Labor Secretary Marty Walsh, during a media blitz on Thursday, said that the new Biden administration rule that requires private employees to show proof of COVID-19 vaccination or get tested for COVID-19 on a regular basis is not a mandate.
“This isn’t a mandate—this is a vaccine or testing,” Walsh, a former mayor of Boston, said during an appearance on MSNBC.
“What we want to do is just encourage people to get vaccinated, if they choose not to get vaccinated, we’re asking—they’re going to get tested and then, in the workplace, when they’re around other people, they’re going to wear a mask. This is not a mandate,” he added on CNN.
The Labor Department’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) promulgated earlier in the day what’s known as the emergency temporary standard that outlines the requirements for private employers.
Critics said the standard is clearly a mandate.
“This new rule is illegal and unconstitutional. It circumvents the normal legal process, along with Congress, to claim emergency powers to impose a mandate on American business,” Rick Esenberg, president and general counsel at the Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty, which is representing two businesses suing the administration over the standard, said in a statement.
Multiple lawsuits were filed within hours of the rule being unveiled. Many of them described it as a mandate.
The administration is citing the Occupational Safety and Health Act, a federal law enacted in 1970 after being passed by Congress and signed by then-President Richard Nixon.
“I don’t believe we’re overstepping our bounds here,” Walsh said, adding that he’s confident, like other administration officials, that the standard will withstand legal challenges.
Using the labor secretary’s rationale, a different requirement issued Thursday is a mandate.
The Department of Health’s Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services separately announced that it’s requiring health care workers at facilities that receive funding from Medicare or Medicaid get vaccinated against the CCP virus. Those facilities, which employ over 17 million workers, are governed by the requirement, not the OSHA standard.
They do not have a testing opt-out option.
Asked what would happen to the health care workers who refuse to get a vaccine, Walsh said on PBS, “Employers will be able to take the action that they think is right.”