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Monday, Oct 18 2021

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Approval Ratings Slip For Republican Governors Who Are Anti-Vax-Mandate

Preferring to follow doctrine over the scientifically proven benefits of vaccines, Republican governors across the U.S. have been leading a charge against covid shot (and mask) mandates, Politico reports. And now their approval ratings are down. Dr. Anthony Fauci calls Texas' mandate ban "unfortunate."

Republican governors crusading against vaccine mandates are facing significantly lower approval ratings on their handling of the coronavirus pandemic than their counterparts. But they鈥檙e not worried. From Florida to Texas to South Dakota, GOP governors have been on the front lines of the war against vaccine mandates, barring immunization requirements in their states and threatening to fight President Joe Biden鈥檚 federal vaccine mandate in court. Just last week, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott flat-out banned vaccine requirements, and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis followed up by vowing to sue the Biden administration. (Kashinsky, 10/17)

Dr. Anthony Fauci is saying Sunday that it is 鈥渞eally unfortunate鈥 that Gov. Greg Abbott has moved to ban vaccine mandates in the state of Texas. The nation鈥檚 leading infectious disease doctor, speaking on Fox News Sunday, said that the Republican governor鈥檚 decision to block businesses from requiring inoculations would damage public health since vaccines are the 鈥渕ost effective means鈥 to stop the spread of COVID-19. (10/17)

In a brief phone interview Thursday, Gov. Greg Gianforte defended his administration鈥檚 policies toward the pandemic, which have included signing into law the nation鈥檚 only prohibition on private businesses requiring vaccines in the workplace, and several measures that limited the power of local health departments to implement measures to curb the virus鈥 spread. 鈥淭he government鈥檚 role is to educate, to communicate 鈥 it鈥檚 not to mandate,鈥 Gianforte said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e seen increases in infections in states with mandates, in states without mandates, and ... the best way for Montanans to protect themselves and their families is to get vaccinated. These vaccines are safe and effective, I鈥檝e continually told that story and I鈥檓 encouraged that we鈥檝e seen an increased number of people decide to get vaccinated.鈥 (Wilson, 10/17)

Gov. J.B. Pritzker has pushed back a deadline for state employees of veterans鈥 homes, prisons and other congregate facilities to be vaccinated against COVID-19 as his office negotiates with labor unions representing some workers. Pritzker, who in August set an Oct. 4 deadline for state workers covered by his requirement to get the vaccine, on Friday said employees have until Nov. 30 to be fully vaccinated, the Chicago Tribune reported. The workers are employed by the departments of Corrections, Veterans Affairs, Human Services and Juvenile Justice. (10/16)

In other news about covid mandates 鈥

Teachers and other school staff in Arlington, Va., have reached a deadline to be vaccinated 鈥 among the first school systems in the Washington region to begin enforcing a coronavirus vaccination mandate as the pandemic persists. In coming weeks, other school systems in Virginia, D.C. and Maryland will cross the same public health threshold, which could mean days out of work, disciplinary action or in the worst case firings for those who do not meet their district鈥檚 vaccination requirements. (St. George, Natanson and Stein, 10/17)

A federal judge has limited the ability for now for the nonprofit running Oak Ridge National Laboratory to place employees on unpaid leave who receive exemptions to a COVID-19 vaccine requirement. U.S. District Judge Charles Atchley in Knoxville issued the temporary restraining order Friday barring UT-Battelle from placing employees on indefinite unpaid leave or firing them after they receive a religious or medical accommodation to the vaccine. (Mattise, 10/18)

Nearly three quarters of the more than 600 long-term care facilities that fall under a state mandate requiring workers to be vaccinated against COVID-19 reported that 95% of their staff are fully or partially immunized, the Department of Public Health said Friday, more than two weeks after the deadline. Long-term care facilities 鈥 including nursing homes, assisted living centers, residential care homes, chronic disease hospitals, intermediate care facilities and managed residential communities 鈥 had to report their staff participation to the state by Sept. 28. All employees of those facilities were required to be immunized against COVID-19 unless they obtained a religious or medical exemption. (Carlesso, 10/15)

The coming federal vaccine mandate could result in a wave of firings of employees who are reluctant to get the life-saving shots. That has many companies nervous that those jobs will be difficult to fill in a labor market where willing hands are increasingly hard to come by. Close to three quarters of respondents to a survey this month who haven鈥檛 implemented a mandate of their own said fears of worker shortages were behind that decision. The survey, run by labor law firm Fisher Phillips LLP, contacted more than 1,500 professionals from different companies including executives, general counsels, human resources staff and others. (DiFeliciantonio, 10/17)

Milwaukee leaders' early pandemic unification over a mask mandate聽ended this summer, and a debate over bringing face coverings back continues. The city's mask ordinance, which only remained in force as long as the city's COVID-19 health orders were in place, lapsed along with the lifting of the last health order聽on June 1.聽While Ald. Marina Dimitrijevic has been vocal in聽pushing聽for a return to masking, Health Commissioner Kirsten Johnson has resisted for a number of聽reasons. (Dirr, 10/17)

In updates from New York 鈥

The COVID-19 vaccine mandate for healthcare workers has largely resulted in few resignations or dismissals at hospitals in the metropolitan area, according to data manually compiled by聽Crain鈥檚. NYC Health + Hospitals and Northwell Health reported the highest rates of noncompliance with the state mandate, which enacted a Sept. 27 deadline for healthcare workers to get at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, a聽Crain鈥檚聽data analysis showed. The city鈥檚 public hospital system has about 2,500 unvaccinated workers among its 43,000-person staff, while Northwell terminated 1,400 of its 76,000 employees, spokespeople for the systems said. The systems declined to share breakdowns by individual hospital. (Kaufman, 10/15)

Nearly two-thirds of New York residents are fully vaccinated against the coronavirus, according to the latest federal statistics. About 12.7 million of New York鈥檚 20 million residents are fully vaccinated, according to data released Saturday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That鈥檚 the seventh highest percentage of any state 鈥 below Vermont, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Maine, Massachusetts and New Jersey. (Villeneuve, 10/16)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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