Skip to main content

New top story from Time: Labor Department Officials Frustrated at White House Over COVID-19 Vaccine and Testing Mandate

https://ift.tt/39WJJGJ

When President Joe Biden directed the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) on Sept. 9 to impose strict COVID-19 vaccination and testing protocols on large businesses, the OSHA employees were ready. It marked the first time in nearly five years that the small agency had the opportunity to fulfill its mission to protect workers across industries from “recognized serious hazards.” But it also highlighted tensions between OSHA and the White House, exposing simmering resentments over how the White House has approached working with the Department of Labor during the pandemic, according to three former top OSHA officials.
[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]

“It’s been a very frustrating nine months for OSHA,” says Former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Labor for OSHA Jordan Barab, referencing a series of instructions from the Biden Administration, including the most recent plan for a vaccine and testing mandate. “This whole thing was basically thought up in the White House.”

The Emergency Temporary Standard (ETS) Biden directed OSHA to draft this month will require businesses with 100 or more employees to require COVID-19 vaccines or weekly testing among employees. The rule will cover more than 80 million workers in America, according to a Labor Department (DOL) spokesperson. But the scope of the rule was drafted in the White House without significant input from agency experts, former OSHA officials say—and they believe it could go farther.

Read More: Here’s Why Companies Aren’t Fighting Biden’s Employee Vaccine Mandate

“OSHA staff and leaders and DOL staff and leaders would prefer a more comprehensive standard,” Barab says. “I think there is a lot of frustration that this is limited exclusively to just vaccinations or testing. The mitigation measures are totally absent.”

Current OSHA staff are not authorized to speak on the record about ongoing rule-making. The White House directed questions to DOL. When asked about the working relationship between OSHA and the White House, a spokesperson for DOL said, “The staff at OSHA are committed to the safety and health of America’s workforce and are working expeditiously on the ETS, which will provide protections for workers and support for employers throughout the country, using tools we know are safe and effective.”

The tension between the agency and the White House traces back to Biden’s second day in office, when he directed OSHA to create a comprehensive ETS that could prevent worker exposure to COVID-19. A team including health and safety specialists, industrial hygienists, engineers and attorneys collaborated to write a rule for all workplaces. The result was a 780-page unpublished ETS that included widespread mandates for masks, six feet of separation, proper ventilation, cleaning and disinfection, quarantining sick workers, and a notification system that would have told workers if they were exposed to the virus, according to the draft text of the rule. (It did not include vaccination requirements, as OSHA wrote the draft before vaccines were widely available.) The unpublished ETS is available due to a Freedom of Information Act request.

But the ETS that the President had personally requested “never saw the light of day,” says Debbie Berkowitz, a former OSHA official and National Employment Law Project (NELP) safety program director. “I think the Administration didn’t have the political will to get it done.”

One problem, experts say, is that the ETS was overtaken by vaccine availability, evolving Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines, and animosity toward federal mandates.

The Biden Administration had pushed the original release date for the first proposed standard from March 15 to June. In that time, an increasing number of people began receiving vaccines, leading the CDC to loosen its guidance. In March, the CDC announced that vaccinated individuals could have small indoor gatherings without masks, and a month later, the agency said that vaccinated individuals could go outside without masks. In May, the public health agency announced fully vaccinated people could stop wearing masks in most places—outdoors and inside.

As the CDC paved the way for restrictions to ease, the original argument for the measures in the ETS—that there was a “grave danger” to workers without actions like masking—appeared to weaken.

Public opinion may not have been behind the original ETS, either. Support for a widespread federal response is higher now than it was at the start of Biden’s term, says N’dea Moore-Petinak, a doctoral candidate at the University of Michigan and coauthor of the book Coronavirus Politics. And businesses may be more open to a vaccine and testing mandate than they would be to a masking mandate like the one included in the original ETS, says Glenn Cohen, an expert on health law and bioethics at Harvard Law School. “While I think masking is terrific, politically it’s a harder sell and the compliance rates may be lower,” he says. “With vaccination, it’s easier to ensure compliance.”

By June, only the portion of the ETS draft related to healthcare workplaces would go into effect.

