"A few weeks from now, this is going to be something that's
widespread across the country because it's really just a basic
safety issue," Kirby told CNN after the meeting.
United is among a growing list of U.S. companies mandating shots for
workers as COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations https://tmsnrt.rs/2WTOZDR
soar in areas with low vaccination rates, mainly conservative states
in the U.S. South.
Kirby said Biden had asked those at the 30-minute meeting about
their vaccination efforts and encouraged them to persuade other
business leaders to follow suit.
Alaska Airlines, which employs about 20,000 people, said separately
that it was looking closely at whether it would require that its
employees be vaccinated.
"If we do, the requirement would not be effective until at least one
vaccine is fully approved by the FDA and would include appropriate
religious and medical exemptions", an Alaska Airlines spokesperson
said in an emailed statement.
Earlier, a White House official said Howard University President
Wayne Frederick, Kaiser Permanente Chief Executive Gregory Adams and
a South Carolina business owner who adopted a
vaccinate-or-get-tested requirement for her workers would also
attend the meeting.
Biden has endorsed companies and local governments pressing more
people to get vaccinated. His administration is also looking into
what authority businesses have to mandate vaccines, Labor Secretary
Marty Walsh told Reuters last week.
"I will have their backs and the backs of other private- and
public-sector leaders if they take such steps," the Democratic
president said last week.
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United announced
https://www.reuters.com/
business/aerospace-defense/united-airlines-makes-covid-19-shots-compulsory-us-employees-2021-08-06
its vaccine requirement for U.S.-based employees last week and Kirby
said that while some had opposed the move, the overall response had
been overwhelmingly positive.
Mandating vaccines for passengers would be more difficult, he said,
citing logistical challenges.
Its major U.S. rivals, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines and
Southwest Airlines, are encouraging employee vaccinations but not
imposing them.
U.S. airlines have enjoyed a broad rebound in travel demand this
summer, but Southwest warned on Wednesday that rising COVID-19 cases
were hitting demand, a sign of the impact of the Delta variant on
the U.S. economy.
Among other transportation companies, U.S. passenger railroad Amtrak
said on Wednesday it would require all of its 18,000 employees to be
fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by Nov. 1 or submit to weekly
testing.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt and Tracy Rucinski; Additional
reporting by Susan Heavey and David Shepardson in Washington and
Kanishka Singh and Anirudh Saligrama in Bengaluru; Editing by Lisa
Shumaker and Peter Cooney)
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