OSHA rules reactions from mandatory vaccination = workcover - Employers drop mandatory vaccination rules.

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"If I require my employees to take the COVID-19 vaccine as a condition of their employment, are adverse reactions to the vaccine recordable?

"If you require your employees to be vaccinated as a condition of employment (i.e., for work-related reasons), then any adverse reaction to the COVID-19 vaccine is work-related. The adverse reaction is recordable if it is a new case under 29 CFR 1904.6 and meets one or more of the general recording criteria in 29 CFR 1904.7."

In response, several large contractors said they have changed or will change their vaccination policy to only recommend—not require—a vaccine.


OSHA Imposes New Guidance For Employer-Required COVID-19 Vaccines​

Contractors criticize mandate to classify adverse reactions as recordable safety incidents


New guidance from the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration is causing contractors to change their COVID-19 vaccine requirements, and many of them criticize the guidance as diametrically opposed to the Biden administration's stated desire to increase vaccinations.

On April 20, OSHA released the new guidance in the frequently asked questions section of its website for COVID-19 safety compliance.

The question asks whether an employer should record adverse reactions to COVID-19 vaccination if the employer requires the vaccine. OSHA states that if a vaccine is required, then any adverse reaction is considered work-related and therefore it must be recorded. Under OSHA rules, most employers with more than 10 employees are required to keep a record of serious work-related injuries and illnesses. Recorded injuries and illnesses become part of a contractors safety record.

This is the actual text of the new question and answer on the OSHA website:

"If I require my employees to take the COVID-19 vaccine as a condition of their employment, are adverse reactions to the vaccine recordable?

"If you require your employees to be vaccinated as a condition of employment (i.e., for work-related reasons), then any adverse reaction to the COVID-19 vaccine is work-related. The adverse reaction is recordable if it is a new case under 29 CFR 1904.6 and meets one or more of the general recording criteria in 29 CFR 1904.7."

In response, several large contractors said they have changed or will change their vaccination policy to only recommend—not require—a vaccine.

"We, sadly, had to back off our (employee vaccination) mandate because OSHA did something I don't understand at all," said Bob Clark, founder and executive chairman of Clayco in a recent ENR Critical Path podcast. "I side with OSHA frequently, we're in its VIP program, but on this they're just wrong. It's a terrible decision they've made and I think it'll be overturned."

Clark said Clayco, which participated in crafting the initial Centers for Disease Control guidance on construction site safety during the pandemic, would be communicating with OSHA through members of congress to seek changes to the guidance. A spokeswoman for OSHA did not immediately return messages asking for clarification of the new guidance. Construction industry groups universally panned the guidance and said it would hurt their efforts to encourage employees to get vaccinated.

"What they put forward could potentially discourage employers from supporting their workers getting the vaccine," said Kevin Cannon, senior director of safety and health services at the Associated General Contractors of America. "AGC is not in support of any mandate, however we participated, April 19th through 23rd, in vaccine awareness week. We had a lot of members who were in chapters that supported the event. We even had some who hosted vaccine clinics on an active job site or in their offices."

Cannon said some member contractors may have changed their approach to those events had they known, at the time, they could potentially "be on the hook for recording these potential adverse reactions."

AGC is also concerned the rule puts contractors working on projects such as hospital expansions, where vaccination could potentially be an owner condition of being present on the site, in a difficult position.

Cannon said AGC has reached out to OSHA as part of the Construction Industry Safety Coalition, a group of 30 industry groups from all major types of construction, to give OSHA more context as to the burden the guidance places on contractors. AGC plans to submit a letter to the agency with chapter input to the agency.


'Caused Significant Confusion'

Donna Reichle, senior director of public affairs at the Associated Builders and Contractors said, "We agree OSHA has caused significant confusion with this guidance. Industry groups will be seeking clarification from the agency."

OSHA has been working for weeks on an all-industries COVID-19 emergency safety standard, which is now being reviewed by the Biden administration's Office of Management and Budget. Release of the final rule is believed to be coming soon. It is possible the new safety standard could preempt or replace the April 20 guidance to employers. It's unclear, at this point, if separate rules will be made for industries such as construction, where liability and risk are defined differently than in industries where work takes place in a company facility.

The number of overall COVID-19 hospitalizations and fatalities also greatly affects the recommendations CDC, OSHA and the various states have released. Cannon said the current guidance, if left unchanged, has the potential to undo months of industry work to encourage vaccination of construction workers.

"It's almost like they haven't talked to the rest of the Biden administration about the goal of getting as many people vaccinated as possible," said Brian Turmail, AGC vice president of public affairs.

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Oy Vey, try to get it in every little way you can sons of solomon. And Whitey, keep giving up your rights for the illusion of safety in an ever expanding financially-debased Police state. History hasn't already proved where this leads.
 
In response, several large contractors said they have changed or will change their vaccination policy to only recommend—not require—a vaccine.
Don't worry! They'll find some other way to enforce the low-key jab mandate by targeting no-vaxxers with other disciplinary actions against violations that totally took place and are no way made up. It's not like they let those pesky OSHA policies get in their way before.
 
I"m not sure what the problem is. If a company forces you to take a medicine in order to maintain employment and that medicine causes an adverse reaction then that company should be responsible.

If the individual takes it of their own accord then no responsibility, but if that employee has concerns or fears and otherwise wouldn't take it why shouldn't the company be responsible for causing any anguish?
 
I"m not sure what the problem is. If a company forces you to take a medicine in order to maintain employment and that medicine causes an adverse reaction then that company should be responsible.

If the individual takes it of their own accord then no responsibility, but if that employee has concerns or fears and otherwise wouldn't take it why shouldn't the company be responsible for causing any anguish?
I think the point is the government who was pressuring private industry into mandatory vaccination programs isn't cutting these same companies a break.

It's just more democrat doublespeak
 
This is good news, but I can't recall a single piece of good news in the past 6 years that didn't get rapidly warped into bad news.
 
Cautiously optimistic on this, so far this is the only way to hold anyone responsible for a bad reaction to an experimental drug therapy.

At least this is forcing employers to dial back their shit. 🤭
 
Hilarious. Can't sue the companies producing the vaccines for adverse effects..but if another company requires you to take a vaccine you can be compensated. Huh. Almost like something might be wrong.
 
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