Tyson Foods ends COVID-19 vaccine mandate for employees
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[November 17, 2022]
By Tom Polansek
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Tyson Foods Inc
confirmed on Wednesday it eliminated a requirement that employees
receive COVID-19 vaccinations, a step the company said improved
meatpacking operations after plants closed in 2020 due to outbreaks
among workers early in the pandemic.
The biggest U.S. meat company by sales lifted the mandate on Oct. 31,
one year after imposing it, according to a report Tyson filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday. The requirement "generally
improved our ability to operate our business effectively in fiscal
2022," the report said.
The virus now presents a lower threat than when Tyson decided in August
2021 to require that employees be vaccinated by that November, company
spokesman Derek Burleson told Reuters on Wednesday.
"The risk of severe infection has decreased significantly, with many
resources readily available including vaccines and boosters, testing,
and improved treatment options," Burleson said.
America's largest meatpacking union, the United Food and Commercial
Workers International Union, said it negotiated an agreement with
Arkansas-based Tyson to end the mandate.
Tyson "worked to get the unions' support to end the requirement, which
was achieved," Burleson said. He added that Tyson kept other safety
protocols like requiring workers to self-screen for COVID-19 symptoms.
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A Tyson Foods employee puts on a second
protective mask outside of the company's meat processing plant,
which has been hit by a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in
Waterloo, Iowa, U.S. April 22, 2020. Picture taken April 22, 2020.
Jeffrey Becker/USA TODAY NETWORK via REUTERS/File Photo
Some Tyson workers remain worried
about catching COVID-19 in chicken plants, said Magaly Licolli,
director of Venceremos, an organization that advocates for poultry
workers in Arkansas.
"There is still the pandemic," said Licolli, who has criticized
Tyson for not protecting plant employees. "Workers are getting sick
over and over of COVID."
Tyson runs slaughterhouses in rural areas where some residents were
reluctant to get vaccinated. The company said last year it paid
employees $200 to get vaccinated and also compensated workers if
they were vaccinated outside normal work hours or away from a Tyson
location.
Claudia Coplein, Tyson's chief medical officer, said in August 2021:
"Getting vaccinated against COVID-19 is the single most effective
thing we can do to protect our team members, their families and
their communities."
(Reporting by Tom Polansek; Editing by David Gregorio)
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