Here Is Why the 6th Circuit Reinstated OSHA's Vaccine Mandate—and Why One Judge Disagreed
The argument hinges largely on what makes an emergency standard "necessary."

When the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit reinstated the Biden administration's vaccine mandate for private employers on Saturday, two members of the three-judge panel were clearly unimpressed by the legal arguments against that policy. But dissenting Judge Joan Larsen thought the businesses and employees challenging the mandate were likely to prevail in arguing that the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) had failed to meet the statutory requirements for its "emergency temporary standard" (ETS). Larsen's argument with Judge Jane Stranch, who wrote the majority opinion, and Judge Julia Gibbons, who joined it, hinges largely on the question of how carefully OSHA must tailor its responses to the workplace dangers it perceives.
OSHA's ETS, which it published on November 5, demands that companies with 100 or more employees require them to be vaccinated against COVID-19 or wear face masks and undergo weekly virus testing. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit stayed the ETS on November 6, citing "grave statutory and constitutional issues." The 5th Circuit extended that stay a week later, when it said the mandate is "fatally flawed" because it "grossly exceeds OSHA's statutory authority."
After that ruling, the many lawsuits challenging the mandate were consolidated and assigned by lottery to the 6th Circuit, which the Biden administration asked to lift the 5th Circuit's stay. In doing so, the 6th Circuit majority criticized the other appeals court for reaching hasty conclusions unsupported by precedent and for failing to properly consider the evidence that OSHA presented in favor of its mandate.
An emergency standard allows OSHA to circumvent the usual rule making process by publishing regulations that take effect immediately. But to avoid the public notice, comment, and hearing requirements that ordinarily apply to OSHA rules, the agency has to identify a "grave danger" to employees "from exposure to substances or agents determined to be toxic or physically harmful or from new hazards." It also has to show the emergency standard is "necessary to protect employees from such danger."
In her 6th Circuit majority opinion, Stranch has little trouble concluding that COVID-19 qualifies as an "agent" that is "physically harmful." Citing the Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary, she says "an 'agent' is 'a chemically, physically, or biologically active principle,'" while "a virus is defined, in part, as 'any [of a] large group of submicroscopic infectious agents.'"
Stranch notes that the Occupational Safety and Health Act includes a religious exemption that mentions immunization: "Nothing in this or any other provision of this chapter shall be deemed to authorize or require medical examination, immunization, or treatment, for those who object thereto on religious grounds, except where such is necessary for the protection of the health or safety of others." She says "the provision's reference to immunization and its creation of a limited exception to the Act's authorization of standards involving immunization would be rendered meaningless if the statute did not contemplate both that 'harmful agents' include infectious, disease-causing agents, such as viruses, and that OSHA would employ the use of immunizations to combat those agents."
Decades ago, OSHA issued a standard addressing bloodborne pathogens that employees who deal with potentially infectious materials might encounter in the course of their work. Although OSHA never required vaccination as part of that standard, it did require that employers offer workers the opportunity to be immunized against hepatitis B. Since Congress passed legislation related to that standard, Stranch says, it implicitly endorsed the idea that infectious diseases can qualify as workplace hazards subject to OSHA regulation. She also notes that the 2021 American Rescue Plan included OSHA funding "to carry out COVID-19 related worker protection activities."
Stranch rejects the 5th Circuit's argument that OSHA's delay in issuing its ETS, which it published nearly two years after the pandemic began and nearly a year after vaccines became available, suggests the agency is not responding to "a true emergency" in the workplace. That claim, she says, "has no foundation in the record and law and ignores OSHA's explanations." OSHA said it initially hoped voluntary COVID-19 precautions would be adequate but eventually discovered they were not, especially in light of relatively developments such as the emergence of the delta variant.
Does COVID-19 represent a "grave danger" in the workplaces covered by OSHA's order? Stranch says the disease's potentially deadly effects, the opportunities for transmission in the workplace, and documentation of work-related outbreaks are enough to establish that point, especially since "the ultimate determination of what precise level of risk constitutes a 'grave danger' is a 'policy consideration that belongs, in the first instance, to the Agency.'"
