What A Day - 50 First Mandates
Episode Date: July 27, 2021Federal public health officials are considering updating mask mandates even for vaccinated Americans as we reach another critical point in the pandemic. But some localities are going above and beyond... that with vaccine mandates. New York City, for example, will require all city employees to be vaccinated, and California announced a vaccine requirement for all state employees and health care workers, too. Private businesses like United Airlines and Morgan Stanley have also started to mandate vaccination for employees. Then in cities like L.A., San Francisco, and New York, many bars and live events require customers to show proof of vaccination.And in headlines: Biden formally announces the withdrawal of American troops from Iraq, a tobacco company wants to ban cigarettes, and Kanye will stay in the Mercedes-Benz Stadium until his album is finished.Show Notes:NYT: “Where Covid-19 Hospitalizations Are Rising in the U.S.” – https://nyti.ms/3BGSWiSPC Mag: “How to Carry Your Vaccination Card on Your Phone” – https://bit.ly/3zBB0nYFor a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Tuesday, July 27th. I'm Akilah Hughes.
And I'm Gideon Resnick, and this is What The Day, the only podcast that is recorded on the beach that makes you old.
Yeah, it's either that or doing the news makes us age a lot faster.
Yeah, if that's true, I've just been going to a normal beach to do this podcast every day for two years.
I mean, at least you're a local, you know?
People know you there now.
On today's show, LeVar Burton hosts his first episode of Jeopardy.
Plus, Kanye West has taken up residence in the same arena where he held a listening party for his upcoming album.
I mean, that is fascinating for sure.
But first, we're going to dive in on the pandemic and mandates.
So we're going to start with masks in the U.S.
So last week, we talked about L.A. being the first major U.S. county to reinstate a mask mandate for indoor public spaces and that more mandates might be on the way.
Well, since then, cities like St. Louis, when and where the vaccinated should wear masks in public.
You know, Jake, this is under active consideration. If you're asking about part of the discussion, yes, I am.
OK, so that is where it stands with mask mandates.
But with lagging vaccinations across the country and the rapid, dangerous spread of the Delta variant, there's a new mandate to be aware of.
So some cities and states and agencies are moving towards vaccine mandates.
Gideon, tell us about that.
Yeah, well, we can kind of look at an example of what it looks like from overseas to know how it could look here.
So last week, France mandated health workers to be vaccinated by mid-September, then starting on August 1st for the general public, people would effectively be barred from lots of indoor public settings we know and love if they couldn't show proof
of vaccination or a negative test.
Almost immediately, two things happened.
The country saw more people signing up to get shots, like a lot, a lot, a lot, so success,
but also a lot of protests, so you take your lumps.
And nearby, Italy has also taken a similar approach.
Now, the U.S. is not at that point yet, but yesterday might have brought us a little bit closer.
For one thing, nearly 60 medical groups, including the American Medical Association and the American Nurses Association,
called for this nationwide mandate that all health care workers be vaccinated.
Independently, that has become a requirement for a lot of hospitals across the country, but it is far from uniform. For example, the CDC estimates that a little less than 60% of nursing home staff
have been fully vaccinated at this point. Wow, that is incredibly irresponsible. Then there's
a new policy by the Department of Veterans Affairs. That's right. So they became the first
federal agency to issue any kind of vaccination mandate. VA Secretary Dennis McDonough told the
New York Times that beginning tomorrow, actually, about 115,000 frontline health care workers are going to have eight weeks to get fully vaccinated
or they could face potential removal from their jobs. Those kinds of workers include doctors,
dentists, and nurses. Right now, reportedly about 70% of workers in the department's health care
centers have been fully vaccinated. All right, that's encouraging. Then what about on the more
local level? Like what vaccine mandates have been announced so far? right, that's encouraging. Then what about on the more local level?
What vaccine mandates have been announced so far?
So two pretty big examples here.
Let's start with New York City,
where Mayor Bill de Blasio made this announcement yesterday
for city employees.
