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BREAKING: SCOTUS Stays OSHA Vax-or-Test Rule, Allows CMS Vaccine Mandate for Health Care Workers to Take Effect
By divided votes, the justices entered stayed t the OSHA Emergency Temporary Standard and stayed the lower court injunctions against the mandate that Medicare and Medicaid service providers require their employees to get vaccinated.
In opinions released this afternoon, the Supreme Court split over two of the Biden Administration's COVID-19 mandates. By a vote of 6-3, in NFIB v. OSHA, the Court ruled against the Occupational Safety and Health Administration's Emergency Temporary Standard vax-or-test rule for large employers. Yet by a vote of 5-4, in Biden v. Missouri, the Court agreed to stay lower court injunctions against the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services vaccine mandate for Medicare and Medicaid service providers. Both opinions for the Court were per curiam.
In NFIB v. OSHA, the Court split 6-3 along traditional ideological lines. Justice Gorsuch wrote a separate concurrence, joined by Justices Alito and Thomas. Justices Breyer, Sotomayor and Kagan issued a joint dissent. In Biden v. Missouri, Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Kavanaugh joined the liberal justices to form the majority. Justices Thomas and Alito each authored dissents that were also both joined by Justices Gorsuch and Barrett.
The opinion for the Court in the OSHA ETS case begins:
The Secretary of Labor, acting through the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, recently enacted a vaccine mandate for much of the Nation's work force. The mandate, which employers must enforce, applies to roughly 84 million workers, covering virtually all employers with at least 100 employees. It requires that covered workers receive a COVID–19 vaccine, and it pre-empts contrary state laws. The only exception is for workers who obtain a medical test each week at their own expense and on their own time, and also wear a mask each workday. OSHA has never before imposed such a mandate. Nor has Congress. Indeed, although Congress has enacted significant legislation addressing the COVID–19 pandemic, it has declined to enact any measure similar to what OSHA has promulgated here.
Many States, businesses, and nonprofit organizations challenged OSHA's rule in Courts of Appeals across the country. The Fifth Circuit initially entered a stay. But when the cases were consolidated before the Sixth Circuit, that court lifted the stay and allowed OSHA's rule to take effect. Applicants now seek emergency relief from this Court, arguing that OSHA's mandate exceeds its statutory authority and is otherwise unlawful. Agreeing that applicants are likely to prevail, we grant their applications and stay the rule.
And from the heart of the opinion:
Applicants are likely to succeed on the merits of their claim that the Secretary lacked authority to impose the mandate. Administrative agencies are creatures of statute. They accordingly possess only the authority that Congress has provided. The Secretary has ordered 84 million Americans to either obtain a COVID–19 vaccine or undergo weekly medical testing at their own expense. This is no "everyday exercise of federal power." In re MCP No. 165, 20 F. 4th, at 272 (Sutton, C. J., dissenting). It is instead a significant encroachment into the lives—and health—of a vast number of employees. "We expect Congress to speak clearly when authorizing an agency to exercise powers of vast economic and political significance." Alabama Assn. of Realtors v. Department of Health and Human Servs., 594 U. S. ___, ___ (2021) (per curiam) (slip op., at 6) (internal quotation marks omitted). There can be little doubt that OSHA's mandate qualifies as an exercise of such authority.
The question, then, is whether the Act plainly authorizes the Secretary's mandate. It does not. The Act empowers the Secretary to set workplace safety standards, not broad public health measures. See 29 U. S. C. §655(b) (directing the Secretary to set "occupational safety and health standards" (emphasis added)); §655(c)(1) (authorizing the Secretary to impose emergency temporary standards necessary to protect "employees" from grave danger in the workplace). Confirming the point, the Act's provisions typically speak to hazards that employees face at work. See, e.g., §§651, 653, 657. And no provision of the Act addresses public health more generally, which falls outside of OSHA's sphere of expertise.
The opinion for the Court in the CMS case begins:
The Secretary of Health and Human Services administers the Medicare and Medicaid programs, which provide health insurance for millions of elderly, disabled, and low income Americans. In November 2021, the Secretary announced that, in order to receive Medicare and Medicaid funding, participating facilities must ensure that their staff—unless exempt for medical or religious reasons—are vaccinated against COVID–19. 86 Fed. Reg. 61555 (2021). Two District Courts enjoined enforcement of the rule, and the Government now asks us to stay those injunctions. Agreeing that it is entitled to such relief, we grant the applications.
