布了指导意见,指出“用人单位要求所有进入工作场所的员工接种疫苗并不违背联邦法律”,只要该政策不与民权法和残疾法中的相关条例抵触。
不过,也有一些州在与疫情相关的问题上支持员工。5 月,蒙大拿州州长、共和党人格雷格•吉安福特 (Greg Gianforte) 签署了一项法案,禁止用人单位强迫员工披露自己的疫苗接种情况。夏威夷和俄勒冈州也限制了“密接者追踪技术”的使用,这些技术会向雇主透露员工的行踪。佐治亚州州长、共和党人布赖恩•坎普 (Brian Kemp) 也于5月签署了一项行政命令,禁止该州雇主根据员工的疫苗接种情况,对他们设置不同的规定。
与此同时,很多私营企业都为了自身的安全,不约而同地选择推行“强制接种令”。
美联航预计,随着旅游业的复苏,该航司将在第三季度恢复盈利,而它是要求新入职的员工提供疫苗接种证明的公司之一。五月的百老汇舞台剧《汉密尔顿》也宣布,所有演员和工作人员都必须接种疫苗,但它对观众没有这样的要求。据《高等教育纪事报》报道,至少有 600 所公立和私立大学要求其教职工和学生提供疫苗接种证明。
医院带头
总部位于芝加哥的美国医院协会(一个代表近5,000家医疗企业的贸易组织)称,全国至少有433家医院已出台和“疫苗接种”相关的规定。周一,美国退伍军人事务部成为第一个强制要求员工接种疫苗的联邦机构。在老兵疗养院工作或出入这些机构的医生、牙医、足病医生、验光师、护士、脊椎按摩师和其他人员将有八周的时间进行接种。
周一,加州副州长加文•纽瑟姆(Gavin Newsom)表示,作为美国人口最多的州,从8月份起,加州将要求所有政府职员提供疫苗接种证明或在办公室戴口罩,并且至少每周接受一次核酸检测。根据该市人力资源部门下发的一份备忘录,旧金山公职人员必须在周四之前汇报他们的接种状况,如果伪造,将被处以罚款。
在纽约,德布拉西奥也在对该市30万名市政工作者采取类似行动:拒绝的员工将被解雇,而且没有薪酬补偿。这个美国人口最多的城市在7月24日报告,7天内的新增病例数平均为837例,是7月11日那一周平均值的两倍多。
从9月13日开始,每一位政府职员都有两种选择:接种#新冠疫苗,或每周接受一次核酸检测。
这就是我们保护这座城市的安全并抗击德尔塔变种的方式。
— 纽约市 (@nycgov),2021 年 7 月 26 日
纽约州州长、民主党人安德鲁•库莫 (Andrew Cuomo) 也表示,尽管该州无权下令要求其1,600多个城市的人全部接种疫苗,但警告说,现在不是采取“毛毛雨一般的措施和渐进行动”的时候了。
“那样的方式无法减缓病毒传播,”库莫说。“我们吸取了教训——过去我们已经尝试过了。”(财富中文网)
编译:陈聪聪
As a resurgence in COVID-19 cases prompts more U.S. employers to require vaccinations, workers who object face a common response: Get a shot or get another job.
In the past six weeks alone, a federal judge in Texas dismissed a lawsuit by employees who had sued over a Houston Methodist Hospital order, and another in Indiana blocked a challenge to Indiana University’s policy for its students and staff. At the same time, a growing number of private and public employers -- including, on Monday, California and New York City -- are telling workers that they must get vaccinated or face mandatory testing.
The alternative is to go the route of more than 150 Houston hospital employees who were fired or resigned as of late June after refusing to get the jab.
“There’s a longstanding precedent to set workplace rules,” said Dorit Reiss, a professor who studies vaccine policy at the University of California Hastings College of the Law. “A safe workplace is important not just for the employer, but also for the employees and for the consumers.”
As companies and governments bring workers back to offices -- as well as navigate a nationwide labor shortage -- managers are enacting more stringent vaccine policies. The slowing pace of inoculation in the U.S. has left unvaccinated residents vulnerable to the highly contagious delta variant; cases, hospitalizations and deaths from COVID-19 are once again on the upswing.
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio is urging private employers to start requiring the shots, while health officials in the San Francisco area have made similar recommendations. The American Medical Association, in a statement issued on Monday and co-signed by more than 50 nursing, pharmacy, surgical, pediatric and other groups, urged mandatory vaccines for all such workers, save “a small minority” who have health-related reasons to avoid the shots.
“Vaccination is the primary way to put the pandemic behind us and avoid the return of stringent public health measures,” the Chicago-based medical group wrote. “This is especially necessary to protect those who are vulnerable, including unvaccinated children and the immuno-compromised.”
As of July 26, COVID-19 vaccine doses have been administered to 53% of the U.S. population, behind countries including mainland China, Germany, France, the U.K, Spain and Canada. The seven-day average number of doses administered in the U.S. was 291,565 as of July 22, down 35.2% from the previous week, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In April, the U.S. was administering more than 3 million shots a day.
Complex Rules
As public and private employers compel employees to get COVID-19 vaccines, they are navigating a web of state and federal rules. In May, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission issued guidance stating that federal laws “do not prevent an employer from requiring all employees physically entering the workplace to be vaccinated for COVID-19,” so long as the policy doesn’t conflict with civil-rights and disabilities laws.
Some states, though, have sided with employees on pandemic-related matters. Montana Governor Greg Gianforte, a Republican, in May signed a bill that prohibits employers from forcing their workers to disclose vaccination status. Hawaii and Oregon have set limits on contact-tracing technology that would reveal workers’ whereabouts to their employers. Brian Kemp, the Republican governor of Georgia, signed an executive order in May prohibiting state employers from having different rules for workers based on their vaccination status.
Private industries, meanwhile, have powerful self-interests and allies.
United Airlines, which expects to return to profitability in the third quarter as travel rebounds, is among companies requiring proof of vaccination from new hires. The Broadway show “Hamilton” in May announced that all cast and crew must be immunized, although it wasn’t demanding the same of audiences. At least 600 public and private colleges are requiring proof from their staff and students, according to the Chronicle of Higher Education.
Hospitals Lead
At least 433 hospitals nationwide have mandates in place, according to the Chicago-based American Hospital Association, a trade group representing almost 5,000 health-care providers. On Monday, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs became the first federal agency to mandate Covid-19 shots. Physicians, dentists, podiatrists, optometrists, nurses, chiropractors and others who work in or visit veterans facilities have eight weeks to get inoculated.
California, the most populous U.S. state, will require all state employees in August to prove they’ve been vaccinated or wear a mask in the office and get tested for the virus at least once a week, Governor Gavin Newsom said Monday. San Francisco public employees have until Thursday to report their status, under penalty of perjury, according to a memo distributed by the city and county human resources department.
In New York, de Blasio is taking similar action for the city’s 300,000-member municipal workforce, with those who resist facing dismissal without pay. The most populous U.S. city reported a seven-day average of 837 new COVID-19 cases for July 24, more than double the average on July 11.
Beginning September 13 every City government employee will need to be vaccinated for #COVID19 or undergo weekly testing. Those are the options.
This is how we keep our city safe and fight back against the Delta variant.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, said the state is powerless to order its more than 1,600 municipalities to require vaccinations, but warned that it was no time for “baby steps and incremental actions.”
“You don’t slow the spread that way,” Cuomo said. “We learned that lesson -- been there, done that.”