On September 13th, the entire city workforce
will be mandated under the COVID safety mandate
to either get vaccinated, which is far preferable, or get tested once a
week. This will apply to about 340,000 municipal workers, and it's meant to be time to the
reopening of schools in the city. For some, the requirements are actually going to start earlier
in August. City staff that are unvaccinated are going to have to wear a mask indoors as well,
but some unions have pushed back saying that they'd want to negotiate on these requirements first. Then we heard almost the exact same thing in California,
where Governor Gavin Newsom announced yesterday that there will be a similar policy for all of
his state employees and health care workers. 246,000 Californians are state employees.
246,000 Californians should be vaccinated. And if they're not vaccinated and cannot verify that they've been vaccinated,
we are requiring that they get tested.
They keep mentioning that to make it sound like a lot more onerous.
I agree.
Like, do you want to get tested at work once every single week?
Or do you want to get vaccinated once?
You know, choice is yours.
What else do these places have in common?
They have huge populations and vaccination rates that are higher than the national average,
but also these climbing COVID cases due largely to Delta.
So I think it's going to be interesting to see if other places start to follow suit
and if this is the start of something bigger.
Oh, man, I just can't keep saying it enough, but I called it.
I called it CDC.
Listen to me sometimes.
Why do we even do this show if they're not going to hear me?
Anyway, it all speaks to how Delta has put us right back into a very precarious moment. Yeah, I mean, that's exactly
right. Most states are seeing some kind of rise in COVID hospitalizations at the moment. Two
examples of where we're seeing steep and pretty fast rises are in places with these lower vaccination
rates, like parts of Missouri and Florida. We can link to a map the New York Times has in our show
notes so you can see that visualized for yourselves. And also in the past few days, the White House is now reportedly thinking that people
who are immunocompromised or 65 and older may actually need a booster shot at some point after
all. There is no official decision on that yet, but we'll stay on top of it, of course, as it
continues to develop. So that's what mandates look like on the state and national level. But Akilah,
another side of this is how individual businesses and companies are coming up with
their own policies here.
So what is the word there?
Yeah, so the big international debate over vaccine passports has finally gone local.
As we will all recall, people were up in arms about the idea of vaccine passports and how
without some uniform system in place, it likely wouldn't work.
Well, since nothing has been uniform about the U.S.'s response to the pandemic, this
isn't going to be either. Rather than calling them passports, some employers and
private businesses are mandating proof of vaccination to enter some places mask-free.
Yeah, I am sensing a pattern here. So let's start with employers and employees.
What do those mandates actually look like?
Okay, so most companies don't require vaccines for people to return to work.
And to be clear, having a vaccine mandate is not illegal since the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission says it doesn't violate discrimination laws.
But at this late hour of the pandemic, a lot of companies are realizing that you can't have a
strong economy if people aren't safe from a deadly virus. Plus, they're probably scared of wrongful
death suits, whether it be from families of employees who get sick or customers who get
sick interacting with employees. And because of that, some heavy hitters just started mandating their workforce get vaccinated.
Here's some examples.
So there's Delta and United Airlines mandating it for new hires.
Morgan Stanley employees have to be vaccinated.
So all right, I guess don't cough on our money.
And across the country, health care facilities, including the Mayo Clinic,
are mandating their employees be vaxxed up if they want to continue working there.
Yeah, and amid all of this, there are a couple of surprising exceptions, though.
Always. I don't know how surprising this will be, but some police departments across the country are once again forgetting their duty to protect and serve and have relatively low vaccination rates.
In Las Vegas, for example, just 39% of employees have gotten at least one dose.
In Columbus, Ohio, that rate is as low as 28%.
And ironically, Pfizer doesn't require employees to be vaccinated,
according to the New York Times, but they're considering it.
I think I know somewhere they can get a vaccine if they're interested.
Yeah, they can call Johnson & Johnson.
