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US President Joe Biden delivers remarks on the Delta variant and his administration's efforts to increase vaccinations at the White House on Thursday. Photo: Reuters

Politico | Coronavirus: Joe Biden expands US vaccine requirements in bid to rein in Covid-19

  • Dubbed ‘Path out of the Pandemic’, the six-part plan includes an order that all executive branch federal workers get vaccinated
  • The new mandates are expected to cover about 100 million workers – two-thirds of all workers in the US

This story is published in a content partnership with POLITICO. It was originally reported by Adam Cancryn and David Lim on politico.com on September 9, 2021.

US President Joe Biden on Thursday announced plans to require staff vaccinations at all health facilities that receive federal funding, as part of a sweeping new plan to rein in the coronavirus.

The move represents a dramatic expansion of the administration’s bid to boost vaccination rates among frontline health care workers, and comes as the administration readies a redoubling of efforts to rein in the virus.

The requirement is part of a broader six-part blueprint for combating the pandemic that Biden unveiled. Dubbed “Path out of the Pandemic”, it outlines new initiatives aimed at boosting vaccinations and access to testing, insulating the economy, keeping schools open, expanding mask requirements and improving care for Covid-19 patients.

“This is not about freedom and personal choice. It’s about protecting yourself and those around you,” Biden said. He added, “The bottom line, we‘re going to protect vaccinated workers from unvaccinated coworkers.”

Biden last month said he would impose staff vaccination requirements on all federally funded nursing homes, a directive expected to cover roughly 15,000 facilities employing 1.3 million people. Now, he is extending the order to a far wider group of providers, including major hospitals across the nation that receive Medicare or Medicaid funding.

Officials anticipate the broader mandate will affect more than 50,000 health facilities and 17 million workers.

Another centrepiece of Biden‘s plan is an executive order requiring that all federal workers get vaccinated against Covid-19, with no option for being regularly tested as an alternative. That is an escalation from his earlier encouragement that the federal workforce seek vaccination or be subject to a range of restrictions.

Covax vaccine shortfall puts pressure on rich nations to act

“The federal workforce is one of the largest in the country, and we’d like to be a model for what we think businesses and other organisations should do around the country,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said on Thursday. “The expectation is, if you want to work in the federal government or be a contractor, you need to be vaccinated.”

She added that federal workers would have 75 days to comply with the mandate, unless they qualify for limited exemptions.

The administration is also developing regulations that will require employers with more than 100 workers to institute requirements that employees get vaccinated or submit to regular testing. Those employers will also be required to give workers paid time off to get vaccinated.

“In total, the new vaccination requirements in the president‘s plan cover about 100 million workers, that’s two-thirds of all workers in the United States,” a senior administration official told reporters on Thursday.

The Department of Labour and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration are expected to issue a rule “in the coming weeks” that will lay out the exact time frame for the new requirements. Those who do not comply with the OSHA standard could face fines up to US$14,000 per violation, the senior official added.

The president in his speech also called on governors to get all teachers and school staff vaccinated, as well as encourage schools to institute regular testing regimes. In a policy directed at Republican-led states that have sought to ban school mask requirements, the administration is committing to backfilling any salaries or funding that states withhold from schools trying to implement Covid-19 safety measures.

“The path ahead even with the Delta variant is not nearly as bad as last winter,” Biden said. “But what makes it incredibly more frustrating is we have the tools to combat Covid-19, and a distinct minority of Americans supported by a distinct minority of officials are keeping us from turning the corner.”

The roughly 300,000 staff at Head Start programmes will similarly be required to get vaccinated, as well as those who work in schools run by federal agencies.

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And on testing, the government is planning to use nearly US$2 billion to buy 280 million over-the-counter at-home tests from multiple diagnostic manufacturers to support testing in long-term care facilities, community testing sites and other settings.

Still, it remains unclear how quickly the administration will be able to procure the rapid tests, which have been in shortage due to overwhelming demand for the products.

Walmart, Amazon and Kroger are also being tapped to sell rapid tests at-cost to consumers for the next three months, according to a fact sheet. The administration is working to expand the number of retail pharmacies where individuals can be tested for Covid-19 and will also sending 25 million rapid tests to community health centers and food banks to expand testing access.

Biden touched on the administration’s plan for Covid-19 booster shots, after an initial roll-out prompted broad confusion and accusations of political pressure on government health agencies.