Stranch thinks "the Fifth Circuit's conclusion, unadorned by precedent, that OSHA is 'required to make findings of exposure—or at least the presence of COVID-19—in all covered workplaces' is simply wrong." If the 5th Circuit were right, she says, "no hazard could ever rise to the level of 'grave danger' because a risk cannot exist equally in every workplace."
Stranch notes OSHA's estimate that the ETS would "save over 6,500 worker lives and prevent over 250,000 hospitalizations over the course of the next six months," which she says "well exceeds what the Fifth Circuit previously found to present a grave danger." She is referring to a 1984 case in which OSHA estimated than an ETS dealing with asbestos would prevent 80 deaths over six months.
Is OSHA's vaccine/testing/masking rule "necessary" to protect employees from the "grave danger" posed by COVID-19? While OSHA has to show the ETS is "essential to reducing the grave danger asserted," Stranch says, that does not mean OSHA "may use only the means that are absolutely required to quell the grave danger." In her view, the law does not require tailoring as careful as the 5th Circuit implied. "OSHA may lean 'on the side of overprotection rather than underprotection' when promulgating an ETS," she says, and "is not required to proceed 'workplace by workplace.'"
Stranch is no more impressed by the constitutional arguments against the vaccine mandate. The 5th Circuit said the ETS "likely exceeds the federal government's authority under the Commerce Clause because it regulates noneconomic inactivity that falls squarely within the States' police power." Stranch says that claim "miss[es] the mark," because "the ETS regulates employers with more than 100 employees, not individuals," and "it is indisputable that those employers are engaged in commercial activity that Congress has the power to regulate when hiring employees, producing, selling and buying goods, etc."
Stranch likewise thinks it is a stretch to suggest that giving OSHA the authority it is asserting would violate the nondelegation doctrine, which aims to preserve the separation of powers by imposing limits on lawmaking by executive agencies. That doctrine, she notes, has almost never been used to overturn a congressional delegation of power, and its demands are modest: Congress need only give agencies an "intelligible principle" to guide their regulations.
Larsen opens her dissent by chiding Stranch for misrepresenting reality. "The majority opinion describes the emergency rule at issue here as permitting employers 'to determine for themselves how best to minimize the risk of contracting COVID-19 in their workplaces,'" she writes. "With respect, that was the state of federal law before the rule, not after."
Larsen also suggests that Stranch has pulled a bait and switch. "The majority opinion initially agrees…that an emergency standard must be more than 'reasonably necessary'; it must be 'essential,'" she writes. "But then that word, and the concept, disappear from the analysis. What starts as a demand for an 'essential' solution quickly turns into acceptance of any 'effective' or 'meaningful' remedy; and later, acquiescence to a solution with a mere 'reasonable' 'relationship' to the problem. The majority opinion never explains why 'necessary' undergoes such a metamorphosis."
As Larsen sees it, OSHA "has not made the appropriate finding of necessity." She notes that "OSHA's mandate applies, in undifferentiated fashion, to a vast swath of Americans: 84 million workers, 26 million unvaccinated, with varying levels of exposure and risk." OSHA has the burden of explaining "why the rule should apply to a large and diverse class," she says, but the agency "does not do so."
OSHA could have considered "a standard aimed at the most vulnerable workers" or "an exemption for the least," Larsen suggests. Alternatively, OSHA "might have considered a standard aimed at specific industries or types of workplaces with the greatest risk of COVID-19 exposure." Although "OSHA acknowledges that death rates are higher in '[c]ertain occupational sectors,'" Larsen notes, "its rule never considers what results would obtain from targeting those sectors alone."
OSHA argued that careful tailoring was not practical because the agency was responding to an emergency. "The agency's claim of emergency rings hollow," Larsen says. "It waited nearly two years since the beginning of the pandemic and nearly one year since vaccines became available to the public to issue its vaccinate-or-test mandate. The agency does not explain why, in that time, it could not have explored more finely tuned approaches."
