Sharing Attorney Andrew Lieb's interview on Newsy - He addressed hearsay about vaccine mandates in the workplace such as: Do you get unemployment if you get fired for refusing vaccination?
Friday, September 17, 2021
Thursday, September 16, 2021
Podcast | Legal Breakdown and Analysis of Biden's Employment Vaccine Mandate
The Lieb Cast answers the following questions about Biden's employment vaccine mandate in the latest podcast:
- Can Biden / OSHA issue an Executive Order / Regulation mandating employment vaccines?
- Can the Federal Congress issue a statute mandating employment vaccines or is that a state's rights issue?
- What is the precedent for an individual state to issue a vaccine mandate and would it be upheld?
- Does it matter if an individual state's Governor or Legislature issued an employment vaccine mandate for enforceability?
- How does a sincerely held religious belief against vaccines avoid employment vaccine mandates?
- How can employers refuse an accommodation who has a disability or sincerely held belief and requests to avoid an employment vaccine mandate?
Plus, we discuss brisket, ice cream, 9/11, Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, horse dewormers, and most importantly, we break down the hiring / staffing issues faced by employers everywhere.
Are Minimum Income-to-Rent Policies Discriminatory?
Landlords and brokers should pay close attention to Long Island Housing Servs. Inc. v. NPS Holiday Square LLC in the Eastern District of New York.
This case addressed whether minimum income requirements for rentals are discriminatory.
What do you think?
Should a landlord be able to screen tenants based on their income?
The landlords in this case utilize "a two-to-one income requirement, which generally requires applicants without housing vouchers to have an income double the monthly rent." If they have vouchers, the vouchers are credited "as one month's rent and [the] applicants [] have [to have] an income equal to between 80 percent and 100 percent of one month's rent."
To be discriminatory, this policy would have to have "'a significantly adverse or disproportionate impact' on housing voucher users."
Currently the plaintiffs and defendants are battling over experts, but this case is going to teach landlords, brokers, property managers, and the like how to frame their policies moving forward.
So, keep a close eye on this one.
Wednesday, September 15, 2021
Vaccine Requirement for NYC Teachers Temporarily Restrained
The New York State Supreme Court (lowest level court with jurisdiction) issued a temporary restraining order until the sooner of a hearing or 9/22/21 concerning New York City's vaccine mandate for public education employees who instead argue for a Vax-Or-Test policy.
To see the arguments yourself, in The New York City Municipal Labor Committee et al vs. The City of New York et al, click here.
Specifically, the Order, at issue, "requires [vaccines for] all DOE staff, City employees, and contractors who 'work in person in a DOE school setting or DOE building'; and '[a]ll employees of any school serving students up to grade 12 and any UPK-3 or UPK-4 program that is located in a DOE building who work in-person, and all contractors hired by such schools or programs to work in-person' to – no later than September 27, 2021"
The teachers union makes three arguments against the Order, as follows:
- "[B]odily integrity and the right to refuse medical treatment;"
- A violation of "due process rights" because it prevents "permanently-appointed DOE and City employees declining vaccination from engaging in their employment;" and
- It "fails to provide required exceptions for those with medical contraindications or sincerely-held religious objections".
The best argument is clearly the third because "DOE has advised that it will not allow those with medical or religious exceptions – should those be accepted – to continue working in person under a strict testing regimen, or remotely with those students receiving remote instructions. Nor is it clear at this stage how those who refuse vaccination will be treated as to leaves, benefits, and other statutory rights."
While DOE may be able to refuse a given accommodation request that results in an employee working in a building, accommodations must be decided on a case-by-case basis, under binding law, and therefore, such a blanket policy is legally problematic.
As we've been suggesting from the outset, NYC Government should negotiate with the Union as to appropriate accommodations. Think about it like a class action of the cooperative dialogue (required mediation following an accommodation request under NYC employment discrimination law).
Otherwise, NYC Government will continuously find itself engaging in individualized cooperative dialogues with each employee that requests an accommodation. That is a financially infeasible result for NYC plus it will cause many teachers to bring suit following each cooperative dialogue. All of this can and should be amicably resolved through advance negotiations by giving the Unions a seat at the table.
COVID-19 Safety Protocols for Federal Contractors and Subcontractors - Executive Orders Analyzed
In an effort to further provide adequate COVID-19 safety protocols for federal contractors and subcontractors, on September 9, 2021, President Biden signed Executive Order 14042, requiring federal agencies to ensure that contractor and subcontractor contracts contain a clause requiring contractors and subcontractors to comply with all guidance for workplace locations published by the Safer Federal Workforce Task Force ("SFWTF").
President Biden established the SFWTF in order to provide guidance to the heads of Federal Govt. agencies on employee safety during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. By September 24, 2021, the SFWTF will provide explanations of protocols required of contractors and subcontractors to ensure workplace safety compliance at workplace locations. Stay tuned for further information as it becomes available.
It appears that Executive Order 14042 goes hand-in-hand with Executive Order 14043, also signed by President Biden on September 9, 2021, which requires COVID-19 vaccinations for all federal employees, subject to certain exceptions. Additionally, by September 16, 2021, the SFWTF is required to provide guidance to federal agencies who must implement a program requiring COVID-19 vaccination for its employees. Stay tuned for our analysis of that guidance as well.
Clearly, President Biden has taken drastic steps in an attempt to slow down the spread of the ongoing COVID-19 virus.
It will be interesting to see what guidance protocols the SFWTF comes up with over the course of this month - do you think it will be challenged in court?
Stay tuned...




