Washington
Post to mandate COVID-19 vaccinations for reporters and staff
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[July 28, 2021]
By Danielle Kaye
(Reuters) - All Washington Post employees
will be required to present proof of full COVID-19 vaccination by
mid-September as a condition of employment, with exceptions for medical
and religious concerns, Publisher Fred Ryan announced on Tuesday in a
memo to staff.
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The paper's new vaccination policy comes amid an uptick in COVID-19
cases in the United States attributed to the highly contagious Delta
variant.
U.S. companies are navigating how and when to reopen offices amid
the spread of the variant. Apple announced last week that the
company is delaying its office reopening until October - a month
later than planned - as cases surge.
The newspaper, owned by billionaire businessman Jeff Bezos, plans to
reopen its offices for all employees for three days per week on
Sept. 13, and employees must show vaccination proof by then, Ryan
said.
Contractors and guests who enter the Washington Post's offices will
also be required to show proof of vaccination.
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"Even though the overwhelming
majority of Post employees have already provided
proof of vaccination, I do not take this
decision lightly," Ryan said in the memo. "However, in considering the serious health
issues and genuine safety concerns of so many
Post employees, I believe the plan is the right
one." (Reporting by Danielle Kaye in New York; editing
by Peter Henderson and Sandra Maler)
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