Employers and Vaccinations
This article is written by Manage Group friend John Dustow and the original article can be found by clicking here.
As we enter another lockdown and wondering whether this will ever end, I am getting several questions from employers around their rights and obligations around vaccination. In particular, whether an employer can make it a requirement to be vaccinated for an employee to gain or maintain their employment.
There is no doubt Covid 19 is impacting our society, both directly with people being infected by Covid 19 and indirectly via lockdowns and job losses, etc. We are constantly reminded that we need to all play our part and get vaccinated.
Now, this blog isn't a debate on the merits of vaccinations. However, I see some media reports indicating that some businesses are following an overseas model of only allowing vaccinated people to enter their premises. I won't dwell on the legalities of that stance, but it does seem many companies are asking for a simple yes or no answer as to whether they can make it mandatory for their employees to be vaccinated. No one can give that to you, and if they do, I would be very sceptical of that advice.
At present, Health Orders have mandated that all border workers who either work at the border or one of our MIQ facilities must be vaccinated and tested regularly. That order (to date) does not require that of employees at any other workplace.
Therefore, the legislation that applies to all other employers and employees regarding vaccination is the Employment Relations Act 2000 and the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015. These acts have not been changed as a result of Covid 19, as some employers found out when they decided to reduce employee's wages without the proper process during lockdowns.
The Employment Relations Act 2000 still states that any decision made by the employer must be what a fair and reasonable employer could do in all the circumstances. Furthermore, for any decision that is likely to impact an employee's employment status, the employer must first provide all the relevant information and then allow the employees to respond to any proposal before making any decision. That is a very high bar to reach and not something that should be taken for granted.
When it comes to Health and Safety, as an employer, you're responsible for maintaining a safe workplace and taking reasonable action/steps to mitigate any reasonable risk of harm to employees. Now I'm not an outright expert on Health and Safety matters, but one of the basic steps to making any significant health and safety decision is that there needs to be a full Health and Safety Risk Assessment. We use the superstars at Manage Group for all the finer aspects of H&S, who can help businesses with this.
So, when it comes to making Health and Safety decisions around Covid 19, one of the first steps is to make a realistic assessment of the risk your employees face in the current Covid 19 environment.
What does that look like? Well, let's take a look at our awesome Custom Officers at the airport. As they process passengers from overseas, what are the realistic risks of coming into contact with Covid 19? You only have to watch the daily briefings from our Director General of Health to know that many people are arriving into our country, then testing positive for Covid 19 in MIQ. I don't think many that would argue that under the risk assessment matrix, it is probable (if not certain) that our Customs Officers will come into contact with someone that has been infected with Covid 19.
The next step is to determine what the impact would be of a Customs Officer contracting Covid 19 from one of these passengers. Again, we can just look at the impact of the virus getting into the community as we sit in Level 4 lockdown. There is the societal impact of lockdowns and restrictions and the health impact on people who contract the virus. Again, I'm not taking a position on the seriousness of the virus; I am merely suggesting an employer must take a "reasoned" approach to these topics.
So, for the sake of this conversation, let's just agree that there is a serious risk of Covid exposure in this particular workplace. We can now look at the obligations of the employer to mitigate this risk in their workplace and what options are open to them:
Policy on social distancing?
Wearing masks/gloves?
Wearing PPE with higher levels of protection?
Vaccination?
All or some of the above?