The new measures, which Biden laid out in remarks from the White
House, would apply to about two-thirds of all U.S. employees, those
who work for businesses with more than 100 workers.
"We've been patient," Biden told the tens of millions of Americans
who have declined to get coronavirus shots. "But our patience is
wearing thin, and your refusal has cost all of us."
Taken together, the policies and speech represented Biden's most
aggressive steps yet to prod Americans resistant to getting shots as
the fast-spreading Delta variant sparks a new wave of sickness and
death.
The surge has posed increased risk not just to the country but to a
president who ran on promises to get control of the pandemic.
Biden's approval ratings have sagged since he said in July the
United States was "closer than ever to declaring our independence
from a deadly virus."
Biden's latest moves are expected to be the subject of political and
legal challenges.
Despite a full-throttled campaign by the Biden administration urging
Americans to get the free and widely available vaccines, just over
62% of eligible Americans https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#vaccinations_vacc-total-admin-rate-total
are fully vaccinated, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
On Thursday, Biden warned that "we're in a tough stretch and it
could last for a while."
Infectious disease and health policy experts said the mandates are
unlikely to significantly change infection rates quickly.
Still, they would help against potential future waves of the virus,
reducing deaths and hospitalizations and alleviating the stress on
the healthcare system, said Georgetown University's Dr. Jesse
Goodman, a former chief scientist at the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration.
"It's absolutely the right thing to do," he said. "Ideally everyone
would have been vaccinated already."
'FEAR, CONTROL AND MANDATES'
In a televised speech running a bit under half an hour, the
Democratic president accused "a distinct minority of elected
officials" who have resisted mask and vaccine mandates on
freedom-of-choice and economic grounds as "making people sick."
The White House COVID-19 recovery plan
https://www.reuters.com/world/
us/bidens-covid-19-strategy-thwarted-by-anti-vaxxers-delta-variant-2021-07-29
was based on the vast majority of eligible Americans being
vaccinated this year. But the public health issue has become
politicized, with a vocal minority refusing the shots and mask
mandates.
Florida Republican Governor Ron DeSantis issued an executive order
in July blocking mask mandates in schools.
Administration medical officials have said over 97% of people
hospitalized with COVID-19 are not vaccinated, and those people
account for an even higher share of deaths.
Cathy McMorris Rodgers, the senior Republican on the House of
Representatives committee that oversees health policy, said Biden
"is using fear, control, and mandates."
The Republican National Committee said it intends to sue the Biden
administration over the vaccine mandate.
Under Biden's plan, the administration will also require
vaccinations for more than 17 million healthcare workers at
hospitals and other institutions that participate in Medicare and
Medicaid social programs for poor, disabled and older Americans.
[to top of second column] |
Biden previously required that
federal employees be vaccinated or get tested.
Federal workers now have 75 days to get
vaccinated, or face termination unless they fall
into limited exemption categories.
Federal workers unions suggested on Thursday
they would accept the vaccine mandate.
SUBSTANTIAL FINES
The U.S. Labor Department's Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) plans to take enforcement actions against
private companies that do not comply with the vaccine mandate, with
substantial fines of nearly $14,000 per violation.
The administration is also calling on entertainment venues to
require tests or shots and for states to adopt mandates for school
employees. It is also multiplying the fines https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-doubling-fines-travelers-not-wearing-masks-2021-09-09
charged to people who fail to wear masks on airplanes, trains and
buses. It plans as well to ramp up testing capacity
for the virus.
Biden will use authority under the Defense Production Act to spur
industry to accelerate production of the tests, and big retailers
including Walmart Inc , Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O> and Kroger Co are
expected to sell the tests at cost for the next three months to make
them more affordable.
Critics have said the Biden administration has not done enough on
testing during its seven months in office. Still, the new demand for
tests could tax already strained suppliers.
Administration officials believe the full recovery of the U.S
economy depends on blunting the spread of the virus, the key focus
of the president since entering office in January.
The disease has killed more than 654,000 people in the United
States, and deaths and hospitalizations have been rising sharply as
the easily transmissible Delta variant of the virus spreads.
https://tmsnrt.rs/3A1KHg3
The spread of the Delta variant has raised concerns as children head
back to school, while also rattling investors, upending company
return-to-office plans and tamping down https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-job-growth-slows-sharply-august-unemployment-rate-falls-52-2021-09-03
hiring.
The White House also plans to offer booster shots providing
additional protection to those who are fully vaccinated. But
supplies are limited and the World Health Organization has begged
rich countries to pause booster programs until more people worldwide
are inoculated.
But with Delta causing more symptomatic breakthrough infections
among fully inoculated individuals, most vaccinated Americans want a
booster, a recent Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll found. Boosters could
begin the week of Sept. 20.
"Get vaccinated," Biden urged in closing his speech.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason, Ahmed Aboulenein and Trevor Hunnicutt;
Additional reporting by Steve Holland, David Shepardson and Susan
Heavey; Writing by Jeff Mason, Steve Holland and Trevor Hunnicutt;
Editing by Heather Timmons, Howard Goller and Peter Cooney)
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