(Reuters) – U.S. banks have been more proactive than other industries in encouraging employees back to the office, but those plans have come under renewed scrutiny due to the rapid spread of the Omicron variant, with Jefferies Financial Group last week reversing course due to a COVID-19 outbreak among employees.
Most major U.S. banks have had staff working in offices since the summer, but some are now choosing not to host holiday parties and others strongly recommending staff get booster shots. The following are the pandemic-related rules among Wall Street’s biggest banks.
Bank of America Corp
The bank since late summer has been encouraging employees to get fully vaccinated and now to get their booster shots when eligible and offers onsite clinics in several locations.
Citigroup Inc
The bank is requiring employees in the United States to be vaccinated but is not mandating boosters. It is providing rapid test kits and encouraging testing for employees going into the office, a source told Reuters.
Deutsche Bank
The German lender has made COVID-19 boosters available to staff at its new midtown headquarters in New York City since early November, according to a source familiar with the matter.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc
As infections flared up in August due to the spreading of the Delta variant, the Wall Street bank mandated vaccines for all staff and visitors entering its offices in the United States
Staff in the United States must be tested onsite on a weekly basis. The bank is also providing access to boosters for those who are eligible, although boosters are not mandatory.
Jefferies
The investment bank requires all staff who want to enter its offices to be vaccinated against COVID-19 and has said it will require boosters by Jan. 31, unless the person concerned is not yet eligible for the additional shot. The bank does not perform onsite testing.
Last week, following a spate of cases, the bank asked staff to work from home where possible and canceled all but essential travel.
JPMorgan Chase & Co
The biggest U.S. bank, and one of the most aggressive in bringing employees back to the office, mandated face covering for its U.S. employees in August, saying they would be required to wear masks in public indoor settings and in common areas regardless of their vaccination status.
In October, the bank said it would restrict business travel for employees who are unvaccinated or have not disclosed their vaccination status. Such employees are required to get tested twice a week and contribute more of their pay toward medical insurance.
The bank also mandated vaccines for new recruits in client-facing roles or those required to travel for business.
Morgan Stanley
The bank said in August it had asked U.S.-based employees to prove they had been vaccinated against COVID-19 by Oct. 1. Earlier in June, the bank had barred clients and visitors from entering its offices in New York and Westchester, according to a source.
Those who were not fully vaccinated were expected to work remotely, the source said at the time.
Wells Fargo & Co
The lender has said it strongly encourages employees to consider getting the COVID-19 vaccine, but does not require it. The bank was providing all employees with four hours of paid leave to get the booster shot if eligible.
The bank also required employees to either document that they are fully vaccinated or get tested regularly.
Fidelity Investments
The company said it has paused voluntary return to office plans in New England, citing a rising risk from the COVID-19 pandemic.
Source: Company statements, memo, sources
(Reporting by Noor Zainab Hussain and Niket Nishant in Bengaluru and Elizabeth Dilts Marshall in New York; Editing by Bill Berkrot)