New mayor Eric Adams will keep N.Y.C.’s first-in-nation private-sector vaccine mandate in place.

Primary tabs

New mayor Eric Adams will keep N.Y.C.’s first-in-nation private-sector vaccine mandate in place.

Following weeks of silence, Mayor-elect Eric Adams vowed on Thursday to keep New York City’s vaccine mandate for private-sector employees in place. The requirement, which was enacted by Mayor Bill de Blasio and is the first of its kind in the nation, went into effect on Monday, during Mr. de Blasio’s last week in office.

“Our focus is vaccine and testing, vaccine and testing, vaccine and testing,” Mr. Adams said, before turning to Dr. Dave A. Chokshi, Mr. de Blasio’s health commissioner, who will stay on as Mr. Adams’s health commissioner until March.

“The private sector employer mandate will stay in effect in the New Year, with a focus on compliance, not punishment,” Dr. Chokshi announced.

Epidemiologists applauded the mandate, but its timing at the tail end of Mr. de Blasio’s tenure sowed confusion among some business owners, who were unsure whether to abide by the mandate, or to just wait until Mr. Adams took office and announced his own policy. Some also see it as a bureaucratic headache and worry that some workers might quit rather than comply.

Mr. Adams’s silence on the matter had also fostered hope among some business owners that he planned to allow the mandate to lapse.

But in the weeks since Mr. de Blasio announced the policy on Dec. 6, the Omicron variant has rampaged through New York City and driven a sharp increase in coronavirus cases.

On Wednesday, the city set a one-day case record for the third time in a week, and a subway line connecting Queens and Manhattan shut down, because so many transit workers had called in sick. Life in the city, in some ways, has slowed to a crawl. The Westminster Kennel Club postponed its January dog show, in deference to Omicron.

Omicron has already infected hundreds of thousands of city residents. On Wednesday, Gov. Kathy Hochul announced that in New York City 39,591 people had tested positive the previous day. And that is an undercount as it doesn’t include many at home tests that came up positive but were never reported to the public health authorities. ...

Country / Region Tags: 
Problem, Solution, SitRep, or ?: 
Groups this Group Post belongs to: 
- Private group -
Workflow history
Revision ID Field name Date Old state New state name By Comment Operations
No state No state
howdy folks
Page loaded in 0.443 seconds.