Larsen also questions OSHA's finding that COVID-19 poses a "grave danger" in the workplace. She agrees that OSHA's authority is not to limited to hazards that are unique to the workplace; previous standards have addressed fire and noise, for example. But in this case, she says, the agency has failed to cite any data quantifying the risk of COVID-19 infection at work, as opposed to the general risk for people of working age. And while "OSHA has heretofore respected that its regulatory authority extends no further than the workplace walls," in this case the precaution it favors (vaccination) is not one that people can put on at work and take off when they leave.
In some respects, Larsen thinks, OSHA's judgments are inconsistent with the numbers it cites. "OSHA has determined that no vaccinated worker is in 'grave danger,' whereas all unvaccinated workers are," Larsen writes. "But the government's own data reveal that the death rate for unvaccinated people between the ages of 18 and 29 is roughly equivalent to that of vaccinated persons between 50 and 64. So an unvaccinated 18-year-old bears the same risk as a vaccinated 50-year-old. And yet, the 18-year-old is in grave danger, while the 50-year-old is not. One of these conclusions must be wrong; either way is a problem for OSHA's rule."
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They reinstated it because commies.
I predict a wishy-washy 5-4 split at the supreme court that resolves nothing.
Agreed
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How is that not "resolved"?
I predict a 6-3 blowout in favor of vaccine mandates with Amy Cunty Barrett, John Kavanaugh, and John Roberts joining the liberal wing in upholding them, just as they have for the last year in denying petitions to challenge municipal, state, and state university vaccine mandates.
Yet u still don't get that these 3 jackassess r not part of the right.
The Phucko Knows
Then it will be a real shame that the things that have to happen when the courts and the ballot box fail us happen. Especially for the democrats.
The majority judge said OSHA was justified because covid is the new normal. It was a political ruling. Her judgment was purely politics.
If it is a new normal, then it is not an emergency.
Yet OSHA will not demand that THIER employees get the shot. Yet nobody finds that interesting? The world is batshit crazy.
The Phucko Knows
What is it about the vaccine propagandists that they think showing a person getting a shot is effective?
Cognitive dissonance. Group Think. Stupidity. Control. Lack of empathy.
Seeing a syringe does absolutely nothing to encourage me. Trypanophobia (the fear of needles) just gives me another reason to avoid a shot I have no desire to get anyway.
What a lollipop make the difference Master?
If you weren't drunk by 8 AM every day you might not make as many basic spelling and grammar errors, sarcasmic.
He may be drunk. But u understood everything he said. Personally I think he's an idiot. But your not that far behind.
The Phucko Knows
My favorite part of our civil liberties protections is how they're subject to a lottery. The luck of the draw which government flavor of robed lawyers you get saddled with determines whether your rights are honored.
Although, the upside is that this ruling is also not good news for congressional democrats.
If it was a new normal, it would not be a emergency.
Reason: The government can do what it wants because it does it and someone in government said they can do it.
How was there proof of an emergency? This thing was announced when? August? September? And putzing around in court ever since.
Meanwhile, there are no reports of workplace related outbreaks. Unless you include pro sports teams, I guess. But that’s a unusual type of workplace that I don’t think are even regulated by OSHA. I mean, OSHA has done nothing to stop CTE in the NHL or football and they haven’t stopped beanballs in baseball.
A lack of outbreaks proves a lack of emergency, doesn’t it?
Not as good as this takedown
https://boriquagato.substack.com/p/6th-circuit-dissolves-the-stay-on
A small taste:
it was not “the pandemic” that shut down workplaces and the economy. it was “the pandemic response.” none of this needed to happen. had we literally done NOTHING, never noticed this, never named it, and never implemented a testing regimen so ill conceived and out of proportion as to be literally unique in the annals of all of human history, this would have passed barely remarked upon as “huh, that was a crummy flu year.” there would have been no economic damage. that was entirely self-inflicted, entirely avoidable, and known to be useless before we undertook it.
despite access to vaccines and testing, the virus “rages on”? i mean, firstly, control your histrionics. secondly, then seemingly these things are not working and thus mandating them seems deeply questionable. and thirdly, many, many places stopped mandating any and all of this a year ago and have shown no ill effects as a result while seeing their economies return, proving once more that it is not the pandemic but rather the pretense of crisis that has hamstrung the economy. this is abundantly clear in the data. covid mitigations do not protect economies, they ransack them.