From the heart of the opinion:
we agree with the Government that the Secretary's rule falls within the authorities that Congress has conferred upon him.
Congress has authorized the Secretary to impose conditions on the receipt of Medicaid and Medicare funds that "the Secretary finds necessary in the interest of the health
and safety of individuals who are furnished services." 42 U. S. C. §1395x(e)(9). COVID–19 is a highly contagious, dangerous, and—especially for Medicare and Medicaid patients—deadly disease. The Secretary of Health and Human Services determined that a COVID–19 vaccine mandate will substantially reduce the likelihood that healthcare workers will contract the virus and transmit it to their patients. 86 Fed. Reg. 61557–61558. He accordingly concluded that a vaccine mandate is "necessary to promote and protect patient health and safety" in the face of the ongoing pandemic. Id., at 61613.The rule thus fits neatly within the language of the statute. After all, ensuring that providers take steps to avoid transmitting a dangerous virus to their patients is consistent with the fundamental principle of the medical profession: first, do no harm. It would be the "very opposite of efficient and effective administration for a facility that is supposed to make people well to make them sick with COVID–19." Florida v. Department of Health and Human Servs., 19 F. 4th 1271, 1288 (CA11 2021).
As readers may recall, before oral argument I predicted that the Court would split on the two rules in this way, as the arguments in favor of the CMS rule are substantially stronger than those for the OSHA ETS.
There is more to say about these opinions, so check back to the blog for additional posts.
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Wow, so I guess Kavanaugh really is a rapist
WTF is wrong with you?
I have a working brain, and an actual understanding of the science involved
Which is why I have complete and utter contempt for the 5 "Justices" issuing the Medicaid ruling. Crap, all those pathetic losers had to do was read the Monday WSJ https://www.wsj.com/articles/omicron-makes-bidens-vaccine-mandates-obsolete-covid-healthcare-osha-evidence-supreme-court-11641760009 to know that the mandate does not actually protect the patients, because getting the shots does not make it ANY less likely that you will infect someone with Covid
If Kavanaugh is going to be a left wing gov't jock sniffing moron, then I'm no longer going to defend him against the left wing attacks.
So, as the Left argued during his confirmation hearings, he's clearly a rapist and abuser. F him
That's not how courts reveiw regulations though. They determination of what the science says and what is good policy is left to the political branches. The Court only reviews for authority. Even the smallest bit of evidence a court defers and you disagreeing with it doesn't mean it doesn't exist.
There are very good arguments against the policy, but that isn't before the court
Basic logic seems to elude you. It is quite possible that (a) you understand the science better than anyone on the planet and (b) Kavanaugh is not a rapist. Whether or not you "defend" him.
I do think it's good that Greg J admits that he has no integrity, that he boasts that his factual claims are based on whether he thinks they serve his political goals.
Objection: two facts not in evidence.
Sensible result. What the more sober VC commentators were guessing would happen. So, exactly the result(s) that were expected.
It's a garbage result, that can only be supported by a scientific ignoramus or liar
The failure in SCOTUS's "reasoning", which is partially a failure of the attorney's arguing the case, is that there's literally no reasonable evidence that getting the Covid shots makes you less likely to infect someone else
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8481107/
Increases in COVID-19 are unrelated to levels of vaccination across 68 countries and 2947 counties in the United States
https://www.wsj.com/articles/omicron-makes-bidens-vaccine-mandates-obsolete-covid-healthcare-osha-evidence-supreme-court-11641760009
"Omicron Makes Biden’s Vaccine Mandates Obsolete/There is no evidence so far that vaccines are reducing infections from the fast-spreading variant."
You disagree? Then produce a chart from October or later, from all countries / counties for which there is data, showing that "vaccination rate" decreases "infection rate".
You can't, because it doesn't. Which is why the Medicaid ruling is utter trash
SCOTUS isn't a science tribunal, and after what we saw in oral arguments we can be grateful for that.
The sole question was whether the law allowed HHS to mandate vaccines for Medicare providers, or at least it might so there was no justification for an injunction.
And whether OSHA has authority to issue a workplace mandate, and it probably doesn't, so that injunction is put back in force.
