Ninety-two percent of federal employees and military personnel have received at least one dose of coronavirus vaccine, while nearly 5?percent more have asked for exemptions on religious or medical grounds, the White House said Wednesday.
Wp Get the full experience.Choose your plan ArrowRight
Among civil servants, vaccination percentages range from 86.1?percent at the Agriculture Department to 97.8?percent at the Agency for International Development (AID). Percentages of employees asking for exemptions also vary, from 10.2?percent at the Department of Veterans Affairs to 1.3?percent at AID and the State Department.
At the largest federal agency, the Defense Department, 93.4?percent of military and federal personnel combined have received at least one vaccination dose, while another 5.5?percent have asked for exemptions.
Story continues below advertisement
Figures from the Office of Management and Budget form the most complete accounting to date of compliance with a requirement that federal employees be fully vaccinated as of Nov.?22, even if they are teleworking full-time. Deadlines for uniformed military personnel vary by service.
Advertisement
Although the vaccination mandates issued by President Biden in September defined “fully vaccinated” as at least two weeks beyond the sole or second shot, depending on the vaccine, the data released Wednesday characterize employees as vaccinated if they have received at least one dose.
Those requesting an exemption also are deemed in compliance with the mandate, as the government decides on their requests. The remaining 3?percent have not shown they are vaccinated, nor have they asked for an exemption.
Story continues below advertisement
“This week’s deadline wasn’t an end point. For those employees who are not yet in compliance, agencies are beginning a period of education and counseling, followed by additional enforcement steps, consistent with guidance from the Safer Federal Workforce Task Force and the Office of Personnel Management,” the announcement said.
Advertisement
The recommended sequence for those refusing vaccines — unless they have asked for an exemption — is a week of counseling about them and the potential career consequences of not complying with the mandate, then a possible unpaid suspension of under two weeks. Only after that would they face being fired.
“At any point, if an employee gets their first shot or submits an exemption request, agencies will pause further enforcement to give the employee a reasonable amount of time to become fully vaccinated or to process the exemption request,” Wednesday’s announcement said.
Federal workers seek religious exemptions to vaccine mandate
At least one large department, Veterans Affairs, has started the disciplinary sequence for some employees. VA is ahead of other agencies because it required vaccinations for its medical employees more than a month before Biden issued the wider directive for federal workers.
Advertisement
Story continues below advertisement
Veterans Affairs Secretary Denis McDonough said last week that even with the process underway, he was unaware of any decisions to fire employees and said the disciplinary process could “stretch out as much as three months, start to finish.”
The process of firing a federal worker typically takes at least a month, since employees have a right to respond and agencies must consider those replies before taking final actions. During that time employees are to keep working, subject to tighter distancing and mask-wearing standards and regular testing when in the workplace.
Federal employees who have pending requests for exemptions are to follow those safety procedures, which also would apply if their request is granted. If the request is denied, the disciplinary process would begin.
Story continues below advertisement
National Treasury Employees Union President Tony Reardon urged agencies to work swiftly on the requests for exemptions.
Advertisement
“For those who have raised religious or medical reasons that they should remain unvaccinated, we hope the agencies process those requests quickly and provide whatever accommodations are necessary to maintain employee safety in the workplace,” Reardon said in a statement. “For the small minority who have not requested an exemption and are still unvaccinated, there is still time for them to change their minds and avoid potential disciplinary action.”
Tracking the coronavirus vaccine, state by state
The numbers released Wednesday include some 2.2?million federal employees plus uniformed armed forces personnel, around 3.5?million in all. The U.S. Postal Service and its 600,000-plus employees aren’t subject to the mandate; a separate mandate for companies with more than 100 employees — which currently is on hold due to a court challenge — would apply to postal workers.
“As we have seen throughout the pandemic, federal employees remain ready to serve — with public health at the forefront,” Rep. Gerald E. Connolly (D-Va.), chairman of the House subcommittee on government management, said in a statement. “Civil servants hold positions of public trust and are meeting this moment.”