You might like cafehayek.com
It's a good thing you can't comprehend anything you read. You wouldn't like Hayek very much.
About 1.7% of people who got COVID died. So if we had ignored it and implemented no response, and just allowed it to spread through the population, it would have killed about 1.7% of the population of the USA. The USA has about 329 million people. So if COVID had been ignored, about 5.5 million Americans would have died. Instead, only 800,000 have. So the initial restrictions saved about 4.7 million lives. Of course, only some of those restrictions saved lives, others were pointless security theater. And a lot of them probably would have been followed voluntarily by decent people, even if the government hadn't mandated them. But still, 4.7 million lives is nothing to sneeze at. If we take the actuarial "value of life" as 7 million dollars that's 33.55 trillion dollars saved.
Of course, now we have the vaccine, which reduces your odds of dying from COVID to far, far lower than 1.7%. So the restrictions aren't really as needed anymore. Anyone who doesn't want to die can get a shot. Anyone who doesn't want to reduce their odds of dying by getting a shot that their tax dollars will pay for whether they get it or not is a person of questionable sanity and intelligence. But the rest of us shouldn't have to suffer because of their poor choices.
Bad null hypotheses are bad. Even the 1917 flu only achieved at most 33% population penetration (% of population ever infected. The actual % is unknown, the range is generally estimated between 25% and 33%). Most pandemics end up around 25%. It was never going to infect everybody. (And any model predicting significantly more than 30% population penetration is just obviously wrong, since we've never seen a respiratory virus do that in a pandemic - they'd wildly overpredict the last 5 major flu pandemics too).
There have thus far been 51.1 million Covid-19 cases in the US. (Some of those might be re-infections, and thus double-counts). Figure another fews 10s of millions of asymptomatic or mild-and-undiagnosed cases, and you might get to 1/4 of the population. (Or we're likely not done yet, so maybe we'll get to 1/4 of the population in the remaining time while it's still a pandemic). That looks a lot like a normal pandemic in terms of population penetration.
There's no good evidence that any of our (non-vaccine) mitigation efforts have done anything to really stop the spread of the virus. From a macro-level, it looks a lot like a pandemic with no effective mitigation at all until the vaccine. (And as Omicron seems to largely dodge the vaccine in terms of case numbers, will return to looking like a no-mitigation pandemic).
Also note that we're never getting to zero Covid. It'll become endemic at some point. It might already be endemic. At some point its no longer a pandemic, it's just the new normal.
Yep. Over and over all around the world, the virus got to roughly 25% prevalence and then started crashing. And that was in 2020 when acquired immunity levels were at their lowest.
From April 27, 2020:
https://newyork.cbslocal.com/2020/04/27/coronavirus-antibodies-present-in-nearly-25-of-all-nyc-residents/
Regionally, the (antibody) results suggest:
24.7% positive in New York City
15.1% positive in Westchester/Rockland
14.4% positive on Long Island
3.2% positive in the rest of the state
Your numbers are completely wrong.
You forgot to factor in the multitude of mutations which could run into the millions. You forgot to factor in the packed hospitals with people dying from non-virus accidents, etc. Vaccines are unpredictable and even worse if the virus is left to mutate unfettered. I hope you are correct.
He also forgot the aliens who are drawn to respiratory viruses with their death lasers. We saved another 3 billion lives right there.
QAnon got that directly from both JFK and JFK Jr yesterday. They were both not looking good, from the decade's long burial.
About 1.7% of people who got COVID died. So if we had ignored it and implemented no response, and just allowed it to spread through the population, it would have killed about 1.7% of the population of the USA.
---------
Nope. And right here you lose all credibility.
