Biden to visit Illinois to promote private sector vaccine mandate
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[September 25, 2021]
By Greg Bishop
(The Center Square) – President Joe Biden
will be in Chicago on Wednesday to promote his order for all businesses
with more than 100 employees to require the COVID-19 vaccine for their
workers.
Business groups are wary about the mandate, which is expected to impact
80 million jobs nationwide.
Biden announced the mandate earlier this month. He’ll visit Chicago on
Wednesday to talk more about it.
Illinois Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Todd Maisch said while
some elements of the business community welcome the mandate so they can
get compliance from employees, other businesses want the government out
of such decisions.
“We don’t think the one-size-fits-all is the right approach, so we are
opposed to what seems to be coming down the pike here,” Maisch told WMAY
earlier this month.
National Federation of Independent Business Illinois State Director Mark
Grant said the emergency temporary standards, or ETS, from the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) will come with a
cost and add to ongoing burdens on business in the era of COVID-19.
“[Mandating] COVID-19 vaccinations or frequent testing by businesses
with 100 or more employees, mandating that such businesses compensate
employees during certain periods in which the employee is not working,”
Grant said, “the businesses that could be subject to the costly and
burdensome ETS includes many small businesses.”
It’s unclear when the emergency temporary standards from the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration will be released, but it
could be within weeks.
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“OSHA rulemaking for new standards has historically been a relatively
time-consuming process,” said a report from the Congressional Research
Service. But “OSHA may promulgate an ETS without supplying any notice or
opportunity for public comment or public hearings.”
Once it’s published in the Federal Register, it takes effect.
Maisch said not knowing all the specifics is also part of the problem.
“And that’s one of the frustrations, I think,” Maisch said. “Even those
who support the president’s decision, or those who are opposed, are
equally concerned that we don’t even know what this is yet.”
That Congressional Research Service report also highlights several OSHA
ETS that have been struck down in the past.
“OSHA has used its ETS authority sparingly in its history and not since
the asbestos ETS promulgated in 1983,” the report said, noting the rare
use of ETS happened earlier in the COVID-19 pandemic impacting the
health care industry. “In the nine times OSHA has issued an ETS, the
courts have fully vacated or stayed the ETS in four cases and partially
vacated the ETS in one case”
There are already lawsuits planned by states and other organizations to
challenge the standard when the ETS is published in the Federal Register
and in effect.
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