One in four companies has instituted a vaccine mandate for U.S. workers, a sharp increase from last month, following President Joe Biden’s
Another 13% of companies plan to put a
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Last month, just 16% of companies
Companies expect to lose between 2% and 8% of their employees due to vaccine mandates, Gartner found, either because they quit or they’re terminated for noncompliance.
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“If you’re at 2%, you can live with that,” Kropp said in a panel discussion Thursday. “If it’s 8%, that could be a real problem, especially if it’s concentrated in one place or in one department.”
The details of Biden’s emergency regulation, which will come from the Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration and applies to private employers with 100 or more workers, haven’t been developed yet. But companies “don’t have the luxury of waiting for the feds to write the rules,” Kropp said in the panel, sponsored by Protocol, a technology news site.
Either choice presents pitfalls for managers.
“Testing people weekly is a heavy lift,” Rachel Conn, an employment lawyer and partner at law firm Nixon Peabody, said on the panel. “Just having a mandate could be easier potentially.”
Another problem, Kropp said, is that while companies expect the OSHA regulation to come in force by the end of the year, some employees believe it could get overturned in the courts. The attorney general of Arizona
“The bigger problem employers have is there are employees who believe the Supreme Court will overturn it,” Kropp said. “A lot of employees who haven’t gotten the shot yet don’t believe this is real. So there’s the legal part of it, and the perception part, and you have to manage both of those things.”
The federal vaccine directive, officially known as an emergency temporary standard, or ETS, doesn’t state whether fully remote workers will have to get their shots as well. California, one of 22 states that has its own OSHA rules, has