Sweden tried that, more than 5,300 Swedes died compared to around 250 in Norway, 600 in Denmark and 325 in Finland, all of which have populations around half the size. Herd immunity is a bad bet unless you have no other choice.
No, you're lying again as usual. Even if your numbers weren't fake though, looking at infection, hospitalization, and fatality rates *today* in Sweden where herd immunity was achieved compared to Norway, Denmark, and Finland, you'd see that Sweden is faring much better. Turns out herd immunity is only a bad bet if you're addicted to fear porn and never want your totalitarian fantasy to come to an end.
As bad as you are at the whole "out of touch boomer thinks he is master troll" schtick, you're even worse when you try to play it straight, sarcasmic. Maybe retire this one and just go back to the 45 paragraph Sqrsly copypasta.
I googled "Did herd immunity work in sweden?" None of the responses align with you. I rest my case.
Well surely they top all the death charts with their reckless behavior, right?
Right?
The highest number of confirmed coronavirus (COVID-19) deaths in the Nordic countries as of December 15, 2021, had occurred in Sweden at 15,191. Denmark followed with 3,051 deaths, Finland with 1,445, and Norway with 1,202.....all of which have populations around half the size.
right!!
So how does one qualify "it could've been worse"? R u really this much of an idiot? If someone hits u in the face with a bat... Do u get to say "thank God for my nose.., as it could've hit me in the head"? U idiots r literally the idiots of all time. The GOATS of gullibility.
The Phucko Knows
You know who else didn't want to give up emergency powers?
Cowardly hypocrites like you?
Riddle me this:
What is the science behind the number 100 as the employee cutoff?
We know that the vaccinated can still get and spread the Communist Chinese virus; what is the science for only testing and masking the unvaccinated?
What is the science behind not admitting those who have survived the virus have immunity better than those vaccinated?
How is a workplace safety authority applied to those who work from home?
Who is John Galt?
100 employees: Life's about hard choices. You do what you can.
Only testing the unvaccinated: It's called an incentive. Vaccine equals freedom.
Naturally immune people: Too complicated. Can't you just lie about it? I'd permit some kind of antibody test, though.
Work from home: Section V.a. They are exempt.
John Galt: Mary Sue.
"100 employees: Life's about hard choices. You do what you can."
I'm assuming the hard choice you're referencing here is that OSHA can only do so much, so only people who work for employers who employ over 100 people (even if it's only one person in 100 offices spread across the US) deserve to live?
Take it up with whoever lobbied for "small businesses" to be exempt. I'm not here to defend every rule ever written down.
Who lobbied for them to be exempt?
And I asked you because you were just defending it.
"Vaccine = Freedom"
Arbeit macht frei, indeed, Tony. People certainly cannot be free as a natural right. In your warped reality, oppression is the natural order, and the benevolence of the oppressors is what you call "freedom." Fuck off, slaver.
Nope, you just don't have a right to recklessly endanger the lives of others.
You believe that when it comes to your own safety. You just don't believe it now because... viruses are microscopic? Your media diet is poor?
Only testing the unvaccinated: It's called an incentive. Vaccine equals freedom.
But it makes no sense. If you think you should worry about catching it from an asymptomatic unvaccinated person, then you should also be worried about the asymptomatic vaccinated person. Both pose a very small, but non-zero risk. And the vaccinated are far less likely to be tested and stay home if they get a mild infection.
Never make the mistake of conferring good faith to evil pieces of genocidal shit like Tony. He doesn't give a fuck about the vaccinated or the unvaccinated. If he was worried about catching viruses he probably wouldn't be a powerbottom faggot who has been exposing himself to a fatal virus in order to indulge his sexual preferences for 30 years. It's about power and control. Getting vaccinated in Tony's world is like bowing to Albrecht Gessler's hat. It's how you demonstrate your submission to authority.
You can nitpick the rules all you want, but in a situation where pushing a million Americans are dead, you just try to do what you can.
Are you helping or hurting the cause of saving lives? Or are you just concerned about the fucking great oppression that is a cloth mask?
