coronavirus

Deadline Arrives for High-Risk Workers in Santa Clara County to Have COVID-19 Booster

NBC Universal, Inc. The deadline has arrived for Santa Clara County workers in high-risk settings to have up-to-date COVID-19 vaccinations, meaning booster shots. Bob Redell reports.

The deadline has arrived for Santa Clara County workers in high-risk settings to have up-to-date COVID-19 vaccinations, meaning booster shots.

In late December, as the omicron variant was spreading fast, county Health Officer Dr. Sara Cody revised the health order to include the booster mandate for county employees in health care, medical first response, skilled nursing facilities, jails and correctional facilities and congregate shelters.

The order requires such workers to have up-to-date vaccinations by Jan. 24.

The deadline has arrived for Santa Clara County workers in high-risk settings to have up-to-date COVID-19 vaccinations, meaning booster shots. Bob Redell reports.

Any Santa Clara County workers in such high-risk settings that aren't up to date on vaccinations must be reassigned to lower risk settings or otherwise be prohibited from working in the higher-risk workplace, the order states.

A waiver process has been set up after hospitals protested the mandate, saying they would lose too many workers. Each hospital or department must apply for the waiver on behalf of their employees; individual workers cannot.

The Santa Clara County Fire Department said 40 of its firefighters want waivers.

"We’re staring at the front lines, at the door, going into fire season not having firefighters available because the question remains - does the health order eventually get lifted? Does it get changed? Does it get rescinded?," said Matt Tuttle, San Jose Firefighters Union President.

San Jose fire Chief Robert Sapien Jr. said unvaccinated individuals will "have to navigate the new order and make decisions on what they're going to do."

The union said it does not know how many, if any, unvaccinated firefighters will change their minds.

San Jose fire Chief Robert Sapien Jr. discusses Santa Clara County's booster mandate for workers in high-risk settings during an interview with NBC Bay Area.

Meanwhile, the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority this week is expected to issue a vaccine mandate for its more than 2,000 employees within the next 60 days. VTA's biggest labor union said it anticipates the agency will lose 2% to 5% of its workers as a result.

VTA officials said as of last week, 61% of its 2,100 employees are fully vaccinated, and 71% have received at least one dose.

Restaurant workers are not under a mandate to show proof of vaccine, but Dr. Cody said it is recommended for both employees and patrons to show they're up to date with their shots.

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