TRANSFORMING Teams
By Paige McAllister
Vaccine accommodations
e know there is a lot of confusion around vaccine mandates and applicable accommodations. In order to provide more in-depth information for you to consider when planning the best course for your company, we wanted to share some of the resources we have found on these topics.
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President Biden’s Vaccine Mandates
President Biden recently announced several initiatives to help the country recover from the ongoing pandemic. One of those initiatives, “Vaccinating the Unvaccinated,” will implement vaccine requirements which will cover 80 million employees. These new rules will extend vaccine mandates to all federal workers and federal contractors and subcontractors. In addition, employees of private employers with 100+ employees will either have to be vaccinated or be tested weekly. These employers will also need to provide paid time off for their employees to get vaccinated and to recover from any side effects of the vaccines. OSHA is expected to issue an Emergency Temporary Standard (ETS) in 30 to 60 days with a short time frame before it becomes a requirement. After six months, OSHA is expected to replace the ETS with a permanent standard.
Accommodations
Conversations about vaccine mandates trigger questions about reasonable accommodations. While the EEOC has not said employers can require employees to be vaccinated, it clarified that there is no law preventing an employer from establishing the requirement. Employers must apply the same requirement to employees regardless of protected group (race, gender, religion, age) and must offer reasonable accommodation due to disability or religious belief. Reasonable accommodation could include allowing
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the employee to work from home, requiring the employee wear a mask and socially distance from others, modifying the employee’s work shift or schedule to reduce personal interactions, mandating the employee to regularly present a negative COVID-19 test and/or creating a job reassignment. While there are many possible accommodations, employers must only offer those that are reasonable, meaning they do not cause an undue hardship on the company. This means that what works for one company or employee may not be possible for another. Employers must be consistent in their consideration of accommodations for all employees, but every employee’s case should be assessed individually using factors such as the reason for the need and the accommodations needed as well as their job duties and impacts of the accommodations on the company and other co-workers. Employers should name one person to review and maintain any reasonable accommodation requests to maintain consistency. A good process for considering a reasonable accommodation includes: ● the employee making a request for accommodation; ● employer starting a dialogue to determine what accommodations are needed and what is reasonable; ● employee providing acceptable documentation of possible accommodations; ● employer considering each accommodation to determine what is reasonable; and ● employer offering reasonable accommodation, if any. The employer should then have the employee sign a written acknowledgement of the details of accommodation including requirements, timing, an on-going review process, repercussions if the employee fails to maintain certain standards, and the right to rescind the accommodation if needed or the situation changes. Each arrangement should be reviewed regularly to ensure it is working for the employee and the company and, if not, adjusted accordingly. The whole process must be kept confidential with only the necessary people knowing of the details behind the need for the accommodation. Medical: Under the Americans with Disability Act (ADA), people who have a disability which prevents them from receiving the vaccine should be offered reasonable accommodation. While most people with health issues are encouraged to get vaccinated, there are some medical conditions which may make it contraindicated such as being allergic to the components in the vaccine or having a neurological condition such as Guillain-Barre Syndrome. Anyone needing reasonable accommodation due to a disability should provide documentation from their personal health Building-Products.com