The White House’s retreat from the original, comprehensive ETS disappointed OSHA staffers, according to the former OSHA officials. The agency, which had been the target of Trump’s ire, already felt hamstrung during the first year of the pandemic. “We got hit with a pandemic in March of 2020 and the Trump Administration [had] decimated OSHA,” Secretary of Labor Marty Walsh told TIME during an Ohio trip last month. The agency did few inspections in early 2020, and inspectors were not given the personal protective equipment needed to enter workplaces. Biden’s decision to spike the comprehensive ETS felt like they still couldn’t perform the job they were hired to do. “It was very frustrating for everyone at OSHA, from the acting administrator all the way down to the staff working every single weekend for months on the standard,” Barab says.

That this ETS applies only to businesses with 100 or more employees also marked a departure from the agency’s standards. Limiting the vaccination and testing rule to larger businesses has no precedence in past guidelines, says David Michaels, OSHA’s administrator from 2009 to 2017. “When it comes to protecting workers from serious hazards, OSHA doesn’t distinguish between workplaces of different sizes,” he says.

Now, although the current ETS lacks OSHA officials’ lengthy wish-list of protective measures from last spring, the small agency, which has limited ability to penalize non-compliance, is tasked with both writing and enforcing it. In the DOL budget request, the Biden Administration has asked for $664.6 million to fund the agency for FY 2022 starting Oct. 1; House Democrats requested $692 million. (Under Trump, the budget for OSHA was $100 million less, at just under $592 million.)

Still, most experts think the new ETS is better than nothing. “This is not perfect, it’s not going to work everywhere,” says Michaels. “It will certainly increase protections for workers in many workplaces and it will contribute to slowing down this pandemic. I’d like to see a stronger regulation, but this is a very good first step.”

-With reporting by Abby Vesoulis/Dayton, OH

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

FOX NEWS: Homeowner finds secret staircase in house behind boarded up door Old houses always come with a little bit of mystery.

Homeowner finds secret staircase in house behind boarded up door Old houses always come with a little bit of mystery. via FOX NEWS https://ift.tt/3f9gYIM

DU's academic, executive council members ask VC to scrap online open book exams https://ift.tt/2YubRfc

The academic and executive council members of the Delhi University on Thursday wrote to the vice-chancellor asking him to scrap the online open-book exams. Their letter to DU Vice-Chancellor Yogesh Tyagi comes in the wake of Union HRD Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal 'Nishank' asking the University Grants Commission (UGC) to revisit the guidelines issued earlier for intermediate and terminal semester examination, and the academic calendar. from IndiaTV: Google News Feed https://ift.tt/2YByOxg

UP Police constable abducts man, robs him off valuables at gunpoint in Delhi https://ift.tt/3jfEi8a

A constable of the Uttar Pradesh Police was arrested along with his associate for allegedly abducting a man and robbing him off his valuables at gunpoint in the national capital, the Delhi Police said on Thursday. Shreekant (30), the constable, is the alleged mastermind while his associate, Raghu Khosla, was previously involved in more than 100 cases, they said. Khosla usually targeted passengers in Rajdhani and Shatabadi expresses stealing items having value more than Rs 1 lakh in each journey, police said.

Raksha Bandhan 2020

Raksha Bandhan 2020 is going to be celebrated in India according to the lunar calendar month of Shravan which is August 3 this year. During the celebration women tie a variety of Rakhi on the wrist of their brothers with a wish to keep all misfortune, distress, evils away from their brothers. In return, brothers promise them for protection and to stand by her in every circumstance. During the rituals, brother offers some gifts to their sisters as a customary gesture. Raksha Bandhan is a very important festival in India. During the festival, sisters who resides far away from their brothers send them Raksha Bandhan quotes to brother through SMS or any other electronic medium. Similarly, brothers sent to their sisters Raksha Bandhan quotes to sister through these media to express their good wishes and well beings for their sisters. In this festival, Raksha Bandhan Quotes, Raksha Bandhan Images, Raksha Bandhan greetings typically trends on all social media platforms. People sen...

