Tyson Foods said it would require its 120,000 workers to get the COVID vaccine after its meatpacking plants were criticized as hot spots for infections early in the pandemic.
The company said only 56,000 of its employees had been vaccinated so far - for a rate of 46.6%. That compares to 50.2% of the US population as a whole that has a vaccine.
Front-line workers who comply with the rule will get $200, the company said, but The United Food and Commercial Workers that represents Tyson workers have opposed the mandate, saying that the vaccine still isn't fully cleared by the FDA.
Tyson foods is requiring all 120,000 of its employees get vaccinated as COVID numbers continue to surge
The CDC has reported 66,000 new cases a day with peak infection rates higher than summer 2020: A Tyson Food
Front-line workers will get $200 for getting the vaccine but the UFCW warns that unvaccinated workers may reject the mandate as it is not FDA approved: A Tyson Foods employee puts on a second protective mask outside of the company's meat processing plant
132 workers who belonged to United Food and Commercial Workers union died after contracting COVID this past year.
Marc Perrone, UFCW president, wrote in a prepared statement: 'While we support and encourage workers getting vaccinated against the COVID-19 virus, and have actively encouraged our members to do so, it is concerning that Tyson is implementing this mandate before the FDA has fully approved the vaccine.'
Tyson's mandate comes as a growing list of companies such as Microsoft, Ford, and General Motors have also required employee vaccinations.
About a third of the companies on the Fortune 500 list of the US's biggest companies are considering vaccine requirements, according to Fortune's calculations. Only about 10 percent have actually put mandates into place, so far, though, the magazine reports.
Some companies have hesitated to mandate the vaccines while they're technically still under 'emergency use authorization' by the Food and Drug Administration. The process to fully approve the vaccines, stripping off the 'emergency use' label could take into 2022, the Wall Street Journal reports.
But since the spread of the Delta variant, some companies are rethinking their hesitancy, according to benefits consultant Willis Towers Watson, the Journal reported.
And the US Equal Opportunity Commission said in May that federal law doesn't prevent vaccine requirements - though some companies still worry about wading into a legally thorny issue, especially on a subject that has carve-outs for religious exceptions - and state-by-state rules.
Still, after the EEOC ruling, companies have been given a green light.
'We'll see more companies saying, 'I'm going to require a vaccine before you can come into the workplace,' Julie Stone, a health care practice leader at Willis Towers Watson, told Fortune.
Tyson said that they want front-line workers to be vaccinated by Nov. 1. Other employees of the company must also be vaccinated as the leadership team is required to get it by Sep. 24 and the rest of the office by Oct. 1.
In a memo to his employees, Tyson CEO Donnie King wrote: 'It is abundantly clear that getting vaccinated is the single most effective thing we can do to protect ourselves, our families and our communities.'
The need for vaccinated employees working in facilities like Tyson are crucial, considering that Tyson has tens of thousands of employees in some locations.
The Arkansas location, where the company is headquartered, has the biggest working population with 24,800 workers. Texas comes in second with nearly half these numbers as they have 12,100 workers.
According to Statista, Tyson is also considered to be the largest meat and poultry processor in the country as they accumulated $43 billion in sales.
Various Tyson locations have held vaccination events for workers and their family members in states such as Indiana, Illinois, Oklahoma, Texas and Virginia.
In their press release, Dr Claudia Coplein, Tysons Foods Chief Medical officer, said: 'Tyson is a family company, and we know our team members want to ensure their families and those they live with are protected against the virus, so we’re pleased to start giving them access to our free, onsite vaccinations. We strive to be a valued partner in every plant community our team members call home. We know expanding access to the vaccine not only helps them and their loved ones but can have positive public health implications for the broader communities where we operate.'
Tyson Foods has heavily populated locations in states such as Arkansas, Texas, Iowa, Nebraska and Georgia
Vaccination sites were opened at Tyson Food locations to provide for workers and their families
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