By Gabriella Borter and Maria Caspani
NEW YORK (Reuters) – New York City will require municipal workers to get vaccinated against COVID-19 by mid-September or face weekly testing, Mayor Bill de Blasio said on Monday, as authorities nationwide have ramped up vaccine promotion to try to stem a wave of infections caused by the Delta variant.
Mayor de Blasio’s announcement, which imposes a vaccine mandate on more than 300,000 municipal workers, comes a week after the city passed a vaccine mandate for all healthcare workers at city-run hospitals and clinics. Citywide, about 59% of the population is vaccinated against COVID-19.
“It is about protecting the workforce, their health and safety and the people they serve,” de Blasio told reporters on Monday.
The city’s mandate comes as federal and local officials are sounding the alarm about a rise in COVID-19 cases and racing to get infections under control before the start of the school year.
The highly transmissible Delta variant of COVID-19, which was first found in India earlier this year, has quickly driven up infections across the United States after the country enjoyed a drop-off in cases and hospitalizations when vaccines became widely available in the spring.
The sharpest increases in COVID-19 cases are in places with lower vaccination rates. Florida, Texas and Missouri account for 40% of all new cases nationwide, with around one in five of all new U.S. cases occurring in Florida, White House adviser Jeffrey Zients said last week.
Just under 50% of the U.S. population is fully vaccinated, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
COVID-19 vaccine and testing mandates remain a point of contention and have already sparked legal opposition in the case of public universities. Opponents see them as a violation of individual rights.
But officials have justified them because the vaccines have proven to be safe and dramatically reduce people’s risk of hospitalization and death from the virus.
Some 57 medical associations on Monday published a statement calling for all healthcare and long-term care employers in the U.S. to require their employees to get vaccinated, calling it “the logical fulfillment of the ethical commitment of all healthcare workers to put patients as well as residents of long-term care facilities first.”
New York City’s largest public employee union, DC 37, took legal issue with the city’s mandate on Monday.
“If City Hall intends to test our members weekly, they must first meet us at the table to bargain. While we encourage everyone to get vaccinated and support measures to ensure our members’ health and wellbeing, weekly testing is clearly subject to mandatory bargaining,” Executive Director Henry Garrido said in a statement.
De Blasio cited the Delta variant as the city’s reason for moving beyond promoting voluntary vaccination.
“It was one thing to start with a heavy voluntary focus in the beginning and then incentive focus, but it’s quite clear the Delta variant has changed the game,” he said.
In the last few weeks, health and government officials have aggressively emphasized the importance of getting vaccinated, including some Republican leaders who previously refrained from openly endorsing the vaccines.
The latest vaccine data indicates that their tone change might be changing some minds. On Sunday, the CDC reported an uptick in the number of vaccine doses administered in the past 24 hours – 778,996, the highest number given in a 24-hour period since the United States reported giving 1.16 million doses on July 3.
The number of vaccine doses administered daily peaked at 4.63 million on April 10, data from the CDC shows.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter and Maria Caspani; Editing by Andrea Ricci)