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Morning Briefing

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Thursday, Oct 14 2021

Full Issue

Education Secretary Gives Texas A Failing Grade On Its Vax Mandate Ban

Miguel Cardona, U.S. Education Secretary, has said he disagrees with the Texas governor's ban on vaccine mandates because of its impact on children in public and private schools. And The Wall Street Journal notes that many companies are stuck in the middle of conflicting federal and state rules on the matter.

U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said that he disagrees with Texas Gov. Greg Abbotts move to ban nearly any coronavirus vaccine mandates in the state. Thats because the move will affect children in both public and private schools in the state, some of whom are not yet eligible to be vaccinated themselves. (Reinicke, 10/13)

The Greater Houston Partnership, which represents some 900 companies including Exxon Mobil Corp., JPMorgan Chase & Co., Chevron Corp. and Accenture PLC, said Tuesday that Mr. Abbotts order would make it more difficult for Texas businesses to operate safely. The organization has been generally supportive of Mr. Bidens efforts to require vaccines for large employers. (Harrison and Findell, 10/13)

Texas Governor Greg Abbott's executive order banning vaccine mandates in the Lone Star state is not sitting well at Houston Methodist, the first hospital system in the country to require employees be immunized against COVID-19. Houston Methodist a medical center and six community hospitals is "deeply disappointed in the governor's order," Dr. Marc Boom, president and CEO of Houston Methodist said in an emailed statement to CBS MoneyWatch. Medical workers take an oath to "do no harm," and that includes "doing everything possible to prevent the spread of disease something we know these vaccines are very good at doing," he added. (Gibson, 10/13)

With just under two weeks until the Dallas Mavericks season opener, owner Mark Cuban has made his stance known on COVID-19 vaccinations. And it doesnt appear that he will be backing down any time soon. It is your choice. It is absolutely, positively up to you. But there are consequences that come with that, Cuban said during an appearance on 10 Questions with Kyle Brandt, a Spotify podcast. If you work for me, I require my employees to be vaccinated unless theres a doctors reason where they cant be. I dont want my kids to be at risk, so the consequences of you not being vaccinated is Im not going to shut the [expletive] up. Im going to be in your mother[expletive] ear driving you mother[expletive] crazy. (Lopez, 10/13)

In updates on mandates in California

A judge on Wednesday blocked an order due to take effect this week that required California prison employees to be vaccinated against COVID-19.Kern County Judge Bernard Barmann issued a temporary restraining order that prevents enforcement of the vaccination mandate for guards and peace officers represented by a powerful union while the court weighs a request for a preliminary injunction, the Sacramento Bee reported. (10/14)

About 800 San Francisco city workers have asked for medical or religions exemptions to avoid a looming deadline for them to get vaccinated or lose their jobs, but so far the city has not approved a single request, a human resources official said Wednesday. About 1,900, or 5.5% of the citys 35,000-employee workforce, have not complied with the mandate to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by Nov. 1, said Mawuli Tugbenyoh, chief of policy at San Franciscos Department of Human Resources. (10/14)

In other vaccine mandate news

More than 800 people who work for Boston have been suspended without pay for failing to comply with the citys coronavirus vaccine mandate, city officials said. Acting Mayor Kim Janey announced in August that the citys roughly 18,000 employees would be required to either show proof of vaccination, or, if they do no want to get a shot, submit to regular testing. (10/13)

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson on Wednesday effectively approved a new law that will allow employees to opt-out of COVID-19 vaccine requirements, a move by fellow Republicans to challenge federal vaccine mandates. Hutchinson allowed the measure to become law without his signature despite his concerns about the impact it will have on businesses in the state. The new law wont take effect until early next year. (DeMillo, 10/14)

A federal judge has extended a ban on United Airlines putting employees on unpaid leave for seeking a medical or religious exemption from the airlines requirement to get vaccinated against COVID-19.U.S. District Judge Mark Pittman in Fort Worth, Texas, granted a restraining order Tuesday in favor of employees who are suing the airline over the mandate. (10/13)

Also

Brooklyn Nets point guard Kyrie Irving onWednesday explained his refusal to get vaccinated against COVID-19 a day after his team announced it was suspending him because his stance made him ineligible to play or practice in their arena. (Scully, 10/13)

There are not many people standing in between the Brooklyn Nets and the NBA championship. ... But it turns out the greatest threat to Nets hegemony when the NBA season begins next week might be a team of New York City health officials. Jay Varma is their LeBron James. Varma was the senior adviser for public health in the New York City mayors office, where it was his job until recently to lead the citys strategy against Covid-19, and he remains a consultant on pandemic matters. Hes also suddenly become one of the most significant figures in the NBA. (Cohen and Radnofsky, 10/13)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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