Boeing requires
Covid-19 vaccinations for employees by Dec. 8 federal deadline
The Boeing Co.
(NYSE: BA) is now requiring most of its U.S.-based employees to get
vaccinated against Covid-19 by Dec. 8 or face losing their jobs. The jet
maker announced the policy in a presentation to its workforce Oct. 11.
The move follows
an executive order by President Joe Biden last month requiring vaccinations
for large private employers and federal contractors. Boeing has nearly
57,000 employees in Washington and 141,000 nationally, according to
Business Journal research.
Employees can
obtain exemptions based on disability or religious accommodations, but must
undergo regular testing for the coronavirus if they're not fully
vaccinated, the company said in the presentation.
That gives
employees just two weeks to receive their first dose of the Moderna
vaccine, three weeks to begin vaccination with the two-dose Pfizer shot or
until Nov. 24 to receive the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine.
“Employees who are
unable to meet these requirements, and do not have an approved
accommodation, by Dec. 8 may be released from the company,” Boeing wrote.
Antibody tests or
prior infection do not qualify employees for exemption, it added.
Boeing’s engineers
union, the Society of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace
(SPEEA), said it is working with Boeing and other employers to ensure the
rollout of the new policy meets the terms of employees’ contracts and urged
its members to get the vaccine.
“We are encouraged
that the vast majority of members we are hearing from are vaccinated and
following health professionals’ recommendations to wear a face mask, wash
hands frequently and practice social distancing,” SPEEA said in an email
statement.
The union
currently represents around 17,000 engineers, technical workers, pilots and
other employees at Boeing, Spirit AeroSystems and Triumph Composite Systems
in Washington, Oregon, Kansas and a handful of other states.
Airlines have also
made moves to require Covid-19 vaccinations among their workforce. Alaska
Air Group announced Oct. 1 that it would require all of its employees and
some contractors to be vaccinated. Southwest Airlines and American
Airlines, both based in Texas, will also require workers vaccinations,
despite an executive order by Gov. Greg Abbott on Monday banning such
mandates.
“Boeing will
continue to carefully monitor guidance from public health agencies, and
requirements from federal, state and local governments to inform our
COVID-19 policies,” a Boeing spokesperson said in an email statement. “We
continue to prioritize the health and safety of all of our employees.”
As of Oct. 11,
more than 77% of eligible Washington residents had received their first
dose of the vaccine, according to the state Department of Health.
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