So for live events or just going out to bars,
there may be mandates like that coming to a city near you, right?
I had to use this app at one point called Excelsior
to show that I was vaccinated.
The other option was getting a negative test and showing that.
There was a long line for it.
That was all just to get into an NBA game at Barclays.
So that's something people everywhere might want to get used to in the future?
Yeah, I think so.
I mean, L.A. now has a database of bars that require proof of vaccine to enter
or, again, a recent negative COVID test. And more than 500 bars in San Francisco have agreed to
start a vaccine mandate too. That begins this Thursday. But reportedly all over the country,
in Atlanta, in Provincetown, Massachusetts, in Denver, and a lot more places, companies and
private businesses are putting their foot down about letting unvaccinated people hold us up
any longer. We're going to put a link in our show notes for how to store your vaccine data on your phone
in case you want to leave your house anytime soon.
And as always, we'll keep following this as these numbers unfortunately go up.
But that's the latest for now. It's Tuesday WOD Squad, and for today's Tim Check,
we're talking about one of the legends of reading.
LeVar Burton of Reading Rainbow and Roots is guest hosting Jeopardy! this week
in a television event we've been looking forward to for a very, very long time.
This award-winning actor and director is the next guest host of Jeopardy!
Who is me? LeVar Burton. Yeah.
So Burton is the fan favorite to take over the show after Alex Trebek
hosted it for 37 seasons. A Change.org petition to make him
the permanent host circulated widely last year and has over 250,000 signatures.
I'm pretty sure I'm on there. And he's made it known that he's really interested in the job, telling the
New York Times in June that he considers it what he was meant to do. And this week, Burton will be
raising money for the literacy nonprofit Reading is Fundamental. So Gideon, from your perspective,
what is it that makes Burton just so perfect for this role? Oh man, what isn't there that makes Burton just so perfect for this role. Oh, man. What isn't there that makes him so perfect?
The man is knowledge in human form.
He's so synonymous with us learning when we were younger.
That's the main thing of the show
is showing off to people how knowledgeable you are.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, he's perfect for it.
I caught a little bit of him doing this last night.
And the other thing that I realized that he was doing really well was this dismissive but nice way of telling people that they had the answers wrong.
So they would buzz in.
They would get something completely off.
And he'd be like, no, before moving on to the next thing.
And I was like, you're killing it.
This is amazing.
Yeah.
That is a real vibe that's
a good way I'm gonna start saying no to people like that about pretty much everything yeah it
was like I'm gonna tell you that you have made a massive mistake in the nicest way possible that
you will remember for a long time because I am disappointed in you um yeah but what do you think
about all this I mean I think that LeVar is just a shoo-in I think he's gonna be great this week I think that it makes sense
to your point reading Rainbow was like the best
part of being a kid in school in the 90s
like when they rolled in that big butt TV
and just like reading Rainbow
theme song would happen and everybody just like try to hit
the high notes and be like butterfly in the freaking sky
like I love that I also
hear I haven't listened to his podcast but I hear his
podcast is great similar energy
of like you know talking about books and reading and the world. And I just think as a curious person, as a person who is so learned, it's like a real benefit to us that he's also just nostalgic and wonderful and talented and charming and all the things like, you know, TLDR. I think that LeVar Burton is just the bee's knees. He is. And, you know, he talks about being disappointed if he doesn't get this.
And I think we will perhaps be more disappointed.
So make sure he gets this.
I think that's true.
And just like that, we have checked our temps.
Stay safe.
Read a book.
And we'll be back with some headlines.
Headlines.
President Biden hosted Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi at the White House yesterday
and announced the U.S. combat mission in Iraq will conclude by the end of this year, but the military will continue to work with Iraqi forces.
Alongside the Prime Minister, Biden said this.
