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New York State Mandates Vaccines For Its Workers

Juraj Varga from Pixabay

Gov. Andrew Cuomo will mandate that front-line workers in New York state-run hospitals be vaccinated against COVID-19. All other state workers also have to be vaccinated or be subject to weekly testing.

But the governor stopped short of imposing new mask mandates, despite advice from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that masks be required indoors in areas where the virus is spreading, due to the more contagious Delta variant.

Cuomo said the nearly 100,000 state workers will have to show proof of vaccination by early September or submit to weekly coronavirus tests. Front-line workers at state-run hospitals also will have to be fully vaccinated, but they will not have the option of weekly testing instead.

“The front-line workers must be vaccinated, period,” Cuomo said.

State-run hospitals and facilities include:

  • SUNY Stony Brook.
  • SUNY Upstate.
  • SUNY Downstate.
  • Long Island Veterans Home at Stony Brook.
  • Helen Hayes Hospital.
  • SUNY College of Optometry.
  • Montrose Veterans Home.
  • St. Albans Veterans Home.
  • Oxford Veterans Home.
  • Batavia Veterans Home.

The announcement follows decisions by New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, who is requiring all city workers to be vaccinated, and by California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who is mandating that all state workers and employees of public and private-sector hospitals, get their shot.
Employees of the New York state Legislature will not be included under the mandate. Cuomo, in June, ended a more than year-long pandemic state of emergency, and no longer has the power to compel other branches of government to comply with pandemic-related rules.

Cuomo said because none of the vaccines have yet received full approval from the Food and Drug Administration, it’s not legally possible to widen vaccination mandates right now. The law only allows employers to enact vaccine requirements for their workers.

State Senate Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins and Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie announced that state lawmakers and their staff, as well as all other state legislative employees, will also be subject to mandatory vaccines or regular testing requirements.

The state’s court system is also adopting similar rules for judges and their staff.

The governor, speaking to a New York City business group, the Association for a Better New York, urged companies to require vaccines for their employees.

Despite growing concerns over the rise of the Delta variant, and incidences of breakthrough infections in fully vaccinated people, Cuomo said businesses should require that all of the workers return to in-person work in their offices in September. He said it will help boost the city’s and the state’s economy.

“By Labor Day, everyone is back in the office,” Cuomo said. “We need that volume to support the restaurants and the shops and the services.”

The governor is not imposing any new statewide mask mandates right now, but he urged localities where the virus is spreading at a high rate to impose local mask mandates. And he said his administration is doing a “full review” of its mask policies, now that the CDC has altered its recommendations.

He’s also urging schools to consider reinstating mask mandates for teachers and students, a step that is now recommended by the CDC.

Cuomo said schools, when they open in the fall, have the potential to become superspreader sites. He said school districts have the legal authority to require that teachers and all other workers receive vaccinations, and that schools may have to take more “dramatic” actions if the situation worsens.

Karen has covered state government and politics for New York State Public Radio, a network of 10 New York and Connecticut stations, since 1990. She is also a regular contributor to the statewide public television program about New York State government, New York Now. She appears on the reporter’s roundtable segment, and interviews newsmakers.