Millions of Americans? My GOD dude... U r an all time jackass. Maybe even the GOAT of jackasses.
The Phucko Knows
The $0.50 posters are here to stir up emption. This results in more visits to the site and multiple visits to the same article. This generates more ad revenue.
I always wondered why they came to a board that didn't even have a large minority that agreed with them and offered robust discussion.
Did anyone ask OSHA why they were allowing certain employers to subject 15 million employees from this grave danger?
Ooh Ooh OOOOH! San Francisco cracking down on vendor carts selling those bacon-wrapped hot dogs! (Mexican specialty—not healthy but DAMN tasty). Carts confiscated, citations issued!
Did you HEAR me Reason?! STREET VENDORS! CALIFORNIA! Now I expect coverage of this either Christmas Day or New Years Day (both Saturdays and you’re welcome for the advance Holiday puff piece!)
https://www.newsbreak.com/n/0dRqFX1B?pd=05vSRvT0&lang=en_US&s=i16
Perhaps the street vendors should hand out free needles? Then SF would give them a grant!
Grave danger from something that has a 99.9% survival rate for 99% of all workers? If that's not stupid enough for you, they go along with pull it out of your rear end science i.e. 99 employees you are exempt, 100 you are not.
The 5th Circuit said the ETS "likely exceeds the federal government's authority under the Commerce Clause because it regulates noneconomic inactivity that falls squarely within the States' police power." Stranch says that claim "miss[es] the mark," because "the ETS regulates employers with more than 100 employees, not individuals," and "it is indisputable that those employers are engaged in commercial activity that Congress has the power to regulate when hiring employees, producing, selling and buying goods, etc."
Since Stranch believes it is the federal government I also think she now needs to consider the 4th amendment when making this ruling.
I could understand how this would not need to be considered when it was "private businesses"
If workers at companies with 100 or more workers are at grave risk, why are workers at companies with fewer than 100 workers not also at grave risk?
If they *are* also at grave risk, why is the administration not imposing this life-saving rule on ALL business. Does the administration only want to product workers at large companies? Are workers at small businesses supposed to just depend on their fellow workers to do the right thing and get vaccinated? That's basically like murdering workers at small businesses...
Because the places of employment with at least 100-workers r getting big bucks to institute the PPE nonsense. A good friend in the manufacturing business has gotten 250,000 dollars TWICE. This WHOLE ridiculous affair is but full of bribes on every level.
The Phucko Knows
5th Circuit didn't ignore OSHA's "evidence" because the evidence is irrelevant. You can cite all the reasons in the world about why you think COVID is an emergency; it does not entail OSHA to perform a function not statutorily assigned to it. OSHA has no authorization to regulate everyday diseases and afflictions that are not unique to the workplace, otherwise it could mandate dietary restrictions, exercise routines, cigarette & alcohol bans, etc.
Supreme Court will end this unconstitutional overreach.
Larsen makes more rational sense. But even on the Federal bench, government worker critical thinking skills are in very short supply.
The problem here, as with most cases involving legal and/or constitutional issues, is that it ultimately boils down to the opinions of those who get the final word.
Regardless of the facts, the majority opinion of the SCOTUS will ultimately decide the fate of this ETS.
The standard needs to rise above something with a 99.97% recovery rate. If I gave u fools those odds in Vegas...., you'd be looking for the deed to your house.
The Phucko Knows
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Hello... OSHA is UN-Constitutional.
Nowhere does the Constitution give the federal government the authority to regulate the "Safety and Health" of every occupation.
F'en Illegal Nazi's.
The power of Congress to regulate employment conditions under the Williams-Steiger Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, is derived mainly from the Commerce Clause of the Constitution. (Sec. 2(b), Public Law 91-596; U.S. Constitution, Art. I, Sec. 8, Cl. 3; "United States v. Darby," 312 U.S. 100.)
Authority isn't/shouldn't be a "derived" process. Just as well scratch that B.S. term and say "manipulated" from the Commerce Clause.