Pandemic-wary U.S. Supreme Court to weigh Biden vaccine mandates
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[January 05, 2022]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme
Court, which has restricted its own operations during the COVID-19
pandemic, is preparing to decide whether to block President Joe Biden's
vaccine mandates for large businesses and healthcare workers in a test
of presidential powers to address an unyielding public health crisis.
The court will hear in-person arguments on Friday on emergency requests
in two separate cases by challengers including business groups,
religious entities and various Republican-led U.S. states for orders
blocking the vaccine requirements, with rulings expected in short order.
The challengers maintain that Biden and his administration have
overstepped their authority.
The court's 6-3 conservative majority in the past has shown skepticism
toward sweeping actions by federal agencies.
Decisions against Biden could hamstring his ability to take broad action
to tackle a pandemic that already has claimed the lives of roughly
830,000 Americans, with COVID-19 cases driven by the coronavirus Omicron
variant soaring nationally.
The nine justices have spent the bulk of the pandemic working remotely.
When the court returned to in-person oral arguments in October for the
first time since the early stages of the pandemic, the few people
allowed to attend were required to wear masks and maintain social
distancing. Among the justices, only Sonia Sotomayor wore a mask in the
courtroom during recent arguments.
Members of the public continue to be barred from entering the court
building, as they have been since March 2020. Lawyers and journalists
are required to take COVID-19 tests to gain entry, though the court has
not required proof of vaccination.
A court representative said all nine justices are fully vaccinated and
have received booster doses.
The justices, sometimes divided, have rejected several religious-based
challenges to state vaccine requirements. Friday's cases are the first
tests of the federal government's authority to issue its own vaccine
mandates.
In other pandemic-related cases, the court has backed religious
challenges to certain restrictions and ended the federal government's
residential housing eviction moratorium, originally imposed under former
President Donald Trump.
The Cincinnati-based 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Dec. 17 lifted
an injunction issued by a lower court that had blocked the rule
requiring workers at businesses with at least 100 employees to be
vaccinated or be tested weekly. That mandate, part of Biden's drive to
increase the U.S. vaccination rate, was issued by the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and affects around 80 million
workers nationwide.
The healthcare worker mandate applies to a majority of the estimated
10.3 million Americans who work in healthcare facilities that receive
money under the Medicaid and Medicare government programs. Biden's
administration is asking the Supreme Court to lift orders by federal
judges in Missouri and Louisiana blocking the policy in half the 50 U.S.
states while litigation on the legal merits of the mandate continues.
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Demonstrators protesting against coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
vaccine mandates and other mitigation measures, stand outside the
windows of the City Hall in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., January 3,
2022. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
'CLEAR STATEMENT'
In both cases, the challengers argued that the federal government
overstepped its authority by issuing requirements that were not
specifically authorized by Congress, citing Supreme Court rulings
that limited federal agency power over tobacco and greenhouse gas
regulations. Both vaccine mandates are of sufficient economic and
political significance to require a "clear statement" from Congress,
according to the challengers.
Deepak Gupta, a lawyer who filed briefs supporting the mandates,
said this argument raised by the challengers is problematic.
"It allows unelected judges to decide there are certain questions
they think are significant enough that they require a clear
statement on that specific issue," Gupta said.
Some legal experts suspect the healthcare worker mandate has a
better chance of surviving Supreme Court review because the
regulation covers just facilities that decide to accept patients
covered by Medicaid and Medicare.
"This is only a condition on participation in a federal program, not
a direct regulation. Second, and pragmatically, the justices may
hesitate before they enjoin a vaccine mandate for healthcare
workers," said Sean Marotta, a lawyer representing the American
Hospital Association, a trade group for healthcare providers that is
not involved in the litigation.
The clock is ticking for the justices.
Biden's administration has said it will start requiring compliance
with the healthcare worker policy next Monday, though companies
would have until Feb. 9 to set up testing programs. In the states
where this regulation has not been blocked, workers are required to
be fully vaccinated by Feb. 28.
Employers are currently unsure how to proceed, with some concerned
about losing staff in a tight labor market if they impose vaccine or
testing requirements, said Todd Logsdon, a lawyer based in
Louisville, Kentucky who represents companies on workplace safety.
"The quicker they can issue the decision the better," Logsdon said
of the Supreme Court.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Will Dunham)
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