That's how the Supreme Court should go about it's business, not ruling on the science, although a complete lack of any scientific basis could make the regulation arbitrary and capricious, but we are at the injunction stage not merits.
A lot of people were predicting this outcome. Doesn't make it sensible, or correct. Just predictable.
Predictable is good in a way. The law should be predictable. Even if the major questions doctrine is dumb and made up….at least it’s been a thing for awhile so you could predict what would happen. Less good is that the “predictable” outcome in the Medicare one was as close as it was.
Things not going as predicted is bad: we still can’t really predict how this court will use the free exercise clause on the shadow docket to upend state regulations/laws (on a lot of topics). That’s not good and isn’t really law. Also could be said about how they’re going to deal with election issues. We have no idea what insane theories they might endorse in the future. Not a lot of law there.
COVID isn’t an occupational hazard because it exists elsewhere is one hell of a dumb reason to invalidate a regulation. I mean under that logic OSHA can’t require fire safety protocols in the workplace because fires are a universal hazard.
Jesus this SCOTUS is dumb.
Hazard or not a hazard is not the proper question before the Court. It was whether the Congress had granted OSHA the statutory authority to issue the regulation.
And how did they get there? They made up this illogical distinction that exists no where in the text.
So let's have OSHA regulate personal car tire pressure, bathtub water levels, and use of twine in back yard gardens to hold up plants, because all those things can harm workers if they occur in workplaces.
You've got it backwards. What the Court is saying is OSHA can't regulate workplace vehicle tire pressure, the use of twine to hold up things in workplaces because those hazards are not unique to the workplace but exist everywhere.
Somin in the other post, who supports the decision, recognizes this is a completely illogical and made-up distinction by the majority.
Either way is backwards.
OSHA can regulate workplace hazards. Hazards in the workplace exist everywhere else too. For instance you can fall off a great height due to a lack of rail at the workplace but you could also do that somewhere else. OSHA can make sure workplaces have rails on elevated platforms despite gravity existing everywhere. So saying COVID exists everywhere is an illogical reason to support the ultimate conclusion that OSHA can’t regulate because it only regulates “occupational” hazards. And perhaps more importantly it’s distinction that exists nowhere in the text of the statute.
LTG, you're talking about the colloquy between CJ Roberts and Keller, right? Right after Kagan finished her questions on 'necessary'. If so, wasn't the context there that OSHA really has to go industry by industry to do workplace regulation as a part of their statutory authority?
Is this what you are talking about in your post above?
No I’m talking about the section in the opinion making this distinction. Somin talks about it in his post.
Oh and nothing new on the Pryor clerk thing.
Ah, ok. And thx for that update. That remains in the back of my mind.
That is setting aside the question of whether the regulation would have accomplished the intended goal.
Based on what is now known about the transmission of the virus, the most likely answer is that the mandate would have had a very trivial impact on the trajectory of the viral spread.
Omicron is now the dominant variant, the vaccines have very limited effectiveness against Omicron. The non vaccinated portion of the workforce that the mandate cover is probably less than 3-4% of the total US population. The small of a segment is too small to have any significant reduction in the spread of covid.
The covid pandemic is going to end the same way every respiratory virus pandemic ends which is when the most everyone has caught the virus. As is well known at this point, the vaccine is ill prepared to prevent that occurance.
In summary, the mandate, if it had been implemented would be very ineffective.
Jesus you're dumb
Can OHSA start imposing AIDS regulations, for an obvious example?
Oh, I know, OSHA can now tell employers to fire any workers who weigh too much (that's what they regulation is about: forcing companies to fire people who don't do what the gov't wants).
Heck, since you think OSHA's powers exceed any individual's "liberty interest" to control their own bodies, apparently OSHA can order companies to fire people for being gay, or for doing anything that is correlated with negative health outcomes.
Do you HAVE to be utterly stupid and clueless to be a leftist? Or does it just help?
Lol you’re a mean spirited jerk. Goodbye freak.
I also find myself skeptical of the “caused by the occupation” distinction. As I understand it, if this distinction were fairly applied, OSHA would lack authority to require a defibrillator unless the job site created a specially enhanced risk of heart attacks.
