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Google

Google Delays Return To Office, Mandates Vaccines (seattletimes.com) 146

Google is postponing a return to the office for most workers until mid-October and rolling out a policy that will eventually require everyone to be vaccinated once its sprawling campuses are fully reopened. The Associated Press reports: The announcement Wednesday came as the more highly contagious delta variant is driving a dramatic spike in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations. In an email sent to Google's more than 130,000 employees worldwide, CEO Sundar Pichai said the company is now aiming to have most of its workforce back to its offices beginning Oct. 18 instead of its previous target date of Sept. 1. The decision also affects tens of thousands of contractors who Google intends to continue to pay while access to its campuses remains limited. "This extension will allow us time to ramp back into work while providing flexibility for those who need it," Pichai wrote.

And Pichai disclosed that once offices are fully reopened, everyone working there will have to be vaccinated. The requirement will be first imposed at Google's Mountain View, California, headquarters and other U.S. offices, before being extended to the more than 40 other countries where the Google operates. Google's vaccine mandate will be adjusted to adhere to the laws and regulations of each location, Pichai wrote, and exceptions will be made for medical and other "protected" reasons. "Getting vaccinated is one of the most important ways to keep ourselves and our communities healthy in the months ahead," Pichai explained.

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Google Delays Return To Office, Mandates Vaccines

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  • (at least expected to come immediately)

    • No outrage. I think they are fools for mandating it, but it is a free country and they can manage their company in any way they see fit.
      • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Wednesday July 28, 2021 @06:44PM (#61632163)

        No outrage. I think they are fools for mandating it, but it is a free country and they can manage their company in any way they see fit.

        Possibly, but the US conservative movement doesn't think freedom means "free to do as you wish", but "free to do as they wish". In other words, they're free to not take vaccines but employers are not free to require it.

        • Wait a sec, aren't conservatives supposed to side with the corporations?

        • by jobslave ( 6255040 ) on Wednesday July 28, 2021 @07:22PM (#61632313)
          I don't get this whole "my body my choice" bullshit. Conservatives are such two faced, double standard assholes, for the most part. If it's "my body my choice", well then get the fuck off of any pro-life argument, you just lost. If it's her body, it's her choice. I also don't understand their hesitancy with the vaccines, there are plenty of old conservatives still alive you received the polio vaccine back in the day, this isn't any fucking different. The only way I can describe any "Trump thumping" "conservative" I've seen, spoken to or read about is they are simply whiney ass snowflakes who lack empathy, forget history, "do as I say, not as I do", make up anything that suits themselves to justify their selfish actions without basis in fact or reality, and are racist and bigoted to the bone.
        • What does this is have to do with conservatism? https://www.kff.org/coronaviru... [kff.org] Only 36% of African Americans are vaccinated. Are they conservative?
          • A lot have conservative views actually. Especially on gay people and religion. But black people are distrustful of the government for a reason.

      • Pure coincidence that once people stopped wearing masks and everything opened back up that cases have started to rise. https://www.news4jax.com/news/... [news4jax.com]

    • There won't be any outrage. Given what we've heard about the workplace culture and internal politics at google I can't imagine any conservatives work there. At least not for very long.

  • When mortality drops to basically zero below the age of 40, I can see a lot of young adults hesitant, especially when it ends up becoming quarterly requirement.
    • Very often in the COVID debate it becomes a conversation of - it kills you or it doesn't.
      But there can often be medium or long term effects that can really diminish your health:
      https://www.cdc.gov/coronaviru... [cdc.gov] (article is surface level, doesn't go into durations etc)

      • Ya, due to political polarization, most people nowadays are accustomed to viewing every subject in terms of extremes. 99% good, 99% bad, red team blue team, etc.

        It can be hard to have a legitimate conversation about risk-reward profiles based on age and history and underlying conditions

      • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Wednesday July 28, 2021 @07:05PM (#61632243)

        If I'm Google I'm possibly more concerned about this [thelancet.com]:

        People who had recovered from COVID-19, including those no longer reporting symptoms, exhibited significant cognitive deficits versus controls when controlling for age, gender, education level, income, racial-ethnic group, pre-existing medical disorders, tiredness, depression and anxiety. The deficits were of substantial effect size for people who had been hospitalised (N = 192), but also for non-hospitalised cases who had biological confirmation of COVID-19 infection (N = 326).
        [...]
        Interpretation. These results accord with reports of ‘Long Covid’ cognitive symptoms that persist into the early-chronic phase.

        It's still early but it makes me very grateful to have avoided infection, and if I was a tech employer, I might be extra motivated to avoid an outbreak in the office.

    • by crow ( 16139 )

      It doesn't really matter what the disease will do to you. Nobody cares if you die, have long-term medical complications, or just have the worst cold of your life. What we care about is all the people you will put at risk if you get infected. You're being told to get vaccinated because we care about other people, some of whom can't get vaccinated, some of whom are the 5% that the vaccine isn't effective for.

      • What kinds of people can't get vaccinated though? I thought the risk of anaphylaxis and autoimmune response was low enough to be considered safe for EUA.

        I'm actually curious how many people fit in the unvaccinatable group, as it might not be worth it to risk 80 million children to protect 200 elderly boomers.

