Yeah, you lost me at "...California law..."There was a good article in the daily ENR email this morning. It was from the Monterey County Herald and referenced California law throughout. The article stated the biggest difference between C19 vaccine and all the others available/required for schools is the FDA has not explicitly approved it yet. They opined that there would be very few issues within industries like engineering. Healthcare, senior care and other public facing that can't work from home occupations were a whole another bag of works though.
Definitely a **** way to do it on the restaurants part.
I wonder if that's true of right to work states, though.
That's what I was getting at, or is there some law/FDA crossover that would prevent them from doing that.Seems like states that discourage unions would be even more likely to let employers force whatever they want (like vaccines) on employees?
Surprised those havent started yetSo people that follow this guy ->View attachment 21306
Can just go "Nope"??
Que the "have you or a loved one been the victim of job loss due to the vaccine mandate..." lawyer commercials.
I'm not an expert either. But I have heard through reliable channels that the EUA is the reason the military is not requiring it, and that they will require it once it receives full approval. If the military doesn't believe they can require it, I wonder how any other employer could.I'm not an expert, but from everything that I found online, it's completely legal to be fired for refusing the vaccine, unless you can prove that you have a medical condition that prevents you from taking it, or you can prove that's it's against your religious beliefs. The fact that's it's only approved under an EUA has no relevance.
Is it that they can't require it? Or is it that they are choosing not to?I'm not an expert either. But I have heard through reliable channels that the EUA is the reason the military is not requiring it, and that they will require it once it receives full approval. If the military doesn't believe they can require it, I wonder how any other employer could.
On the other end of the spectrum, my wife is actively trying to figure out how she can get vaccinated. She left her travelling job and went back to the medical center in the Hamilton County Justice Center where she'd worked before, which not surprisingly, is way up there in risk of exposure. I guess in Ohio right now, they're basing it primarily on age and people who work in an actual hospital, because you know, only people who work in a hospital are really "health care workers
If it can be proven that an unvaccinated employee poses a direct threat to others AND the threat can't be eliminated through other means, then that employee could legally be let go.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯Really stupid question- if "others" is vaccinated, is the unvaccinated employee a threat?
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