With Pfizer Approved, Will Employers Mandate? Opinions Vary.
Business leaders broadly agree they need to get more workers vaccinated to keep the U.S. economy humming, but theyâre split over how best to do that.
Some are dangling bigger bonuses or other incentives to cajole employees into getting the COVID-19 vaccine. Others have started requiring it.
Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. introduced an incentive program that offers employees $1,500 to get vaccinated, and $3,000 if a mill achieves 75 percent participation.
Companies from Arkansas-based Walmart to Microsoft Corp. have imposed vaccine mandates mostly on white-collar workers returning to offices. Meatpacker Tyson Foods Inc. took a harder line, saying all its workers must get the vaccine by Nov. 1.
âWe did not take this decision lightly,â Donnie King, Tysonâs chief executive, wrote in a memo to the companyâs roughly 120,000 U.S. employees. âWe have spent months encouraging our team members to get vaccinatedâtoday, under half of our team members are.â
These strategies come with risks for employers, their workers and their customers, and their outcomes could shape the course of the pandemic.
More than a third of American adults have not been vaccinated, according to recent U.S. data. Firms using a lighter touch risk workplace outbreaks. Those mandating shots risk losing workers in a tight job market.
Each CEO cites myriad reasons for their vaccine strategy, though many also point to new Centers for Disease Control guidelines relating to how vaccinated people transmit the Delta variant.
Some want to prevent worker illnesses or absences from crippling their operations. Others want to end remote work. Still others face complications related to union rules.
Walmart executives didnât make the COVID-19 vaccine mandatory this spring in part because executives worried it wasnât readily available to all who wanted it and wasnât yet fully FDA approved, said a person familiar with the matter. Earlier this month, Walmart said it would require vaccines for U.S. corporate staff and regional managers. It is not mandating the shots for store workers.
A Walmart spokesman said the company hopes that by asking executives to be vaccinated, they will âinfluence even more of our frontline associates to become vaccinated.â
Walmart is offering a $150 bonus to employees who get the shot.
Some U.S. airlines are requiring vaccines for new hires but not existing staff. Manufacturing giants such as General Electric Co., Caterpillar Inc. and the big three U.S. automakers have said they arenât mandating vaccines.
Snap-on Inc., a Wisconsin-based high-end tools manufacturer with a largely blue-collar workforce, wonât mandate the vaccine, says Chief Executive Nicholas T. Pinchuk, because he believes such a move would backfire.
âI donât think the way to do it is to tell people, somehow because they donât get the vaccine, they are flawed,â Pinchuk said. âThey donât respond to that.â
He instead talks up the benefits of the vaccine. The company has offered employees time off to get the shot. Snap-onâs overall vaccination rate is above the national average, with more factory workers than corporate staff having received it.
Companies mandating vaccinations for workers represented by labor unions must negotiate those requirements.
Labor union leaders have sent mixed messages on vaccine requirements. Some have insisted such changes be reached only through collective bargaining, while others have come out publicly in support.
General Motors Co. and its rivals have decided to reinstate mask wearing across their workforces after discussions with a joint task force of the UAW union.
A UAW spokesman said a vaccine mandate would be subject to negotiations with union officials, although the union is encouraging the shots.
U.S. employers can require all workers present in a workplace be vaccinated against COVID-19, according to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
Most companies say they will allow for health and religious exemptions, and some are still determining how they will respond to workers who do not comply.
Lourenco Goncalves, the Cleveland-Cliffs CEO who started what he characterizes as the âmost generous vaccine incentive program in the world,â said he isnât mandating the vaccine because he doesnât need every employee to get the shot to lower chances of outbreaks at worksites.
Goncalves said about 60 percent of the companyâs 25,000 workers have been vaccinated as of late last week, although some mills had more success than others. Nineteen of the companyâs 46 work sites now qualify for the full cash incentive. The incentive program expired Saturday.
Sources: Northwest Indiana Times, Wall Street Journal