Twilight star Gregory Tyree Boyce and girlfriend died from drug use - coroner Drug use led to the deaths of Twilight star Gregory Tyree Boyce and his girlfriend, a coroner has ruled.

via Entertainment News - Latest Celebrity & Showbiz News | Sky News https://ift.tt/2MlAOTg

New top story from Time: TIME Studios Earns Daytime Emmy Nomination for 2020 TIME Kid of the Year Special on Nickelodeon

https://ift.tt/3yKjxtY TIME Editor-in-Chief and CEO Edward Felsenthal sent the following note to staff Friday. Dear all, I’m happy to let you know that TIME Studios, in partnership with Trevor Noah’s Day Zero Productions and Mainstay Entertainment, has been nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award for 2020’s TIME Kid of the Year special on Nickelodeon in the category of Outstanding Daytime Non-Fiction Special. The special also received a second nomination in the category of Outstanding Daytime Promotional Announcement. This marks TIME’s first-ever Daytime Emmy nomination, and the seventh nomination for TIME in the last five years. This is a testament to our ongoing transformation, and to the growth of TIME Studios through the phenomenal work of the Studios team supported by so many people throughout our organization. [time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”] Special congratulations to Ian Orefice, Rebecca Gitlitz, Mike Beck, Jeff Smith, Andrea Delbanco, Alexa Conway, Javon Stephenson ...

BRT Service on Van Ness to Begin Tomorrow

BRT Service on Van Ness to Begin Tomorrow By Jiaying Yu Tomorrow, April 1, we will cut the ribbon on San Francisco’s first Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) corridor on Van Ness Avenue. The public is invited to join and celebrate this historic moment in front of the War Memorial. The ribbon-cutting will include speeches from local and state leaders, performances from local musicians and giveaways. After the ribbon is cut, there will be an inaugural ride on the new Van Ness BRT corridor to North Point where the celebration continues with live music.    BRT service on Van Ness is part of Muni’s Rapid Network, which prioritizes frequency and reliability for customers. Muni and Golden Gate Transit customers are expected to experience 32% shorter travel times. With dedicated transit lanes in the middle of the road, enhanced traffic signals with Transit Signal Priority and new platforms and shelters, the Van Ness BRT corridor will be the fastest way to travel north-south in this part of...

JEE, NEET Exams: 7 CMs to move SC against holding key entrances in September today | LIVE https://ift.tt/3gyLz1i

At least seven chief ministers are expected to move the Supreme Court today against the holding of JEE Main and NEET exams in September. The National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test (NEET) is scheduled to be held on September 13, while the engineering entrance exam JEE Main has been planned from September 1-6. The exams have been deferred twice due to the coronavirus pandemic. It was last week when the Supreme Court had dismissed a plea seeking postponement of the two exams amid COVID-19 pandemic, saying a "precious" academic year of students "cannot be wasted" and that life has to go on. Despite the court's decision, students continue to voice their anger against holding the exams at a time when the cases are at an all-time high. Students have also cited major concerns such as the lack of transportation and flood situation in some states.

New top story from Time: Making Meals From Mealworms Is ‘Part of the Answer’ to the Climate Crisis, the CEO of Ynsect Says

https://ift.tt/3kKguwZ (To receive weekly emails of conversations with the world’s top CEOs and business decisionmakers, click here .)   Global food production accounts for one-third of all greenhouse-gas emissions, according to a comprehensive study published this year in the journal Nature Food that looked at every aspect of food production from transportation to packaging. Meat production alone makes up nearly 60% of that total. The study underscores the growing consensus that in order to stave off the worst impacts of climate change, the world needs a dramatic rethinking of how food is produced and consumed . Especially since the U.N. estimates that food production will have to increase by 70% by 2050 to feed the world’s growing population. [time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”] Increasingly, companies and scientists are viewing insects as an environmentally sustainable alternative source of protein. Crickets, grasshoppers and beetles are already commercially produce...

New top story from Time: GOP Tucks $8 Billion For Military Weaponry in Coronavirus Response Package

https://ift.tt/310scs0 (WASHINGTON) — A new $1 trillion COVID-19 response package by Senate Republicans is supposed to give the government more weapons to battle the surging coronavirus pandemic. But GOP lawmakers have more than just the “invisible enemy” in mind. The Republican measure includes billions for F-35 fighters, Apache helicopters and infantry carriers sought by Washington’s powerful defense lobby. Overall, the proposal stuffs $8 billion into Pentagon weapons systems built by defense contractors like Boeing, Lockheed Martin and General Dynamics — corporate titans that sit atop the Washington influence industry. The bill, drafted by Senate Appropriations Committee Chair Richard Shelby, R-Ala., would deposit $2.2 billion in Pentagon shipbuilding accounts, boost missile defense systems in California and Alaska and deliver about $1.4 billion for C-130 transport planes and F-35 fighters manufactured by Lockheed Martin Corp. Some of the F-35s could be delivered to an A...