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          What kinds of people can't get vaccinated though?

          Everyone under 12, currently, plus anyone whose immune system is suppressed too much. The first group can't get the shot. The second group can get the shot, but won't actually get vaccinated by doing so.

          I'm actually curious how many people fit in the unvaccinatable group, as it might not be worth it to risk 80 million children to protect 200 elderly boomers.

          Somewhere around 4% of U.S. adults are immunocompromised. That includes, among others, anyone who has ever gotten any sort of transplant (other than non-blood-bearing tissues like marrow-free bones, ligaments, cartilage, and tendons). That's about 8.4 million people, and not all of them are old (though I

      • It doesn't really matter what the disease will do to you. Nobody cares if you die, have long-term medical complications, or just have the worst cold of your life.
        What we care about is all the people you will put at risk if you get infected. You're being told to get vaccinated because we care about other people, some of whom can't get vaccinated, some of whom are the 5% that the vaccine isn't effective for.

        COVID IS NEVER GOING AWAY. Everyone should expect to be exposed to it at some point. It's only a question of when and under what circumstances.

        The idea that you can hide forever or expect everyone else to capitulate to such fantasies is unreasonable. Vaccines and treatment are the ONLY exit ramp other than infection with live virus. There is no third option.

        The domain experts were saying this from day one yet somehow the public became confused and got it in their heads that if they hide for long enough

        • by crow ( 16139 )

          If we didn't have stupid people refusing the vaccine, COVID-19 would be like the measles in the US by now.

    • When mortality drops to basically zero below the age of 40, I can see a lot of young adults hesitant, especially when it ends up becoming quarterly requirement.

      Death isn't the issue. Being in the hospital for days or weeks while you can barely breathe, you have brain fog, blood clots, organ damage and "long haul" covid is the issue.

      Apparently people don't mind getting sick and feeling like they're dying. Not to mention the hospital bills to pay.

      • Death isn't the issue. Being in the hospital for days or weeks while you can barely breathe, you have brain fog, blood clots, organ damage and "long haul" covid is the issue. Apparently people don't mind getting sick and feeling like they're dying. Not to mention the hospital bills to pay.

        Hospitalizations and complications are also orders-of-magnitude lower in younger people (specifically below ~40-50) https://www.statista.com/stati... [statista.com]

        It's a risk no matter which route you take. The nice thing about getting COVID though is that the side-effects are more likely to be covered by insurance.

      • Apparently people don't mind getting sick and feeling like they're dying. Not to mention the hospital bills to pay.

        These same people don't listen to others who've experienced this very thing and chalk it off to "propaganda."

  • OR, it could be that Google doesn't want their group policy rates to go up when everyone starts having long-term symptoms and decline.

  • It's painfully obvious it's not safe to reopen the offices yet. The Delta variant spread faster than we could get people vaccinated (never mind the reason why). That's said I think we're going to full steam ahead it anyway. Property values of all that office real estate or in danger of plummeting. Your life and mine are most certainly not worth the billions of dollars that would be lost if everybody who could work from home did.

    A sane society would just pass a law mandating it. We are not a sane society
  • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Wednesday July 28, 2021 @08:28PM (#61632543)

    As the Delta variant of covid takes hold in the U.S., some restaurants are now saying if you can't prove you're vaccinated, you don't get served [marketwatch.com].

    Needless to say, some people are up in arms about this and some states have passed laws saying you can't require people to prove they're vaccinated before serving them. Here is the real test: bring your dog or cat (or goat or emu) into a restaurant or grocery store and watch how many people whine about bringing "unclean" animals into a place where food is prepared or where some people might be allergic to animal dander.

    The hypocrisy will be delicious.

  • Google, being a private company, is within their rights to set workplace policy. Employees, if they don't like the rules, are free to take their services elsewhere. What I'd like to see is a policy that allows people to work from home if they don't want to get the vaccine.

    Suppose that tomorrow the federal government decided to legalize pot nationwide. Not just state by state but the whole country. Were that to happen, companies could still decide to drug test their employees and fire or refuse to hire peopl

    • "Suppose that tomorrow the federal government decided to legalize pot nationwide. Not just state by state but the whole country. Were that to happen, companies could still decide to drug test their employees and fire or refuse to hire people that test positive."

      You don't have to suppose. Change "pot" to "alcohol". Alcohol is legal for anyone over 21 to buy and consume, yet companies can fire or refuse to hire someone who shows up to work or an interview drunk.

      • That's right and porn is also legal and most, if not all, companies will fire you if they catch you watching it on company equipment. Again, perfectly reasonable. Getting vaccinated is as much about protecting yourself as it is about protecting your workmates.

  • It is forbidden for employers to even ASK any medical information. Let alone MANDATE anything.
    Employers may not know if you are vaccinated or not.
    If you say it is not illegal, you live in the wrong country.

    • It is forbidden for employers to even ASK any medical information. Let alone MANDATE anything.
      Employers may not know if you are vaccinated or not.
      If you say it is not illegal, you live in the wrong country.

      You really should read up on HIPAA. Employers can ask you medical questions all day. You're under no obligation to answer them though.

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