As U.S. companies push to get workers vaccinated, states disagree on
who's essential
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[December 09, 2020]
By Tina Bellon and Richa Naidu
NEW YORK/CHICAGO (Reuters) - Companies and
industry groups lobbying to get their U.S. workers to the front of the
line for COVID vaccination are running into a patchwork of state plans
and confusion over who is essential, and who is not.
Inoculation against the disease caused by the novel coronavirus is key
to safely reopening large parts of the economy and reducing the risks of
illness at crowded meatpacking plants, factories and warehouses.
But before one needle has entered the arm of an American worker,
confusion has broken out over who exactly is considered essential during
a pandemic.
With initial vaccine doses limited and strong federal guidance lacking,
it has fallen to U.S. states to determine who will be first in line to
receive a vaccine, and who will have to wait well into next year.
State vaccine distribution plans reviewed by Reuters showed broad
discrepancies over who would be considered essential, with some states
clearly outlining specific worker groups and others not providing any
clarity.
Generally, states have broad discretion when it comes to vaccine
distribution and policy and are able to issue vaccination mandates for
their residents.
Many states have so far followed federal guidance to give meat and food
processing industry workers space in the line, but some are slowly
moving away, said Mark Lauritsen, a former hog slaughter worker who now
advocates on behalf of about 250,000 meatpacking and food processing
workers under the United Food and Commercial Workers union.
"For example, Colorado has not moved meatpacking and meat-processing as
high as some other states. So we'll be directing a lot of our effort
towards places like Colorado where we may be moved down the food chain."
"We're a union that has members in every state so we will be talking to
every state to make our case as to where our place in line should
be...Everybody is going to be jockeying for a place in line."
More than 20 large industries have urged officials to prioritize their
workers, including individual companies such as ride-hailing company
Uber Technologies Inc and food delivery provider DoorDash Inc and
industry groups representing truck drivers, teachers, retail workers and
other business sectors.
DoorDash in its letter calling for preferred vaccine access for its
delivery workers said the company could also help public health
officials communicate vaccine information through its platform.
At least 22 industries, including agricultural companies, cleaning
suppliers, dental hygienists, bus drivers and meat packers, also have
written to the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), an
independent panel of health experts recommending vaccine distribution
guidelines to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
WHO IS ESSENTIAL?
"We're hopeful that local health officials start jumping on this quicker
rather than later so that there's some guidance and some better sense of
how to be efficient with the essential workforce," said Bryan Zumwalt,
executive vice president of public affairs for the Consumer Brands
Association.
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A woman holds a small bottle labeled with a "Coronavirus COVID-19
Vaccine" sticker and a medical syringe in front of displayed USA
flag in this illustration taken, October 30, 2020. REUTERS/Dado
Ruvic/File Photo
The group representing consumer products makers including Procter &
Gamble Co and Coca-Cola Co, has sent letters to nearly all 50 U.S.
states and federal officials, urging their nearly 1.2 million
workers to be prioritized for a vaccine.
ACIP to date has only recommended healthcare personnel and residents
of long-term care facilities should receive the vaccine first - a
priority not disputed by any industry or state. ACIP members did not
respond to a request for comment or declined to comment pending the
discussions.
While some states have said they would await the committee's further
recommendations, others went ahead and developed their own vaccine
distribution priorities, a review of COVID-19 vaccine distribution
plans showed.
U.S. President-elect Joe Biden has criticized President Donald
Trump's lack of a coordinated plan to distribute coronavirus
vaccines, but it is not clear whether the federal government could
overwrite state distribution plans.
In New York, essential frontline workers regularly interacting with
the public, such as pharmacists, grocery store workers and transit
employees, are slated to receive the vaccine in a second
distribution phase, while Florida included all essential workers on
a U.S. Homeland Security list.
But that Homeland Security department list, spanning more than 25
major industries, makes up nearly 70% of the U.S. labor force,
according to researchers at the National Bureau of Economic
Research.
Georgia's plan said the state was working with various industries,
including poultry plants, manufacturers and warehouse distributors.
In North Carolina, which has one of the most detailed distribution
plans spanning nearly 150 pages, workers in meatpacking, seafood,
poultry and food processing, transportation and retail would be
included in an early phase so long as they had at least two chronic
conditions that put them at high risk.
Pennsylvania's distribution plan on the other hand only includes
three pages, stating merely that those "contributing to the
maintenance of core societal functions" would be prioritized.
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