Well, our role in Iraq will be to be available to continue to train, to assist, to help,
and to deal with ISIS as it arrives. But we are not going to be by the end of the year in a combat
mission. There are roughly 2,500 U.S. troops currently in Iraq, and officials have not yet announced
how that number will change following this announcement. But this formal announcement
is largely symbolic, and it comes as Biden is completing the withdrawal of U.S. forces
from Afghanistan, and Qadmi faces increased pressure from hardline Shiite factions who
are calling for the removal of all American troops.
One of the world's biggest cigarette companies is taking a noble stand against itself.
Philip Morris International called for cigarettes to be banned in the UK within 10 years,
describing cigarette smoking as a, quote, problem, okay, that should be solved as soon as possible.
Eradicate us. This fits with the UK government's stated goal of eliminating tobacco smoking by 2030.
It also fits with PMI's recent efforts to move away
from its core tobacco business and focus on the other end of the addiction rainbow, launching and
acquiring businesses that make nicotine gum, inhalers, and even life insurance. This is how
executives double their profits while also doubling the damage to their own mortal souls.
Tobacco companies haven't always prioritized doing good. So there's reason to be very skeptical of PMI support for a cigarette ban.
Notably,
the ban would leave room for electronic cigarette alternatives that companies
like PMI are pushing more and more based on dubious,
often tobacco company funded research showing that they're safer than smoking.
Cannot wait to see how this doesn't turn out the way that they are promising
it will.
The Olympics kicked off this weekend with the world's best athletes meeting up in Tokyo
to compete and collect negative COVID tests.
Here are some of the highlights.
Weightlifter Haidelen Diaz brought home the first ever gold medal for the Philippines
with her record-breaking 127-kilogram lift.
And swimming world record holder Katie Ledecky of Team USA
lost the 400-meter freestyle to Australia's Arianne Titmuss by
.67 seconds.
Until that event, Ledecky had never lost an
individual race at the Olympics, so Titmuss' victory
was extremely impressive. However,
it was Titmuss' coach, Dean Boxall,
who went viral for his celebration
ceremony, where he seemed to lose control
of his mind and body, jerking, flailing,
and humping in a style somewhere between
James Brown and Cosmo Kramer.
We'll keep you posted on more victory dances and historic wins as the Olympic Games continue.
Jerking, flailing, and humping.
That is actually the steps to the Humpty Dance, if you're familiar.
Exactly.
Kanye West discovered a little-known trick for scoring great deals on sports tickets.
Literally move into a stadium.
TMZ is reporting that Kanye has been living in Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta since
last Thursday when he held a huge listening party there for his new album, Donda.
Apparently, he was inspired by the energy of the crowd, so he wants to stay until he
finishes the album.
Also, he's not just blowing up an air mattress by the escalators.
He reportedly has his own in-stadium studio space and living quarters, plus a chef to cook meals.
I hope that chef is not just a microwave.
Kanye was spotted in the stadium crowd at an Atlanta United game last Saturday,
probably asking people to please keep it down so he can go to sleep.
The Donda livestream broke records for Apple Music with 3.3 million viewers,
and the album is now set to come out on August 6th.
After that, you can safely go to Mercedes-Benz Stadium without any risk of seeing Kanye in a bathrobe. Yeah, I'm excited for him to
live out the rest of his time doing 2004's The Terminal, starring Tom Hanks. Good for him.
Yeah, wow. I love his ambition, and those are the headlines.
That is all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
rescue us from the beach that makes you old, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just civic-minded press releases
from tobacco companies like me,
what a day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Akilah Hughes.
I'm Gideon Resnick.
And happy housewarming, Kanye.
Yeah, I hope someone got you one of those electric bottle openers.
They're a great gift, and I feel like you might need one.
Yeah, I hope that you've had tons and tons of free hot dogs
that were just in the stadium.
That would be cool.
It's a pretty sick house filled with hot dogs.
Yeah.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Charlotte Landis.
Sonia Tun and Jazzy Marine are our associate producers.
Our head writer is John Milstein,
and our executive producers are Leo Duran,
Akilah Hughes, and me.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.