I don’t completely agree with LawTalkingGuy’s hypotheticals. For example, l think rails could still be required because although gravity is universal, altitude is location-specific. But nonetheless, I think a number of standard safety measures done in workplaces address hazards which are general and not specifically caused by the work site or work itself.
The failure in SCOTUS's "reasoning", which is partially a failure of the attorney's arguing teh case, is that there's litterly no reasonable evidence that getting the Covid shots makes you less likely to infect someone else
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8481107/
Increases in COVID-19 are unrelated to levels of vaccination across 68 countries and 2947 counties in the United States
https://www.wsj.com/articles/omicron-makes-bidens-vaccine-mandates-obsolete-covid-healthcare-osha-evidence-supreme-court-11641760009
"Omicron Makes Biden’s Vaccine Mandates Obsolete/There is no evidence so far that vaccines are reducing infections from the fast-spreading variant."
You disagree? Then produce a chart from October or later, from all countries / counties for which there is data, showing that "vaccination rate" decreases "infection rate".
you can't, because it doesn't. Which is why the Medicaid ruling is utter trash
Wow, Barrett, Thomas, Alito and Gorsuch vote one way based on ideology. Sotomayer, Kagan, and Breyer vote another way based on ideology.
Somebody tell us again that the Court is not made up of a bunch of political hacks?
I will tell you (once): SCoTUS justices are not political hacks. None of them.
Not...A....Single....One....Is....A....Political....Hack.
At least Barrett, thomas, Alito, Gorsuch had a reasonable understanding of the science.
The supreme court is made up of a bunch of political operatives with LIFETIME appointments, not simple hacks.
"Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Kavanaugh joined the liberal justices to form the majority."
Just as Harry Blackmun started out as Burger's "Minnesota Twin," Kavanaugh is Robert's mini-me. I wonder if he'll ever decide to step out on his own...
Gorsuch has a lot more to make up for [Bostock, McGirt] at this point but Kav's weakness in following Roberts is more disturbing.
I still don't understand the McGirt antipathy as anything other than blatant bigotry. Why do so many conservatives, who do not even live in Oklahoma, care that a treaty with an Indian tribe was enforced for once? Why do they care that different agencies need to deal with criminal prosecution?
I get the Bostock hate, it really sucks when a legal theory you said was the only legitimate one, gets used in favor of a group that you think is inherently unworthy of legitimacy and respect.
Because we care for the citizens of Oklahoma too. I know you consider them backwards hicks but we think they should not face increased crime. The FBI and the US attorney do not have the personal to do normal law enforcement in half a state.
So Bob From Ohio, a question for you. In the post-Bostock world, what has actually happened in OK? Was it the really bad outcome many feared...criminals walking free over jurisdictional issues, crime spike, etc? You know more about that than me. I sure there was some dislocation and chaos, but I have not really seen any coverage of that. Objectively, is it much worse than pre-Bostock?
I understand your objection to Bostock (I think)
https://www.ocpathink.org/post/state-asks-high-court-to-overturn-mcgirt-decision
Good article from August 2021. Sounds like a mess (state of OK brief). Isn't SCoTUS considering a re-hearing McGirt?
https://www.kgou.org/indigenous-news/2022-01-07/supreme-court-to-decide-whether-to-reconsider-its-mcgirt-v-oklahoma-decision
The natives are citizens too. They’re Oklahomans too. They care about their safety too. And fwiw, that’s not how it’s talked about. Ted Cruz said Gorsuch “gave away” Oklahoma. As if native tribes were others not part of the American body politic.
What are they, part of the "American body politic" or a separate nation with separate laws?
Are Oklahomans Americans or a separate thing with their own laws? We both know the answer to this.
Native tribes are Americans like you and me. They just happen to have a unique legal status due to historical circumstances. Much like how DC residents are Americans with a unique legal status. Or Puerto Ricans, etc.
America is a polity which is based on decentralized sovereignty. The existence of tribal sovereignty is in no way a challenge to their American-ness.
I mean, well, yeah.
Suck it, Vaxxholes
Ok, that was humorous = vaxxholes
The creativity of VC Conspirators never ceases to amaze.
The use of mandates to encourage vaccination seems not to have worked. Many, probably the majority, are vaccinated, but a distinct minority resents being forced to do something it does not want to do.
