U.S. to lift most COVID-19 vaccine mandates for federal workers, foreign travellers - Action News
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U.S. to lift most COVID-19 vaccine mandates for federal workers, foreign travellers

The Biden administration will end most of the last remaining U.S. federal COVID-19 vaccine requirements next week when the national public health emergency for the coronavirus ends, the White House said Monday.

Biden administration ending requirements on May 11

A person wearing a mask rolls up their sleeve as another administers a vaccine shot on their arm.
U.S. President Joe Biden is administered a COVID-19 vaccine booster shot at the White House in September 2021. (Evan Vucci/The Associated Press)

The Biden administration will end most of the last remaining U.S. federal COVID-19 vaccine requirements next week when the national public health emergency for the coronavirus ends, the White House said Monday.

Vaccine requirements for federal workers and federal contractors, as well as foreign air travellers to the U.S., will end May 11. The government is also beginning the process of lifting shot requirements for Head Start educators, health-care workers, and non-citizens at U.S. land borders.

The requirements are among the last vestiges of some of the more coercive measures taken by the federal government to promote vaccination as the deadly virus raged, and their end marks the latest display of how President Joe Biden's administration is moving to treat COVID-19 as a routine, endemic illness.

"While I believe that these vaccine mandates had a tremendous beneficial impact, we are now at a point where we think that it makes a lot of sense to pull these requirements down," White House COVID-19 co-ordinator Dr. Ashish Jha told The Associated Press on Monday.

Deeply polarizing at the time and the subject of numerous legal challenges many of which were successful the vaccination requirements were imposed by Biden in successive waves in late 2022 as the nation's vaccination rate plateaued even amid the emergence of new, more transmissible variants of COVID-19.

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More than 100 million people at one time were covered by Biden's sweeping mandates, which he announced on Sept. 9, 2021, as the delta variant of the virus was sickening more people than at any time up to that point in the pandemic. Biden had ruled out such requirements before taking office that January, but came to embrace them to change the behaviour of what he viewed to be a stubborn slice of the public that refused to be inoculated, saying they jeopardized the lives of others and the nation's economic recovery.

Federal courts and Congress have already rolled back Biden's vaccine requirements for large employers and military service members.

Mandates remain for many employees of the National Institutes of Health, Indian Health Service and Department of Veterans Affairs which implemented their own requirements for health--care staff and others independent of the White House will remain while those agencies review their own requirements, the administration said.

Democratic Rep.Brian Higgins, who represents a district that includes Buffalo, N.Y.,and Niagara Falls, hailed the announced dropping of the mandates as "long overdue" and hopes the move will spur more cross-border travel between the U.S. and Canada.

The vaccine mandate "kept families apart and impeded economic recovery," Higgins said in a statement.

"This last lifting of pandemic restrictions is certainly welcome news and critically important as we seek opportunities to encourage a robust cross-border exchange that delivers shared prosperity."

'COVID continues to be a problem'

Over 1.13 million people in the U.S. have died of COVID-19 since the pandemic began more than three years ago, including 1,052 people in the week ending April 26, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). That was the lowest weekly death toll from the virus since March 2020.

"COVID continues to be a problem," Jha said. "But our healthcare system or public health resources are far more able to respond to the threat that COVID poses to our country and do so in a way that does not cause problems with access to care for Americans."

He added, "Some of these emergency powers are just not necessary in the same way anymore."

A person gestures while speaking at a lectern.
White House COVID-19 response co-ordinator Ashish Jha speaks at the White House in December 2022. (Susan Walsh/The Associated Press)

More than 270 million people in the U.S., or just over 81 per centof the population, have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, according to the CDC.

While federal mandates are ending, Jha predicted that some employers, especially medical facilities, may decide to maintain their COVID-19 vaccination requirements. He noted that the hospital where he practises has had a flu vaccine requirement for employees for 20 years.

Jha dismissed concerns that the ending of the international traveller vaccination requirement would increase the risk of a new variant from overseas entering the U.S. Biden has already rolled back virus testing requirements for both American citizens and foreign travellers to the U.S.

Jha said the U.S. was already protected by a traveller genomic surveillance program, which, for instance, tests for different virus strains in aircraft wastewater.

"We think that we are much more able to identify if a new variant shows up in the United States and respond effectively," he said. "And I think that's what makes the need for a vaccine mandate for travelers less necessary right now."

With files from CBC News