01:50

WHO says no need for Covid-19 booster shots for now since vaccine supplies are low

WHO says no need for Covid-19 booster shots for now since vaccine supplies are low

The White House initially announced that it would make boosters available beginning the week of September 20, but has since walked plans back after the Food and Drug Administration and Centres for Disease Control warned it would be unable to authorise them for all Americans by that deadline.

“By planning now, we will be able to quickly get booster shots into the arms of eligible Americans once approved,” the plan reads. “As soon as authorisations are given, the administration will be prepared to offer booster shots, starting the week of September 20.”

The administration in the meantime is speeding shipments of monoclonal antibody treatments to states, amid a surge in demand among the harder-hit states in the Southeast.

The new plan comes just two months after Biden held a July 4 celebration at the White House, where he declared that the nation was close to vanquishing the pandemic.

Covid-19 booster jabs can help vulnerable: WHO Europe head

Since then, cases fuelled by the more contagious Delta variant have skyrocketed, and the administration has struggled to chart a clear course through the crisis. The CDC in particular has come under fire over its muddled messaging, including abruptly advising people to once again wear masks indoors and releasing an array of confusing data on the implications of so-called breakthrough Covid-19 cases.

A Gallup poll earlier this week found that more Americans now disagree than agree that the CDC has communicated a clear pandemic response plan. And for the first time, more people reported feeling negatively about Biden’s own Covid-19 communication than positively.

That has fuelled a renewed emphasis on the pandemic fight, which Democrats view as critical to Biden’s public standing and their odds of keeping full control of Congress in 2022.

Republicans in the meantime are waging pitched battles over mask-wearing in schools, with some like Florida Governor Ron DeSantis vowing to punish officials that try to make it a requirement.

02:34

Delta variant drives Covid-19 surge in southern US as unvaccinated are urged to get shots

Delta variant drives Covid-19 surge in southern US as unvaccinated are urged to get shots

The federal vaccination requirement will apply to all executive branch workers and contractors, bringing the rest of the government in line with the tougher requirements adopted earlier by the Department of Defence, Department of Veterans Affairs and parts of the health department.

Until Thursday, the rest of the federal workforce had the option to submit to regular testing, mask-wearing and restrictions on travel rather than get vaccinated. That clause will now be eliminated, bringing the entire government in line with the approach that Biden has pushed private-sector companies to adopt.

The American Federation of Government Employees, the largest union of federal workers, immediately pushed back on the stronger mandate. While it has “strongly encouraged” its members to get vaccinated and believes that vaccines are essential to protect workers and end the pandemic, AFGE President Everett Kelley said the change in policy should be negotiated with its bargaining unit.

“Put simply, workers deserve a voice in their working conditions,” Kelley said.

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Psaki said Thursday that the administration has had “a range consultations with unions” – including AFGE – over the last few months.

“We understand there will be objections, there will be concerns, there will be criticisms – but our role here is to save lives, and we welcome feedback and engagement but we’re going to stay true to our goal,” she said.

The new plan coincides with rising anxiety over Covid-19 outbreaks at schools, where children under 12 years old remain unvaccinated. Biden stressed the need to set up regular testing as a way of heading off the spread of infection.

The White House earlier this year allocated US$10 billion to help schools create Covid-19 testing regimes, but few took advantage of the opportunity amid a lull in cases earlier this year.

Marcus Plescia, chief medical officer at the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials, said the effort to implement testing in schools across the country is a good idea. Public health experts have raised concern in recent weeks that infections among children are rising as they head back into classrooms for the start of the school year.

“I have been surprised at how many are not testing routinely,” Plescia said.

But it is unclear how the Biden administration plans to get school districts that have not already implemented testing to do so. So far, just 1,602 institutions have signed up to partake in a separate US$650 million federal effort to organise testing at regional coordination hubs at K-8 schools and congregate settings like homeless shelters.

One industry source expressed doubt at the effectiveness of what they described as the Biden team employing a strategy of “No, really guys, we mean it.”

“We all assume that it‘s just Texas and Iowa that aren’t testing to protect kids. But the reality is plenty of affluent suburbs in Connecticut, Maryland, etc aren’t even testing at all,” the source said.

Megan R. Wilson contributed to this report.

Read Politico’s story.

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