I propose that next time the government employ the Parmentier principle. What, you say? Antoine-Augustin Parmentier was a 18th Century French pharmacist and agronomist, best remembered as a vocal promoter of the potato as a food source for humans in France and throughout Europe. He surrounded his potato patch at Sablons with armed guards during the day to suggest valuable goods, withdrawing them at night so people could steal the potatoes. Until his time, potatoes were considered animal fodder in France; after him they became a gourmet treat.
"Stolen waters are sweet, and bread eaten in secret is pleasant." (Prov. 9:17)
Next time, the government should forbid vaccination, unless you have a special pass from the president. Then everyone will want one.
An interesting analogy, Bored Lawyer. The proverb alludes to adultery (stolen waters) and idolatry (bread eaten in secret); well put.
Or like the old joke: the man was trying to get rid of his sofa, so he put it out by the curb with a sign saying "Free sofa to anyone who wants it." Every day he looked outside, but it sat there for a week with no takers. So he changed the sign to "Sofa, $50." It was gone within the hour.
Remember back in the Dark Days when the judge (in Hawaii?) struck down Trump’s travel restrictions and cited in the decision Trump’s comments about Muslims to prove Trump’s racist intent? And everyone said “hooray!!”?
Today we’ve got a cite in there related to Biden’s chief of staff referring to the OSHA mandate as a “work around” to force more vaccinations. Live by the sword……..
Trump's travel restrictions were by executive order, which aren't dependent on a grant of authority from Congress. Trump's comments were probative of an unconstitutional basis for issuing the order. In this case, the question is whether Congress had granted to OSHA the authority to issue the mandate. So Ron Klain's comments don't really seem relevant.
Trump’s travel restrictions were dependent on a grant of authority from Congress. The Supreme Court reviewed the statute and concluded the grant was sufficiently broad to cover what he did.
The authorizing statute is 8 U.S.C. section 1182(f). In Trump v. Hawaii, the Court held this statute granted the President the necessary authority.
Um no. If it was live by the sword, then SCOTUS would have ignored Klain’s comments like they ignored Trumps. Or they would have struck down the travel ban due to Trump’s comments. No live by die by where SCOTUS is being completely hypocritical.
I hope employers give the relevant health care workers a few days to get vaccinated before firing them. Even the belligerently ignorant and lethally reckless deserve a few days for compliance with society's rules.
Health care providers -- like the society they serve -- will be better off without the losers they terminate.
Be prepared for more “OMG!! Shortages of beds!!!!” Because it’s coming. Truth is they have plenty of beds. The shortage is people.
What is the world coming to? I find myself agreeing with RALK. Any anti-vaxxer or aichmophobe working in healthcare actually does need to be replaced. At their job.
And yes they should be given a chance to comply with the requirements of their position first.
Replacement in this context is a two-step process. First, with respect to participation in the health care system. Second, in the natural course, when replaced by a better, younger American in our electorate and society.
For the second replacement, society should wait as long as it takes.
For the first replacement, these misfits have had plenty of time to prepare, so a few days is all they need or deserve before being advised to expand their employment horizons. With the weekend approaching, maybe until Monday afternoon.
"The Secretary of Health and Human Services determined that a COVID–19 vaccine mandate will substantially reduce the likelihood that healthcare workers will contract the virus and transmit it to their patients."
He also determined that masks aren't necessary, are necessary, need to be doubled, and (again) don't work unless they are (K)N95.
Science.
(just for the record, the vaccines don't stop the spread, and any order, edict, regulation, or law that does not account for natural immunity is fascism, not science)
I don’t think a health regulation potentially being under-inclusive is the same as an extreme right-wing nationalist ideology…
Fine...I hope more medical staff quits and people suffer,
Many medical staff are becoming registry and leaving the hospitals scrambling.
It's a Domino Effect, unvaxxed leave, the remaining get overwhelmed and burnt out, they start to call in and leave, the remaining become even MORE overwhelmed and get burnt out until it all crashes or there's a strike.
Then suddenly like in Cali they change their rules since the administration isn't going to clean diapers and change catheters.
Let it happen...Odds are it really isn't the Unvaxxed dying...It's a combination of sick and obese unvaxxed with quite a few vaxxed who never took care of themselves but got the vaccine which odds are is actually destroying their immune system.